Could you please tell me, if it's possible to read Environment Variables using Javascript from a page running on Firefox.
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Do you mean operating systems environment variables? – Shamim Hafiz - MSFT Sep 22 '10 at 14:50
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@Gunner you know any other? :) – Andrey Sep 22 '10 at 14:53
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@Andrey: Well I know it means OS ones. I was wondering if the original poster was talking about settings of the browser and calling that environment variables. – Shamim Hafiz - MSFT Sep 22 '10 at 17:42
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This question is answered in this post: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/399263/finding-the-currently-logged-in-user-from-a-firefox-extension – Adam Apr 03 '12 at 11:56
2 Answers
Short answer: No.
Long answer: Maybe. If you mean system environment variables, there isn't (that I'm aware of) any way to do that via straight JavaScript. You can access a number of system information through JavaScript though. Check this page out for some examples:
http://www.docsteve.com/DocSteve/Samples/JS/javascript_env.html
This shows how to get the underlying OS/platform, Depending on exactly what you're looking for, this may not work. It's possible via other methods, like creating an ActiveX object and using that. However, this requires additional steps on the user end (like installing/authorizing ActiveX).
I think this is a security feature, separating the system from the browser, therefore it can be difficult (or impossible, depending on your requirements).
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Thanks for the help Josh. @Bears will eat you, you are right FF doenst support ActiveX, so I am out of luck here I guess – t0mcat Sep 22 '10 at 15:13
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While FF doesn't natively support ActiveX, I've personally used ActiveX within FF before via an add-on. This was a while ago, 1.x, so maybe newer FF versions removed that capability. – Josh Sep 23 '10 at 01:54