How to launch html using Chrome at "--allow-file-access-from-files" mode?
That flag is dangerous!! Leaves your file system open for access. Documents originating from anywhere, local or web, should not, by default, have any access to local file:/// resources.
Much better solution is to run a little http server locally.
--- For Windows ---
The easiest is to install http-server globally using node's package manager:
npm install -g http-server
Then simply run http-server
in any of your project directories:
Eg. d:\my_project> http-server
Starting up http-server, serving ./
Available on:
http:169.254.116.232:8080
http:192.168.88.1:8080
http:192.168.0.7:8080
http:127.0.0.1:8080
Hit CTRL-C to stop the server
Or as prusswan suggested, you can also install Python under windows, and follow the instructions below.
--- For Linux ---
Since Python is usually available in most linux distributions, just run python -m SimpleHTTPServer
in your project directory, and you can load your page on http://localhost:8000
In Python 3 the SimpleHTTPServer
module has been merged into http.server
, so the new command is python3 -m http.server
.
Easy, and no security risk of accidentally leaving your browser open vulnerable.
Search for the path of your Chrome executable and then, on your cmd, try :
> "C:\PathTo\Chrome.exe" --allow-file-access-from-files
Source
EDIT : As I see on your question, don't forget that Windows is a little bit similar to Unix, so when you type "chrome ...", cmd will search for Chrome in the PATH, but in general the Chrome folder isn't on the PATH. Also, you don't specify an extension for your executable... So if you move to Chrome's folder, this command will probably work too :
> .\chrome.exe --allow-file-access-from-files
You may want to try Web Server for Chrome, which serves web pages from a local folder using HTTP. It's simple to use and would avoid the flag, which, as someone mentioned above, might make your file system vulnerable.