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Pop-up Blocker Wildcard

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  • 1 has this problem
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  • Last reply by cor-el

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Does anyone know how to use an ACTUAL wildcard in the pop-up blocker whitelist? Everything I find online just says to use the domain and it will allow everything from that domain, but that doesn't work in my experience. My work uses a Citrix client so I can log in from home, and the URL changes depending on what servers are available at the time. It's a massive company, so they have dozens of servers, and it would take me forever to try and whitelist them all.

The URLs are structured as https://server-aa11.login.company.com. So I need to be able to whitelist everything from login.company.com. In Chrome, I do this using [*.]login.company.com and I have no problems with it, but I have been trying to use FF instead of Chrome recently as Chrome has been having problems for me on Windows 11.

Anyone have any advice?

Does anyone know how to use an ACTUAL wildcard in the pop-up blocker whitelist? Everything I find online just says to use the domain and it will allow everything from that domain, but that doesn't work in my experience. My work uses a Citrix client so I can log in from home, and the URL changes depending on what servers are available at the time. It's a massive company, so they have dozens of servers, and it would take me forever to try and whitelist them all. The URLs are structured as https://server-aa11.login.company.com. So I need to be able to whitelist everything from login.company.com. In Chrome, I do this using [*.]login.company.com and I have no problems with it, but I have been trying to use FF instead of Chrome recently as Chrome has been having problems for me on Windows 11. Anyone have any advice?

All Replies (1)

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You normally create the exception for the "https://login.company.com" top level domain to include possible subdomains.

See also: