gorhill
d333eb96ea
|
10 years ago | |
---|---|---|
assets | 10 years ago | |
doc | 10 years ago | |
platform | 10 years ago | |
src | 10 years ago | |
tools | 10 years ago | |
.gitignore | 10 years ago | |
.travis.yml | 10 years ago | |
CONTRIBUTING.md | 10 years ago | |
LICENSE.txt | 10 years ago | |
README.md | 10 years ago |
README.md
Regarding the new required Chromium permission as of 0.9.1.2: About the required permissions: change your privacy related settings.
uMatrix
Definitely for advanced users.
Forked and refactored from HTTP Switchboard.
Install manually the latest release, or install from:
You may contribute with translation work:
- For in-app strings, on Crowdin: uMatrix on Crowdin.
- For description (to be used in AMO, Chrome store, etc.), submit a pull request. Reference description is here (feel free to improve as you wish, I am not a writer).
HTTP Switchboard's documentation is still relevant, except for uMatrix's differences with HTTP Switchboard.
You may contribute with documentation: uMatrix's wiki.
Warnings
Regarding broken sites
uMatrix does not guarantee that sites will work fine: it is for advanced users who can figure how to un-break sites, because essentially uMatrix is a firewall which works in relaxed block-all/allow-exceptionally mode out of the box: it is not unexpected that sites will break.
So this means do not file issues to report broken sites when the sites are broken because uMatrix does its job as expected. I will close any such issue without further comment.
I expect there will be community driven efforts for users to help each others. If uMatrix had a home, I would probably set up a forum, but I do not plan for such thing, I really just want to code, not manage web sites. If you need help to un-break a site when using uMatrix, you can try Wilders Security, where you are likely to receive help if needed, whether by me or other users.
uMatrix can be set to work in allow-all/block-exceptionally mode with a single click on the all
cell in the global scope *
, if you prefer to work this way. This will of course break less sites, but you would then lose all the benefits which comes with block-all/allow-exceptionally mode -- though you will still benefit from the 62,000+ blacklisted hostnames by default.