Question

I'm trying to selectively disable window.location, using Greasemonkey, at the start of the document.

I don't want to fully disable javascript, just disable some redirects done with javascript. They look like this:

window.location = "unwanted url";
Was it helpful?

Solution 2

You can't change the window.location prototype, because this a "native property" of window and it is not configurable.

On Firefox (Greasemonkey), if you try to override this then you will get errors like:

TypeError: can't redefine non-configurable property 'location'

and

Error: Permission denied to shadow native property

...depending on how you attempt it. Other browsers give similar errors.


To block this kind of relocation, you need to interfere with the page's javascript on a case-by-case basis.

See "Stop execution of Javascript function (client side) or tweak it" for a general approach that works in Firefox. Although it may be much easier, depending on your target page's exact code.

OTHER TIPS

I don't think it's possible.

  • You can't overwrite properties or methods on window.location (fails silently)
  • you can't redefine its prototype with location.__proto__ = Something.prototype
  • location.constructor.prototype is basically Object.prototype
  • the constructor doesn't really do anything (like create the attributes or methods)
  • __definesetter__ fails silently
  • Object.defineProperty gives an error like, TypeError: Cannot redefine property: href
  • delete window.location and delete window.location.href don't do anything

I'm out of ideas...

quite too late but you can do it simply without removing the whole script with Object.prototype.watch:

window.watch('location', function( attr ,_ , target){
    if(target.indexOf('unwanted url') !== -1)return '#';
});
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top