Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

I want to set accessibility.blockautorefresh to false permanently

  • 3 replies
  • 1 has this problem
  • 1 view
  • Last reply by McCoy

more options

I use Firefox at work and we use several applications that need to auto refresh. I set accessibility.blockautorefresh to False every day and once I close my browser and open it again it sets it to true. I'm not sure if this is the computer or not, but does anyone have any idea how I can set this up so I don't have to change it every day?

I use Firefox at work and we use several applications that need to auto refresh. I set accessibility.blockautorefresh to False every day and once I close my browser and open it again it sets it to true. I'm not sure if this is the computer or not, but does anyone have any idea how I can set this up so I don't have to change it every day?

Chosen solution

You can check if you have a user.js file in the profile folder to initialize prefs# each time Firefox starts. The user.js file will only be present if you or other software has created this file and normally won't be present.

You can check its content with a text editor (right-click: "Open with"; do not double-click). The user.js file is read each time Firefox is started and initializes preferences to the value specified in this file, so preferences set via user.js can only be changed temporarily for the current session.

You can delete the user.js file if you didn't create this file yourself.

You can use the button on the "Help -> Troubleshooting Information" (about:support) page to go to the current Firefox profile folder or use the about:profiles page.

Read this answer in context 👍 1

All Replies (3)

more options

Chosen Solution

You can check if you have a user.js file in the profile folder to initialize prefs# each time Firefox starts. The user.js file will only be present if you or other software has created this file and normally won't be present.

You can check its content with a text editor (right-click: "Open with"; do not double-click). The user.js file is read each time Firefox is started and initializes preferences to the value specified in this file, so preferences set via user.js can only be changed temporarily for the current session.

You can delete the user.js file if you didn't create this file yourself.

You can use the button on the "Help -> Troubleshooting Information" (about:support) page to go to the current Firefox profile folder or use the about:profiles page.

more options

Thank you so much. I have been trying to scour the internet for this info. I appreciate your help

)
more options

Removed post.

Modified by McCoy