In Windows, launch a different browser depending on the url.
BrowseRouter
becomes your default "browser". When you click a link, it decides which real browser to launch. If you have multiple browsers installed, this is very useful. Example use cases:
- Workplace. You access an intranet site through a specific browser while you prefer to use another browser for the rest of the internet.
- Proxies. One browser is configured to use a proxy while another isn't. For example, my employer is in another country. It's too slow to proxy all of my web traffic through their network. Some sites load in the wrong language and currency because they ignore system locale settings and localize based on IP address. Even worse, some sites or pages are blocked.
- Compatibility. Some sites you visit work better in specific browsers. You don't care which browser opens, just that the loaded page works.
- Browser wars. You're tired of browsers jostling to be the default. You're tired of changing the default browser to accomodate different workflows.
BrowseRouter
does no tracking and makes no network connections of its own whatsoever.
Your system administrator could know which pages you are visiting by auditing process start logs e.g. BrowseRouter.exe http://some-naughty-site.com
. They would have the same information for any browser.
This is a fork of BrowseSelector. That version is no longer mantained, so I ported to .net6.0.
- Clone and extract to a folder somewhere on your PC.
- Open
config.ini
and customize paths to your browsers and domain patterns (see below). - As administrator, Run
BrowseRouter.exe --register
from this folder to register the tool in Windows as a web browser. - (Optional) Open default browser chooser: from the Start Menu, search for "default browser" or "default apps". Select
BrowseRouter
as the default browser.
- If you skipped step 4, the first time you click on a link after registring BrowseRouter as a browser, you will be presented with the Open With dialog.
Tested on:
- Windows 10 Pro
BrowseRouter.exe --register
Register as a web browser.
BrowseRouter.exe --unregister
Unregister as a web browser.
Once you have registered the app as a browser, you should use visit "Set Default Browser" in Windows to set this app as the default browser.
BrowseRouter.exe http://example.org/
Launch a URL
Config is a poor man's INI file:
; Default browser is first in list
; Use `{url}` to specify UWP app browser details
[browsers]
ff = C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe
# Open in a new window
#chrome = "C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --new-window
chrome = C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe
edge = C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\Edge\Application\msedge.exe
; Url preferences.
; Only * is treated as a special character (wildcard).
; Matches are domain-only. Protocols and paths are ignored.
; Use "*.blah.com" for subdomains, not "*blah.com" as that would also match "abcblah.com".
[urls]
google.com = chrome
visualstudio.com = edge
mozilla.org = ff
; Source preferences.
; Only * is treated as a special character (wildcard).
; Matches on window title of application used to open link.
; Applied only if no url preference match is found.
[sources]
* - Notepad = ff
Slack | Test = crome
; Default case. Added automatically
; * = whatever
- Browsers must either be in your path or be fully-qualified paths to the executable e.g.
C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe
. - Arguments are optional. However, if you provide arguments the path must be enclosed in quotes. For example,
"chrome.exe" --new-window
- If there are no arguments, then the paths do not need to be quoted. For example,
chrome.exe
will work.
There are two ways to specify an Url. You can use simple wildcards or full regular expressions.
Simple wildcards:
microsoft.com = ie
*.microsoft.com = ie
- Only
*
is treated as a special character in URL patterns, and matches any characters (equivalent to the.*
regex syntax). - Only the domain part (or IP address) of a URL is checked.
- There is no implied wildcard at the start or end, so you must include these if you need them, but be aware that "microsoft.*" will not only match "microsoft.com" and "microsoft.co.uk" but also "microsoft.somethingelse.com".
Full regular expressions:
/sites\.google\.com/a/myproject.live\.com/ = chrome
- Full regular expressions are specified by wrapping it in /'s.
- The domain and path are used in the Url comparison.
- The regular expression syntax is based on the Microsoft .NET implementation.
Wildcares and full regular expressions may also be used to match source window titles.