On 09/04/14 07:29, David Fifield wrote:
It gets the job done, but it sucks because the first thing you see is the dialog and you have to know not to close it. Is there a way to accomplish the same thing (keep the browser running, but don't show a browser window) without raising a conspicuous dialog?
You could play further with this:
$ nc -l -p 9999 & $ iceweasel -no-remote -p testing -chrome http://localhost:9999
If there's no server listening, firefox opens up a "can't connect" page. Otherwise, it continues running, with no UI, past the 3-minute TCP timeout mark, even if you kill nc in the meantime.
However, I am not sure if the process is actually responsive, or simply hanging waiting for an HTTP response - so you'll need to test that. Also, there's no guarantee that firefox will keep this behaviour.
Failing everything, maybe you could return a real XUL response that displays "don't close me"?
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