Zoeken in Support

Vermijd ondersteuningsscams. We zullen u nooit vragen een telefoonnummer te bellen, er een sms naar te sturen of persoonlijke gegevens te delen. Meld verdachte activiteit met de optie ‘Misbruik melden’.

Learn More

Deze conversatie is gearchiveerd. Stel een nieuwe vraag als u hulp nodig hebt.

Firefox cookies behaviour

  • 6 antwoorden
  • 1 heeft dit probleem
  • 174 weergaven
  • Laatste antwoord van writetome

more options

I'm on Windows 10 Firefox 87.0 (64 bit). I have two firefox profile. The two prifile sync to my firefox account and have the same addons enabled.

I'm investigating for a cooky of one well defined site

Why I have different cookies for this site depending of the firefox profile active ? ( Of course firefox option cooKies are identical ) ( Of course if I check the cookies.sqlite of the two profile they are different for the same site )

Where I can check to discover this different behaviour ?


Please don't esitate to ask me more info if You need

I'm on Windows 10 Firefox 87.0 (64 bit). I have two firefox profile. The two prifile sync to my firefox account and have the same addons enabled. I'm investigating for a cooky of one well defined site Why I have different cookies for this site depending of the firefox profile active ? ( Of course firefox option cooKies are identical ) ( Of course if I check the cookies.sqlite of the two profile they are different for the same site ) Where I can check to discover this different behaviour ? Please don't esitate to ask me more info if You need

Gekozen oplossing

Your are rigth !!! I login to the site from the profile num 1  !!!. Just for testing Your excellent answer I login using profile num 2 and : voilà the respose cooky have "uid" and "passhas" !

My my biggest thanks

Dit antwoord in context lezen 👍 0

Alle antwoorden (6)

more options

Firefox Sync can share a variety of kinds of data between profiles, but cookies are not one of the kinds of data you can sync.

Ref. How do I choose what information to sync on Firefox?

Perhaps it is possible for an add-on to do it, but I'm not sure that would be secure.

more options

Thanks for You answer

I'm sorry but to sync cooky is not my objective.

My objective is to understand   why i got from the same site different cookies if I use different profile.
 Let me add that if I copy cookies.sqlite from one profile to the other profile than the cooky for the site are identical.

But I don't understand why they where at the beginning ( when I access the first time the site ) different.

 I can imagine that something was set differently in an about:config item configuration  but it's very difficult  to compare the complete  about:config  belonging the the 2 profiles.
more options

It's an interesting question. So for example: you start with no cookies for site A in either profile, visit site A performing the same actions in both profiles, and after your visits you have different cookies for site A in each profile.

You can use the Storage Inspector to view the cookies in a panel in the lower part of the tab: https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Tools/Storage_Inspector

What kind of differences do you notice?

Firefox's cookie settings (in about:config, you can filter using cookie) can affect whether the cookie set has an expiration date in the future or is only a session cookie. Expiration is one of the columns you can display in the Storage Inspector's cookies list.

more options

I report here the response and the request cookies for the 2 profiles:

I like to add that the related curl is OK for both profiles ( just is released a different structure of the output but still the output carry out all relevant information  !) . My investigation is just to understand why I got a different cookies behavior.

firefox profile num 1 =============================================

Response cookies { "__cfduid": { "domain": ".wigistream.to", "expires": "2021-04-26T17:04:14.000Z", "httpOnly": true, "path": "/", "samesite": "Lax", "value": "d84cc7cc0ff58a535ecd65223f1c412d11616864654" } } Request ccokies { "_ga": "GA1.2.972812746.1613419989", "passhash": "2d9535147b1a2c0567f109b0f4600a3adf144e4537a53835056f0fe97f115875", "uid": "3335" }

firefox profile num 2 =============================================

Response cookies { "__cfduid": { "domain": ".wigistream.to", "expires": "2021-04-26T17:07:56.000Z", "httpOnly": true, "path": "/", "samesite": "Lax", "value": "df9a17a74e1620f77d682c211699642a41616864876" } } Request cooky { "_ga": "GA1.2.489080285.1616752965", "hf1": "1" }


more options

The "__cfduid" cookie looks like a session ID, so that needs to be unique for each browser. Actually, I found a post from Cloudflare saying they plan to stop setting this cookie, so it doesn't sound essential: https://blog.cloudflare.com/deprecating-cfduid-cookie/

The request cookies should be cookies that the site set previously and which Firefox is now returning.

"_ga" is an ID for Google Analytics.

I assume "passhash" and "uid" are present in profile 1 because you are logged in to that site?

I have no idea what the hf1 cookie is. It might be used to store a flag like "opted in" or "opted out" of cookies.

more options

Gekozen oplossing

Your are rigth !!! I login to the site from the profile num 1  !!!. Just for testing Your excellent answer I login using profile num 2 and : voilà the respose cooky have "uid" and "passhas" !

My my biggest thanks