Windows 10 reached EOS (end of support) on October 14, 2025. If you are on Windows 10, see this article.

搜尋 Mozilla 技術支援網站

防止技術支援詐騙。我們絕對不會要求您撥打電話或發送簡訊,或是提供個人資訊。請用「回報濫用」功能回報可疑的行為。

了解更多
此討論串已經關閉並封存。 如果您有需要幫助,請新增一個新問題
被鎖定 封存

Policy.json wins over GPO

Mike Kaply replied
SuMo Bot

Thanks Mike for the description here: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/firefox-enterprise-87-release-notes by Mike Kaply

Does the following section meant that policies.json would win a conflict with a setting that is also set in GPO: The policies.json file is no longer ignored if policies are specified via GPO (Windows) or configuration profiles (macOS). The policies are combined with GPO or configuration profile taking precedence over policies.json where there are conflicts.

Thanks Mike for the description here: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/firefox-enterprise-87-release-notes by Mike Kaply Does the following section meant that policies.json would win a conflict with a setting that is also set in GPO: '''The policies.json file is no longer ignored if policies are specified via GPO (Windows) or configuration profiles (macOS). The policies are combined with GPO or configuration profile taking precedence over policies.json where there are conflicts. '''

所有回覆 (3)

Note that ESR has transferred from 78.15.0 ESR to 91.3.0 ESR with the release of Firefox 94.

Thanks for pointing this out. We are moving very soon to the 91.3.0 version. But now we are still on 78.15.0 and this version jump would include the change I have mentioned before which was introduced in Firefox Rapid Release 87.0.

So this would be new to our 91.3.0 version and I just want to double check on this.

> Does the following section meant that policies.json would win a conflict with a setting that is also set in GPO:

No, GPO would win. That's what this statement says:

> The policies are combined with GPO or configuration profile taking precedence over policies.json where there are conflicts.

GPO takes precedence.

The reason it was done this way is because without this, a user could theoretically put a policies.json in a local copy of Firefox and overide policy set by their company in the registry.

This question has been locked because the original author has deleted their account. While you can no longer post new replies, the existing content remains available for reference.