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This repository was archived by the owner on Nov 15, 2017. It is now read-only.
Rules in a domain-level scope apply only to web pages which URL match the domain of the page.
Site-level scope (example: arstechnica.com)
Rules in a site-level scope apply only to web pages which URL match the hostname of the page.
Out of the box, there are two scopes in HTTPSB: the global scope (*), and the behind-the-scene scope (chromium-behind-the-scene).
For any web page you visit, you can create a narrower scope for that web page, or use the default global scope.
Just to avoid any confusion in the context of this doc, "domain name" is different than "site name". For example, example.com is a domain name, whereas www.example.com and forums.example.com are site names.
Global scope
The global scope is identified with the ∗ glyph.
Rules in global scope will apply to any web site, except where a narrower scope exists for that site.
Domain-level scope
Domain-level scopes are narrower than global scope, but broader than site-level scopes.
Rules in domain-level scope will apply only to web sites which domain matches the domain of the scope.
For example, all rules in domain-level scope ∗.example.com will apply to www.example.com, forums.example.com, where.am.i.example.com, etc.
Site-level scope
Rules in site-level scope will apply only to web sites which hostname matches exactly the hostname of the scope.
Site-level scopes are the most narrow of all level of scopes. Rules in a site-level scope will apply only to one single web site.
For example, all rules in site-level scope example.com will apply to example.com only, and not to forums.example.com or www.example.com.
Scope precedence
There is a scope precedence in HTTPSB. If one scope doesn't exist, a scope with lower precedence is then tried, until global scope is reached.