# Supported Chrome command line switches Following command lines switches in Chrome browser are also Supported in atom-shell, you can use [app.commandLine.appendSwitch][append-switch] to append them in your app's main script before the [ready][ready] event of [app][app] module is emitted: ```javascript var app = require('app'); app.commandLine.appendSwitch('remote-debugging-port', '88315'); app.commandLine.appendSwitch('host-rules', 'MAP * 127.0.0.1'); app.on('ready', function() { }); ``` ## --remote-debugging-port=`port` Enables remote debug over HTTP on the specified `port`. ## --proxy-server=`address:port` Uses a specified proxy server, overrides system settings. This switch only affects HTTP and HTTPS requests. ## --no-proxy-server Don't use a proxy server, always make direct connections. Overrides any other proxy server flags that are passed. ## --host-rules=`rules` Comma-separated list of `rules` that control how hostnames are mapped. For example: * `MAP * 127.0.0.1` Forces all hostnames to be mapped to 127.0.0.1 * `MAP *.google.com proxy` Forces all google.com subdomains to be resolved to "proxy". * `MAP test.com [::1]:77` Forces "test.com" to resolve to IPv6 loopback. Will also force the port of the resulting socket address to be 77. * `MAP * baz, EXCLUDE www.google.com` Remaps everything to "baz", except for "www.google.com". These mappings apply to the endpoint host in a net request (the TCP connect and host resolver in a direct connection, and the `CONNECT` in an http proxy connection, and the endpoint host in a `SOCKS` proxy connection). ## --host-resolver-rules=`rules` Like `--host-rules` but these `rules` only apply to the host resolver. [app]: app.md [append-switch]: app.md#appcommandlineappendswitchswitch-value [ready]: app.md#event-ready