Unknown
As of June 2026, Unknown has — users.
Usersno change0%
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Ratingno change0%
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— reviews
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Version
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90-day change · In the last 90 days this extension 2 version updates, changed permissions.
History
5 snapshotsTracking since Apr 1, 2026.
Not enough history yet for this metric — the chart fills in as we collect more snapshots.
View as table
| Date | Users | Rating | Reviews | Version |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 1, 2026 | — | — | — | 1.0.0 |
| Apr 17, 2026 | — | — | — | 1.0.0 |
| Apr 22, 2026 | — | 5.00 | 1 | 1.0.1 |
| Apr 27, 2026 | — | 5.00 | 1 | 1.0.2 |
| May 5, 2026 | — | 5.00 | 1 | 1.0.2 |
| Now | — | — | — | — |
Changelog
- May 5, 2026description
SF Org Manager (Free) gives you instant visibility into all your active Salesforce orgs directly from your browser toolbar. Click the icon and see every org you're logged into, their session status, and key details at a glance. Open any org in one click. SF Org Manager works by detecting active Salesforce session cookies (sid) in your browser — the same cookies Salesforce uses to keep you logged in. It validates each session against the Salesforce REST API in real time, then enriches each org with data the cookie alone doesn't provide. From the sid cookie itself, the extension reads your org ID and instance URL. From the Salesforce REST API, it fetches your username, email, profile name, org name, org type (scratch, sandbox, dev hub, production), instance name, namespace, and trial expiration date. All of this is cached locally so that even after your session cookies expire overnight, your orgs are still visible with the details previously fetched. If a session has expired, the extension tells you exactly why and surfaces the CLI command to re-authenticate on the spot. Built for Salesforce developers who: - Work across multiple orgs daily (scratch orgs, sandboxes, dev hubs, production). - Want to see session status without opening each org manually. - Use the Salesforce CLI and want quick re-auth commands when sessions expire. - Need a fast way to jump between orgs. Privacy note: This extension does not collect, transmit, or cache any access tokens or credentials. The sid session cookie is read locally in your browser and used only to make API calls directly from your machine to Salesforce. No data ever leaves your browser to any third-party server. 1.0.1 Notes - changed "refresh" button label to "reload" - changed "logged in" label to "active" - changed "logged out" label to "inactive" - sort by organization type and show org type label on each org card - highlight username value in light blue - adjust "remove org from cache" styling 1.0.2 Notes - fix expired org tag displaying for inactive orgs - display organization name in org info section - change "unknown" label to "other"
(empty)
- May 5, 2026short_description
Manage all your active Salesforce orgs. Detects sessions automatically, displays details, and opens any org in one click.
(empty)
- May 5, 2026name
SF Org Manager (Free)
Unknown
- May 5, 2026category
productivity/tools
(empty)
- May 5, 2026host_permissions
https://*.salesforce.com/*, https://*.force.com/*
(empty)
- May 5, 2026permissions
storage, cookies
(empty)
- Apr 22, 2026description
SF Org Manager (Free) gives you instant visibility into all your active Salesforce orgs directly from your browser toolbar. Click the icon and see every org you're logged into, their session status, and key details at a glance. Open any org in one click. SF Org Manager works by detecting active Salesforce session cookies (sid) in your browser — the same cookies Salesforce uses to keep you logged in. It validates each session against the Salesforce REST API in real time, then enriches each org with data the cookie alone doesn't provide. From the sid cookie itself, the extension reads your org ID and instance URL. From the Salesforce REST API, it fetches your username, email, profile name, org name, org type (scratch, sandbox, dev hub, production), instance name, namespace, and trial expiration date. All of this is cached locally so that even after your session cookies expire overnight, your orgs are still visible with the details previously fetched. If a session has expired, the extension tells you exactly why and surfaces the CLI command to re-authenticate on the spot. Built for Salesforce developers who: - Work across multiple orgs daily (scratch orgs, sandboxes, dev hubs, production). - Want to see session status without opening each org manually. - Use the Salesforce CLI and want quick re-auth commands when sessions expire. - Need a fast way to jump between orgs. Privacy note: This extension does not collect, transmit, or cache any access tokens or credentials. The sid session cookie is read locally in your browser and used only to make API calls directly from your machine to Salesforce. No data ever leaves your browser to any third-party server. 1.0.1 Notes - changed "refresh" button label to "reload" - changed "logged in" label to "active" - changed "logged out" label to "inactive" - sort by organization type and show org type label on each org card - highlight username value in light blue - adjust "remove org from cache" styling
SF Org Manager (Free) gives you instant visibility into all your active Salesforce orgs directly from your browser toolbar. Click the icon and see every org you're logged into, their session status, and key details at a glance. Open any org in one click. SF Org Manager works by detecting active Salesforce session cookies (sid) in your browser — the same cookies Salesforce uses to keep you logged in. It validates each session against the Salesforce REST API in real time, then enriches each org with data the cookie alone doesn't provide. From the sid cookie itself, the extension reads your org ID and instance URL. From the Salesforce REST API, it fetches your username, email, profile name, org name, org type (scratch, sandbox, dev hub, production), instance name, namespace, and trial expiration date. All of this is cached locally so that even after your session cookies expire overnight, your orgs are still visible with the details previously fetched. If a session has expired, the extension tells you exactly why and surfaces the CLI command to re-authenticate on the spot. Built for Salesforce developers who: - Work across multiple orgs daily (scratch orgs, sandboxes, dev hubs, production). - Want to see session status without opening each org manually. - Use the Salesforce CLI and want quick re-auth commands when sessions expire. - Need a fast way to jump between orgs. Privacy note: This extension does not collect, transmit, or cache any access tokens or credentials. The sid session cookie is read locally in your browser and used only to make API calls directly from your machine to Salesforce. No data ever leaves your browser to any third-party server. 1.0.1 Notes - changed "refresh" button label to "reload" - changed "logged in" label to "active" - changed "logged out" label to "inactive" - sort by organization type and show org type label on each org card - highlight username value in light blue - adjust "remove org from cache" styling 1.0.2 Notes - fix expired org tag displaying for inactive orgs - display organization name in org info section - change "unknown" label to "other"
- Apr 17, 2026description
SF Org Manager (Free) gives you instant visibility into all your active Salesforce orgs directly from your browser toolbar. Click the icon and see every org you're logged into, their session status, and key details at a glance. Open any org in one click. SF Org Manager works by detecting active Salesforce session cookies (sid) in your browser — the same cookies Salesforce uses to keep you logged in. It validates each session against the Salesforce REST API in real time, then enriches each org with data the cookie alone doesn't provide. From the sid cookie itself, the extension reads your org ID and instance URL. From the Salesforce REST API, it fetches your username, email, profile name, org name, org type (scratch, sandbox, dev hub, production), instance name, namespace, and trial expiration date. All of this is cached locally so that even after your session cookies expire overnight, your orgs are still visible with the details previously fetched. If a session has expired, the extension tells you exactly why and surfaces the CLI command to re-authenticate on the spot. Built for Salesforce developers who: - Work across multiple orgs daily (scratch orgs, sandboxes, dev hubs, production). - Want to see session status without opening each org manually. - Use the Salesforce CLI and want quick re-auth commands when sessions expire. - Need a fast way to jump between orgs. Privacy note: This extension does not collect, transmit, or cache any access tokens or credentials. The sid session cookie is read locally in your browser and used only to make API calls directly from your machine to Salesforce. No data ever leaves your browser to any third-party server.
SF Org Manager (Free) gives you instant visibility into all your active Salesforce orgs directly from your browser toolbar. Click the icon and see every org you're logged into, their session status, and key details at a glance. Open any org in one click. SF Org Manager works by detecting active Salesforce session cookies (sid) in your browser — the same cookies Salesforce uses to keep you logged in. It validates each session against the Salesforce REST API in real time, then enriches each org with data the cookie alone doesn't provide. From the sid cookie itself, the extension reads your org ID and instance URL. From the Salesforce REST API, it fetches your username, email, profile name, org name, org type (scratch, sandbox, dev hub, production), instance name, namespace, and trial expiration date. All of this is cached locally so that even after your session cookies expire overnight, your orgs are still visible with the details previously fetched. If a session has expired, the extension tells you exactly why and surfaces the CLI command to re-authenticate on the spot. Built for Salesforce developers who: - Work across multiple orgs daily (scratch orgs, sandboxes, dev hubs, production). - Want to see session status without opening each org manually. - Use the Salesforce CLI and want quick re-auth commands when sessions expire. - Need a fast way to jump between orgs. Privacy note: This extension does not collect, transmit, or cache any access tokens or credentials. The sid session cookie is read locally in your browser and used only to make API calls directly from your machine to Salesforce. No data ever leaves your browser to any third-party server. 1.0.1 Notes - changed "refresh" button label to "reload" - changed "logged in" label to "active" - changed "logged out" label to "inactive" - sort by organization type and show org type label on each org card - highlight username value in light blue - adjust "remove org from cache" styling
Permissions & access
- Permissions
- None declared
- Host access
- None declared
Technical
- Version
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- Manifest
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- Size
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- Min Chrome
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- Languages
- 0
- Featured
- No
Metadata
- ID
- hbajppcbmlamndpdnklgljoilpfcbkif
- Developer ID
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- Developer Email
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- Created
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- Last Updated (Store)
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- Last Scraped
- Jun 3, 2026
- Website
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- Support URL
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- Privacy Policy
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Data sourced from the Chrome Web Store · last verified Jun 3, 2026.