I have a file named <h1>test.zip on my webspace. When i try to download it, it get renamed as
__h1_test.zip
Is there a way to leave the original filename to the downloaded file?
I'd like the downloaded file to keep the name <h1>test.zip once downloaded.
I'm using ubuntu at the moment and i can rename files as <h1>test.zip on my device.
"<" this tag is coverted into "_"
so i suggest you , don't use "< >" tag , add another name.
No. The browser does that to prevent the user from accidentally overwriting an existing file with the same name and you have no control over this.
You have a few options to change it. None of them are perfect.
Go to chrome settings in your browser bar chrome://settings/, scroll down to advanced, click it, scroll down to downloads and check the box to prompt. You can then specify the same name so it isn't auto-renamed but it will prompt every time, even if there isn't a duplicate. You get used to it fast, so it isn't as big of a deal as it sounds like.
If that isn't what you want check out a Chrome extension that attempts to address this issue (not sure if it works with ubuntu though). There are numerous forums out there where people are asking for the same functionality and have been for years so don't expect Chrome to change default behavior... Here's one (untested by me) -> https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/downloads-overwrite-alrea/lddjgfpjnifpeondafidennlcfagekbp?hl=en-US
Finally, depending on what you are doing (always downloading the same set of files for example) you could configure an FTP client or something else to pull the files and set the name instead of using a browser to pull them... you would be able to configure that more easily to overwrite. If you are downloading random things and just want to save bandwidth/etc when accidentally downloading the same file, then you likely need an extension/different browser/etc. to resolve it.
Related
I'm working on a large project, which uses IE (IE11) to display local htm pages. (Yes, IE is required. I can't use a different browser). We aren't using a web server; everything is pulled from the local drive. No http requests are made during this.
We're planning to send parts of it out to remote locations to use on those sites. Atm I'm using a self-extracting rar, so that the htm, js, css, and media files can all be put in the proper locations. After deployment, the file structure on the remote location should mirror that of the Dev system. Everything works fine on the Dev system. However, at the remote sites some of the anchor links stop working. After some testing, it appears that if the file I'm trying to link to originated from a different computer, the link does nothing. But if I were to make a new file, copy everything from the old file to the new file, and replace the old one with the new one, the link works. The files are identical in content, but only the one that originated from the remote site works.
Link
The above would work if foo.htm was created on that computer, but not if it was created on a different computer (such as the Dev computer). This issue appears to occur with .htm/html files, as well as .css and .js files. It might also occur for media files, but I didn't check.
I imagine there is some kind of security setting or something that needs to be changed, but I can't figure out what. We plan to distribute to a lot of sites, so I can't manually fix the problem for every site.
Any idea why this is happening?
Edit: No errors pop up in the console when I click on the links. I didn't check out the network tab, since everything is local, but that might be a thing to try tomorrow. Also, I didn't know about file blocking. I'll check that too. If that were to be the case, how can I unblock the files automatically? This may be deployed to people who don't have a strong grasp of computers.
From the description of the issue, it looks like when you send the zip file to another machine then on that machine file gets blocked.
Below are some ways to unblock the file or to prevent the blocking. You can choose the suitable way as per your requirement.
The easiest way to unblock the file is to, right-click the zip file then click on properties and click on the Unblock Checkbox and click the OK button. Then after try to unzip the file. It will unblock all files together.
You can also try to unblock the zip file by using the PowerShell command below.
dir "folderpath" -Recurse | Unblock-File
Note: Make sure to run the script as an administrator.
Further, you can set a group policy to prevent blocking the file.
Group policy path:
User Configuration-> Administrative Templates-> Windows Components-> Attachment Manager
Policy name: Do not preserve zone information in file attachments
You can double click this policy and disabled it.
Note: Please note this will leave you vulnerable to malware & is not recommended..
Gurus,
I am using uipath(A Ui Based Automation Tool) to download a file from a website using chrome browser.
I want browser to not prompt before downloading and just download the file in the downloads folder.
From various posts on this website i found that there exists a file called "preferences" which can be modified to solve this problem.
Before coding further i decided to do the changes in the "preferences" file manually on multiple machines, just to make sure that the changes i do in the preferences file reflect in the chrome browser as well .
I am manually modifying values for these 2 options in the preferences file.
download.default_directory
download.prompt_for_download
When i changed value for download.default_directory(Manually in Preferences file), it reflects the same in the chrome browser settings on every machine that i tested on.
But When i change value for download.prompt_for_download, it reflected in the chrome browser settings on some of the machines while on others i found that it does not reflect in the browser and rather the preferences file also seems to have reverted back to previous values.
The steps i followed are as below..
close any running instance of chrome
do the modifications in the preference file and save it
open chrome and go to settings>advance and downloads
i see DreamCatcher pointing to a similiar situation in this post, but no answers there..
I hope I can help solve your issue or at least give you some direction :)
Option#1: Chrome Settings
Wouldn't the problem be solved by changing the settings for downloads in the browser before running the bot? https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/95759?co=GENIE.Platform%3DDesktop&hl=en
Option#2: Do it in UiPath
And the other thing, is that when the prompt (to save the file) appears, couldn't you insert the path of the file that includes the default folder to save + name file + extension? (e.g. on the save path of the prompt, use type text "c:\myDocuments\downloads\filename.ext" ? I've done this in the past with UiPath...get the prompt window, type text and just modify the string being passed to carry the path, file name and extensio...then click "SAVE" or use hotkey "Enter"(if the file requires replacement, these are another 20cents you will have to program in UiPath, but it'd doable).
Option#3: Script
Another option, which I have not done, but see my friends do is creating BAT files to reset certain browser settings or the "registry"...so what they do is that they configure the BAT to do the changes to the browser and they add an activity (in UiPath) to invoke the BAT file every time the browser is opened by the robot.
Links for reference:
https://superuser.com/questions/59465/is-it-possible-to-download-using-the-windows-command-line
https://getadmx.com/?Category=Chrome&Policy=Google.Policies.Chrome::DownloadDirectory
I'd like to have an html file that organizes certain files scattered throughout my hard drive. For example, I have two files that I would link to:
C:\Programs\sort.mw
C:\Videos\lecture.mp4
The problem is that I'd like the links to function as a shortcut to the file. I've tried the following:
Link 1
Link 2
... but the first link does nothing and the second link opens the file in Chrome, not VLC.
My questions are:
Is there a way to adjust my HTML to treat the links as shortcuts to the files?
If there isn't a way to adjust the HTML, are there any other ways to neatly link to files scattered throughout the hard drive?
My computer runs Windows 7 and my web browser is Chrome.
You need to use the file:/// protocol (yes, that's three slashes) if you want to link to local files.
Link 1
Link 2
These will never open the file in your local applications automatically. That's for security reasons which I'll cover in the last section. If it opens, it will only ever open in the browser. If your browser can display the file, it will, otherwise it will probably ask you if you want to download the file.
You cannot cross from http(s) to the file protocol
Modern versions of many browsers (e.g. Firefox and Chrome) will refuse to cross from the http(s) protocol to the file protocol to prevent malicious behaviour.
This means a webpage hosted on a website somewhere will never be able to link to files on your hard drive. You'll need to open your webpage locally using the file protocol if you want to do this stuff at all.
Why does it get stuck without file:///?
The first part of a URL is the protocol. A protocol is a few letters, then a colon and two slashes. HTTP:// and FTP:// are valid protocols; C:/ isn't and I'm pretty sure it doesn't even properly resemble one.
C:/ also isn't a valid web address. The browser could assume it's meant to be http://c/ with a blank port specified, but that's going to fail.
Your browser may not assume it's referring to a local file. It has little reason to make that assumption because webpages generally don't try to link to peoples' local files.
So if you want to access local files: tell it to use the file protocol.
Why three slashes?
Because it's part of the File URI scheme. You have the option of specifying a host after the first two slashes. If you skip specifying a host it will just assume you're referring to a file on your own PC. This means file:///C:/etc is a shortcut for file://localhost/C:/etc.
These files will still open in your browser and that is good
Your browser will respond to these files the same way they'd respond to the same file anywhere on the internet. These files will not open in your default file handler (e.g. MS Word or VLC Media Player), and you will not be able to do anything like ask File Explorer to open the file's location.
This is an extremely good thing for your security.
Sites in your browser cannot interact with your operating system very well. If a good site could tell your machine to open lecture.mp4 in VLC.exe, a malicious site could tell it to open virus.bat in CMD.exe. Or it could just tell your machine to run a few Uninstall.exe files or open File Explorer a million times.
This may not be convenient for you, but HTML and browser security weren't really designed for what you're doing. If you want to be able to open lecture.mp4 in VLC.exe consider writing a desktop application instead.
If you are running IIS on your PC you can add the directory that you are trying to reach as a Virtual Directory.
To do this you right-click on your Site in ISS and press "Add Virtual Directory".
Name the virtual folder. Point the virtual folder to your folder location on your local PC.
You also have to supply credentials that has privileges to access the specific folder eg. HOSTNAME\username and password.
After that you can access the file in the virtual folder as any other file on your site.
http://sitename.com/virtual_folder_name/filename.fileextension
By the way, this also works with Chrome that otherwise does not accept the file-protocol file://
Hope this helps someone :)
Janky at best
right click </td>
and then right click, select "copy location" option, and then paste into url.
back to 2017:
use URL.createObjectURL( file ) to create local link to file system that user select;
don't forgot to free memory by using URL.revokeObjectURL()
I've a way and work like this:
<'a href="FOLDER_PATH" target="_explorer.exe">Link Text<'/a>
In the google chrome version 30.0.1599.101 m I am not able to save the changed js file.
On saving the js file I got yellow triangle symbol with "change to this file were not saved to file system" message.
I know this used to work in older version
I am using windows-7 64 bit
Click on the cog in the developer tools window (lower right corner)
Go to workspace and add the directory which you would be working on.
This is to accidentally prevent you from modifying files that you did not intend on changing.
Happened to me too. After picking the workspace directory, I also mapped the file from the "Source" panel of Devtools to its filesystem equivalent (using right-click on the file, from the file tree). It solved my problem.
In chrome > 63, accepted answer option is disabled.
In later should be done through workspaces.
Tonight, I accidentally managed to fix this problem, just open the file on the disk and save it with a simple change even with a space.
Refresh the page in Chrome, Chrome will link it(The file) to the disk.
Using Ctrl + F5 to clear the browser cache worked for me.
I found nothing in "workspace" that seemed relevant, and other things people listed didn't help either. What helped was to go in dev tools, where it says Pages, Sources etc., there is also Overrides (duh :)), I chose it, it said "Select folder for overrides", I did, and then also clicked "Allow" on Chrome asking for confirmation. That's it, after that I was able to save the files, the overrides worked.
Ok, my case might be a bit different but I will share my experience on what I was facing that caused to this warning and how I solved it.
I was trying to check a certain strange behavior on a React app for video streaming, so I opened up Developer console, enabled local overrides and tried editing the js file, immediately upon saving I got the warning “Changes to this file were not saved to file system”.
Note the message at bottom right “Source mapped from app.bundle.min.js”, this indicated that this is not an actual file but a mapping from the app.bundle.js (Webpack bundle)
So I moved to editing the app.bundle.min.js, I searched the appropriate string I was interested in from the mapped file (react-dom.production.min.js) and searched it in app.bundle.min.js
Again I got the same warning but I noticed the “app.bundle.min.js” file was fetched using a url parameter ?v=4900, I decided to remove it to check if that was the culprit causing the issue, to achieve that I modified the index.html file and edited the script tag that was fetching the js file from
<script src="libs/app.bundle.min.js?v=4900"></script> to <script src="libs/app.bundle.min.js"></script>
After that I forced refresh the page (Shift+F5, normal refresh didn’t work), tried modifying and saving and Jackpooot!! (Take away: You can’t override files fetched with a url parameter). I then was able to beautify, modify and override the app.bundle.min.js implementation and achieved what I wanted.
On Chrome Version 109~ :
Go to F12 > Sources Tab > Overrides (You may need to click the chevron next to Page)
Select/Create a folder to contain Overrides
You can now right-click a file or editor window & save it for Overrides
Image of sources tab where Overrides is located
Something to note: if you are making dynamically loaded JS available in devtools via the helpful: //# sourceURL=Example.js comment, this network to local mapping will not work.
Note: Notice the "//# sourceURL=dynamicScript.js" line at the end of dynamicScript.js file. This technique gives a name to a script created with eval, and will be discussed in more detail in the Source Maps section. Breakpoints can be set in dynamic JavaScript only if it has a user supplied name.
https://developer.chrome.com/devtools/docs/javascript-debugging
When you're using sourceURL, you can't actually find the respective JS file in the Sources tree where you might expect it to exist. It is available to open via the "no-domain" tree, however (or quick open with CTRL/CMD+P).
I'm still looking for a solution.
The easiest solution I found to this problem:
(keep in mind, I was manipulating an html page that lives on my machine)
open the associated html page from the command line so the page displays
for mac, that's simply $ open <name>.html
open Dev Tools
open Sources tab
in Page, open a new .js file there with whatever name you need
write in some text and save
This worked for me. Yes, I had to create a new .js file, but my directory locally recognized it was there when I pulled it, and my editor was updating in real time with the dev tools each time I saved either. At that point, my editor and the dev tools source tab had become one thing.
Currently on Chrome 100.0.4896.60 (Official Build) (x86_64).
I've got a js file with source maps; the override has always been spotted.
I'm able to override the map file (which won't work though for the debugging purpose) and the index.html file.
Apparently my issue is related to minified js with source maps.
Seem to work in relation to the chrome version installed.
I tried the following attempts but didn't work:
remove cache
disable / enable override
add the dir to the workspace
install chrome canary
To debug then I've tried:
build my file.min.js to test. In my case was production/file.min.js
start a npx http-server in production (cd production && npx http-server) which open to http://127.0.0.1
override index.html to consume http://127.0.0.1/file.min.js
Interesting considerations:
When i was doing basic overriding i had to replace the file manually all the times.
Now, I've got a watch task going on and i can basically refresh the page.
I can see as well the source map update.
It's simple! Right click on your page, Go to Inspect, go to the Network tab and tick the check box 'Disable cache'. Reload the page and you will see the effect.
I have a chm file that I can open at home. I use windows XP at home and at work. However, when I open the file at work it doesn't show the contents of the file. It properly shows the TOC for the file though. Any ideas pls?
Try to right-click on your chm file and select properties. You will see an "Unblock" button. Click on it, it should solve your problem.
Other than what Nicolas suggested, you may not be able to see contents of a CHM that you open over a UNC path. If that is the case copy the file to a local drive.
just go to power shell and run it as administrator,
cd your folder
and use the following command
Unblock-File '.\filename.chm'
On Windows 7 copying the file locally and unchecking the file opening warning message worked.
I had the same situation, on a Windows 10 (VMware) system. I had to move the file to a local drive as suggested by another poster AND THEN uncheck the file opening warning message. Opening the file gave a "Open File - Security Warning" message, with a checkbox at the bottom "Always ask before opening this file". Until I unchecked that box, only the TOC showed. After unchecking, the contents showed properly. HTH someone else!
Open command prompt and run as administrator.
Go to file location, input the file name and press enter.
It should open the file and view contents in chm viewer.
More read at: http://langbasics.blogspot.in/2014/12/chm-viewer-unable-to-show-contents.html
Thanks
It appears a lot of people have this problem but were unable to track down a solution. There are apparently different levels of authentication. Most articles I read tell you to set the MaxAllowedZone to '1' which means that local machine zone and intranet zone are allowed but '4' allows access for 'all' zones.
For more info, read this article:
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/892675
This is how my registry looks (I wasn't sure it would work with the wild cards but it seems to work for me):
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\HTMLHelp]
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\HTMLHelp\1.x]
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\HTMLHelp\1.x\ItssRestrictions]
"MaxAllowedZone"=dword:00000004
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\HTMLHelp\1.x\ItssRestrictions]
"UrlAllowList"="\\\\<network_path_root>;\\\\<network_path_root>\*;\\ies-inc.local;http://www.*;http://*;https://www.*;https://*;"
As an additional note, weirdly the "UrlAllowList" key was required to make this work on another PC but not my test one. It's probably not required at all but when I added it, it fixed the problem. The user may have not closed the original file or something like that. So just a consideration. I suggest try the least and test it, then add if needed. Once you confirm, you can deploy if needed. If the 'Unblock' method does not work, or you do not see the option, this should. Good Luck!
P.S. Another method that worked was mapping the path to the network locally by using mklink /d (symbolic linking in Windows 7 or newer) but mapping a network drive letter (Z: for testing) did not work. Just food for thought and I did not have to 'Unblock' any files. Also the accepted 'Solution' did not resolve the issue for me.
Your CHM File Has the "#" Hash Character in the Filename or in the Directory Name. Please remove "#" and you will be able to see the content. If still you are not able to see then please visit following link: https://www.helpsmith.com/chm-cannot-be-displayed.php
Windows block *.chm files came from another computer fore security reason. Click right mouse button on file and set unblock checkbox see.
If someone need, there is a web page: http://topdf.com/ where is possible convert a chm in to pdf. I tested it with a chm of ~18MB and 615 pages. I was able to got a pdf with a hyperlinked contents table.
I was experiencing the same problem.
I read that the .chm file only worked on NTFS.
My file was on a cloud network drive which is not NTFS, so I copied it locally and the problem was gone.
Use SumatraPDF. It opens .chm files.
I had same problem and zipped the file then open it from inside the zip program.(I use 7-zip)