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Hierdie gesprek is in die argief. Vra asseblief 'n nuwe vraag as jy hulp nodig het.

Where does Firefox store SQLITE download history

  • 3 antwoorde
  • 1 het hierdie probleem
  • 269 views
  • Laaste antwoord deur cor-el

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I normally choose my download location and if they're zip I'll delete them after extract.

The problem is currently I can't find any way to get where did I put my downloaded files if it's not there.

BUT!!! In order to know the files aren't there, Firefox has to know where did I put them.

I searched the home folder but nothing named `download` is in the folder.

I asked a question for what should I do https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/que.../1312757 but doesn't get anything remotely useful.

I normally choose my download location and if they're zip I'll delete them after extract. The problem is currently I can't find any way to get where did I put my downloaded files if it's not there. BUT!!! In order to know the files aren't there, '''Firefox has to know where did I put them'''. I searched the home folder but nothing named `download` is in the folder. I asked a question for what should I do [https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1312757] but doesn't get anything remotely useful.

Gewysig op deur cor-el

Gekose oplossing

That data is stored as a "downloads/destinationFileURI" annotation in places.sqlite. I don't know of a way to access this data directly in the user interface.

You can run this code in the Browser Console to retrieve the annotation map and check the "downloads/destinationFileURI" array.

const DESTINATIONFILEURI_ANNO = "downloads/destinationFileURI";
const METADATA_ANNO = "downloads/metaData";
let pageAnnos = await PlacesUtils.history.fetchAnnotatedPages([METADATA_ANNO,DESTINATIONFILEURI_ANNO,]);

Lees dié antwoord in konteks 👍 1

All Replies (3)

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Gekose oplossing

That data is stored as a "downloads/destinationFileURI" annotation in places.sqlite. I don't know of a way to access this data directly in the user interface.

You can run this code in the Browser Console to retrieve the annotation map and check the "downloads/destinationFileURI" array.

const DESTINATIONFILEURI_ANNO = "downloads/destinationFileURI";
const METADATA_ANNO = "downloads/metaData";
let pageAnnos = await PlacesUtils.history.fetchAnnotatedPages([METADATA_ANNO,DESTINATIONFILEURI_ANNO,]);

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cor-el said

That data is stored as a "downloads/destinationFileURI" annotation in places.sqlite. I don't know of a way to access this data directly in the user interface. You can run this code in the Browser Console to retrieve the annotation map and check the "downloads/destinationFileURI" array.
const DESTINATIONFILEURI_ANNO = "downloads/destinationFileURI";
const METADATA_ANNO = "downloads/metaData";
let pageAnnos = await PlacesUtils.history.fetchAnnotatedPages([METADATA_ANNO,DESTINATIONFILEURI_ANNO,]);

Thanks for the reply. I didn't get the e-mail for some mysterious reasons but just ran across this problem again and remembered I have already asked this.

Anyway, the file is indeed in the `places.sqlite` but the table name is wrong.

It's actually in the `moz_annos`.

I don't write JS though, but I thought you can't access the storage using the frontend JS?

Gewysig op deur palm22180

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You can run privileged JavaScript code via the Browser Console and this allows to access such data. To enable the command line in the Console:


I didn't mention a specific table in places.sqlite in my above reply. Yes, moz_annos stores the downloads as a special 'download' annotation defined in moz_anno_attributes (downloads/metaData, downloads/destinationFileURI, downloads/destinationFileName). The entries in moz_annos are linked to moz_places that stores the actual history entry (moz_places.id = moz_annos.place_id).