How to hide chrome warning after crash?












26















When Chrome has crashed, it displays a warning (under the address bar) upon restart, offering to restore tabs. I'm launching chrome in kiosk mode and I don't want theses warnings to be displayed.



Is there a way to do this ?










share|improve this question

























  • This is a probable duplicate of superuser.com/questions/461035/…. Even though this question is older, it has 10x fewer views and 3x fewer votes.

    – nc4pk
    Jul 23 '15 at 0:31
















26















When Chrome has crashed, it displays a warning (under the address bar) upon restart, offering to restore tabs. I'm launching chrome in kiosk mode and I don't want theses warnings to be displayed.



Is there a way to do this ?










share|improve this question

























  • This is a probable duplicate of superuser.com/questions/461035/…. Even though this question is older, it has 10x fewer views and 3x fewer votes.

    – nc4pk
    Jul 23 '15 at 0:31














26












26








26


11






When Chrome has crashed, it displays a warning (under the address bar) upon restart, offering to restore tabs. I'm launching chrome in kiosk mode and I don't want theses warnings to be displayed.



Is there a way to do this ?










share|improve this question
















When Chrome has crashed, it displays a warning (under the address bar) upon restart, offering to restore tabs. I'm launching chrome in kiosk mode and I don't want theses warnings to be displayed.



Is there a way to do this ?







google-chrome crash session-restore






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 4 '17 at 21:17









InterLinked

1,1331232




1,1331232










asked Jan 25 '11 at 13:44









OlivierOlivier

66931020




66931020













  • This is a probable duplicate of superuser.com/questions/461035/…. Even though this question is older, it has 10x fewer views and 3x fewer votes.

    – nc4pk
    Jul 23 '15 at 0:31



















  • This is a probable duplicate of superuser.com/questions/461035/…. Even though this question is older, it has 10x fewer views and 3x fewer votes.

    – nc4pk
    Jul 23 '15 at 0:31

















This is a probable duplicate of superuser.com/questions/461035/…. Even though this question is older, it has 10x fewer views and 3x fewer votes.

– nc4pk
Jul 23 '15 at 0:31





This is a probable duplicate of superuser.com/questions/461035/…. Even though this question is older, it has 10x fewer views and 3x fewer votes.

– nc4pk
Jul 23 '15 at 0:31










7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















16














You should run Chrome in Incognito Mode with this command:



chrome --incognito --kiosk http://127.0.0.1


Here they talk about running this command before starting Chrome to stop the Restore Bar from appearing:



sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly": false/"exited_cleanly": true/' 
~/.config/google-chrome/Default/Preferences





share|improve this answer
























  • incognito does the trick for me.

    – Olivier
    Jan 27 '11 at 15:40






  • 7





    Yes, incognito works, but it disables cookies and cache, and (in my case) they are required.

    – Davide Andrea
    Oct 1 '17 at 23:44













  • I added the sed line in my cron file after @reboot

    – Aryeh Beitz
    Jan 8 '18 at 16:07



















19














Based on @MiQUEL's answer to this duplicate question:



There are a few approaches.



Incognito mode (--incognito) helps, but it has several disadvantages, such as disabling the cache.



Passing --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble works in some versions of Chrome, but, as of Chrome 58, it no longer works. (Removing the --disable-session-crashed-bubble was done as part of this issue; comments there suggest that the flag was intended to test the bubble feature and was not intended as an end-user feature to hide the Chrome warning).



The most reliable approach I've found is to manually edit Chrome's on-disk preferences. Here's how you do this on Linux. (Note that these instructions are for chromium-browser; Google Chrome itself uses ~/.config/google-chrome instead of ~/.config/chromium.)



sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences


Putting it all together with a couple of additional flags that have been helpful for kiosk mode in one Chrome version or another:



#!/bin/sh
sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences
chromium-browser --kiosk --no-default-browser-check --no-first-run --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble "http://some_url/"





share|improve this answer
























  • For some reasons tilde wasn't resolved for me, I had to use $HOME in I use lxsession autostart.

    – mark.sagikazar
    Nov 13 '17 at 14:05



















11














--disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble



while true; do
chromium-browser --kiosk http://fotolia.com/ --no-first-run --touch-events=enabled --fast --fast-start --disable-popup-blocking --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble --disable-tab-switcher --disable-translate --enable-low-res-tiling
sleep 10s;
done





share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    Confirmed, this works for me on Chromium 47 on Linux.

    – Sundae
    Dec 9 '15 at 15:42






  • 1





    Did the trick for me. My Chromium ignored the "exited_cleanly" Preferences.

    – cljk
    Feb 19 '16 at 6:59











  • doesn't work anymore (Chromium 65 on RaspberryPi)

    – david114
    Dec 13 '18 at 9:54



















5














This finally worked for me, and it's pretty simple:




  1. Shut down Chromium gracefully

  2. Change the "Change content" permissions of ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences to "Nobody"


That will lock the state of two variables, regardless of how Chromium
was shut down:




  • "exit_type": "Normal"

  • "exited_cleanly": true


Of course, only do that after you're done setting preferences






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    Please do not post the same answer to multiple questions. If the same information really answers both questions, then one question (usually the newer one) should be closed as a duplicate of the other. You can indicate this by voting to close it as a duplicate or, if you don't have enough reputation for that, raise a flag to indicate that it's a duplicate. Otherwise tailor your answer to this question and don't just paste the same answer in multiple places.

    – DavidPostill
    Oct 2 '17 at 5:01






  • 2





    Repeated admonishments from moderator aside, unlike every other suggested solution for this problem, this one actually worked for me. So thank you for sharing it.

    – Justin Force
    Dec 5 '17 at 20:55






  • 2





    This seemed like a great solution at first glance. The main problem is that when using this with WebDriver under Selenium, chromedriver complains (at least on a Windows node) that it can't write to the prefs file at startup, so it won't let you launch a session when the prefs file is read-only.

    – Scott Dudley
    Jul 11 '18 at 20:23



















4














I believe --restore-last-session will also do the job.



Source: http://peter.sh/experiments/chromium-command-line-switches/






share|improve this answer































    3














    I have been trying to solve this problem for days. Incognito mode comes without cache, and changing Preferences file did not work for me.



    Finally I have been able to solve by following steps below:




    1. Go to chrome://flags url. Search for “Enable session restore bubble UI” and set it to Disabled.

    2. open chrome with --kiosk --disable-infobars options.






    share|improve this answer


























    • Looks like that flag no longer exists

      – AJ Richardson
      Feb 23 '18 at 18:12



















    0














    --restore-last-session argument when launching Chrome.






    share|improve this answer























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      7 Answers
      7






      active

      oldest

      votes








      7 Answers
      7






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      16














      You should run Chrome in Incognito Mode with this command:



      chrome --incognito --kiosk http://127.0.0.1


      Here they talk about running this command before starting Chrome to stop the Restore Bar from appearing:



      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly": false/"exited_cleanly": true/' 
      ~/.config/google-chrome/Default/Preferences





      share|improve this answer
























      • incognito does the trick for me.

        – Olivier
        Jan 27 '11 at 15:40






      • 7





        Yes, incognito works, but it disables cookies and cache, and (in my case) they are required.

        – Davide Andrea
        Oct 1 '17 at 23:44













      • I added the sed line in my cron file after @reboot

        – Aryeh Beitz
        Jan 8 '18 at 16:07
















      16














      You should run Chrome in Incognito Mode with this command:



      chrome --incognito --kiosk http://127.0.0.1


      Here they talk about running this command before starting Chrome to stop the Restore Bar from appearing:



      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly": false/"exited_cleanly": true/' 
      ~/.config/google-chrome/Default/Preferences





      share|improve this answer
























      • incognito does the trick for me.

        – Olivier
        Jan 27 '11 at 15:40






      • 7





        Yes, incognito works, but it disables cookies and cache, and (in my case) they are required.

        – Davide Andrea
        Oct 1 '17 at 23:44













      • I added the sed line in my cron file after @reboot

        – Aryeh Beitz
        Jan 8 '18 at 16:07














      16












      16








      16







      You should run Chrome in Incognito Mode with this command:



      chrome --incognito --kiosk http://127.0.0.1


      Here they talk about running this command before starting Chrome to stop the Restore Bar from appearing:



      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly": false/"exited_cleanly": true/' 
      ~/.config/google-chrome/Default/Preferences





      share|improve this answer













      You should run Chrome in Incognito Mode with this command:



      chrome --incognito --kiosk http://127.0.0.1


      Here they talk about running this command before starting Chrome to stop the Restore Bar from appearing:



      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly": false/"exited_cleanly": true/' 
      ~/.config/google-chrome/Default/Preferences






      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Jan 26 '11 at 18:41









      jowidojowido

      56634




      56634













      • incognito does the trick for me.

        – Olivier
        Jan 27 '11 at 15:40






      • 7





        Yes, incognito works, but it disables cookies and cache, and (in my case) they are required.

        – Davide Andrea
        Oct 1 '17 at 23:44













      • I added the sed line in my cron file after @reboot

        – Aryeh Beitz
        Jan 8 '18 at 16:07



















      • incognito does the trick for me.

        – Olivier
        Jan 27 '11 at 15:40






      • 7





        Yes, incognito works, but it disables cookies and cache, and (in my case) they are required.

        – Davide Andrea
        Oct 1 '17 at 23:44













      • I added the sed line in my cron file after @reboot

        – Aryeh Beitz
        Jan 8 '18 at 16:07

















      incognito does the trick for me.

      – Olivier
      Jan 27 '11 at 15:40





      incognito does the trick for me.

      – Olivier
      Jan 27 '11 at 15:40




      7




      7





      Yes, incognito works, but it disables cookies and cache, and (in my case) they are required.

      – Davide Andrea
      Oct 1 '17 at 23:44







      Yes, incognito works, but it disables cookies and cache, and (in my case) they are required.

      – Davide Andrea
      Oct 1 '17 at 23:44















      I added the sed line in my cron file after @reboot

      – Aryeh Beitz
      Jan 8 '18 at 16:07





      I added the sed line in my cron file after @reboot

      – Aryeh Beitz
      Jan 8 '18 at 16:07













      19














      Based on @MiQUEL's answer to this duplicate question:



      There are a few approaches.



      Incognito mode (--incognito) helps, but it has several disadvantages, such as disabling the cache.



      Passing --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble works in some versions of Chrome, but, as of Chrome 58, it no longer works. (Removing the --disable-session-crashed-bubble was done as part of this issue; comments there suggest that the flag was intended to test the bubble feature and was not intended as an end-user feature to hide the Chrome warning).



      The most reliable approach I've found is to manually edit Chrome's on-disk preferences. Here's how you do this on Linux. (Note that these instructions are for chromium-browser; Google Chrome itself uses ~/.config/google-chrome instead of ~/.config/chromium.)



      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences


      Putting it all together with a couple of additional flags that have been helpful for kiosk mode in one Chrome version or another:



      #!/bin/sh
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences
      chromium-browser --kiosk --no-default-browser-check --no-first-run --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble "http://some_url/"





      share|improve this answer
























      • For some reasons tilde wasn't resolved for me, I had to use $HOME in I use lxsession autostart.

        – mark.sagikazar
        Nov 13 '17 at 14:05
















      19














      Based on @MiQUEL's answer to this duplicate question:



      There are a few approaches.



      Incognito mode (--incognito) helps, but it has several disadvantages, such as disabling the cache.



      Passing --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble works in some versions of Chrome, but, as of Chrome 58, it no longer works. (Removing the --disable-session-crashed-bubble was done as part of this issue; comments there suggest that the flag was intended to test the bubble feature and was not intended as an end-user feature to hide the Chrome warning).



      The most reliable approach I've found is to manually edit Chrome's on-disk preferences. Here's how you do this on Linux. (Note that these instructions are for chromium-browser; Google Chrome itself uses ~/.config/google-chrome instead of ~/.config/chromium.)



      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences


      Putting it all together with a couple of additional flags that have been helpful for kiosk mode in one Chrome version or another:



      #!/bin/sh
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences
      chromium-browser --kiosk --no-default-browser-check --no-first-run --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble "http://some_url/"





      share|improve this answer
























      • For some reasons tilde wasn't resolved for me, I had to use $HOME in I use lxsession autostart.

        – mark.sagikazar
        Nov 13 '17 at 14:05














      19












      19








      19







      Based on @MiQUEL's answer to this duplicate question:



      There are a few approaches.



      Incognito mode (--incognito) helps, but it has several disadvantages, such as disabling the cache.



      Passing --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble works in some versions of Chrome, but, as of Chrome 58, it no longer works. (Removing the --disable-session-crashed-bubble was done as part of this issue; comments there suggest that the flag was intended to test the bubble feature and was not intended as an end-user feature to hide the Chrome warning).



      The most reliable approach I've found is to manually edit Chrome's on-disk preferences. Here's how you do this on Linux. (Note that these instructions are for chromium-browser; Google Chrome itself uses ~/.config/google-chrome instead of ~/.config/chromium.)



      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences


      Putting it all together with a couple of additional flags that have been helpful for kiosk mode in one Chrome version or another:



      #!/bin/sh
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences
      chromium-browser --kiosk --no-default-browser-check --no-first-run --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble "http://some_url/"





      share|improve this answer













      Based on @MiQUEL's answer to this duplicate question:



      There are a few approaches.



      Incognito mode (--incognito) helps, but it has several disadvantages, such as disabling the cache.



      Passing --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble works in some versions of Chrome, but, as of Chrome 58, it no longer works. (Removing the --disable-session-crashed-bubble was done as part of this issue; comments there suggest that the flag was intended to test the bubble feature and was not intended as an end-user feature to hide the Chrome warning).



      The most reliable approach I've found is to manually edit Chrome's on-disk preferences. Here's how you do this on Linux. (Note that these instructions are for chromium-browser; Google Chrome itself uses ~/.config/google-chrome instead of ~/.config/chromium.)



      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences


      Putting it all together with a couple of additional flags that have been helpful for kiosk mode in one Chrome version or another:



      #!/bin/sh
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/' ~/.config/chromium/'Local State'
      sed -i 's/"exited_cleanly":false/"exited_cleanly":true/; s/"exit_type":"[^"]+"/"exit_type":"Normal"/' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences
      chromium-browser --kiosk --no-default-browser-check --no-first-run --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble "http://some_url/"






      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered May 4 '17 at 20:27









      Josh KelleyJosh Kelley

      1,05711122




      1,05711122













      • For some reasons tilde wasn't resolved for me, I had to use $HOME in I use lxsession autostart.

        – mark.sagikazar
        Nov 13 '17 at 14:05



















      • For some reasons tilde wasn't resolved for me, I had to use $HOME in I use lxsession autostart.

        – mark.sagikazar
        Nov 13 '17 at 14:05

















      For some reasons tilde wasn't resolved for me, I had to use $HOME in I use lxsession autostart.

      – mark.sagikazar
      Nov 13 '17 at 14:05





      For some reasons tilde wasn't resolved for me, I had to use $HOME in I use lxsession autostart.

      – mark.sagikazar
      Nov 13 '17 at 14:05











      11














      --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble



      while true; do
      chromium-browser --kiosk http://fotolia.com/ --no-first-run --touch-events=enabled --fast --fast-start --disable-popup-blocking --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble --disable-tab-switcher --disable-translate --enable-low-res-tiling
      sleep 10s;
      done





      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        Confirmed, this works for me on Chromium 47 on Linux.

        – Sundae
        Dec 9 '15 at 15:42






      • 1





        Did the trick for me. My Chromium ignored the "exited_cleanly" Preferences.

        – cljk
        Feb 19 '16 at 6:59











      • doesn't work anymore (Chromium 65 on RaspberryPi)

        – david114
        Dec 13 '18 at 9:54
















      11














      --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble



      while true; do
      chromium-browser --kiosk http://fotolia.com/ --no-first-run --touch-events=enabled --fast --fast-start --disable-popup-blocking --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble --disable-tab-switcher --disable-translate --enable-low-res-tiling
      sleep 10s;
      done





      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        Confirmed, this works for me on Chromium 47 on Linux.

        – Sundae
        Dec 9 '15 at 15:42






      • 1





        Did the trick for me. My Chromium ignored the "exited_cleanly" Preferences.

        – cljk
        Feb 19 '16 at 6:59











      • doesn't work anymore (Chromium 65 on RaspberryPi)

        – david114
        Dec 13 '18 at 9:54














      11












      11








      11







      --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble



      while true; do
      chromium-browser --kiosk http://fotolia.com/ --no-first-run --touch-events=enabled --fast --fast-start --disable-popup-blocking --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble --disable-tab-switcher --disable-translate --enable-low-res-tiling
      sleep 10s;
      done





      share|improve this answer













      --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble



      while true; do
      chromium-browser --kiosk http://fotolia.com/ --no-first-run --touch-events=enabled --fast --fast-start --disable-popup-blocking --disable-infobars --disable-session-crashed-bubble --disable-tab-switcher --disable-translate --enable-low-res-tiling
      sleep 10s;
      done






      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Dec 6 '15 at 2:12









      frekelefrekele

      21124




      21124








      • 1





        Confirmed, this works for me on Chromium 47 on Linux.

        – Sundae
        Dec 9 '15 at 15:42






      • 1





        Did the trick for me. My Chromium ignored the "exited_cleanly" Preferences.

        – cljk
        Feb 19 '16 at 6:59











      • doesn't work anymore (Chromium 65 on RaspberryPi)

        – david114
        Dec 13 '18 at 9:54














      • 1





        Confirmed, this works for me on Chromium 47 on Linux.

        – Sundae
        Dec 9 '15 at 15:42






      • 1





        Did the trick for me. My Chromium ignored the "exited_cleanly" Preferences.

        – cljk
        Feb 19 '16 at 6:59











      • doesn't work anymore (Chromium 65 on RaspberryPi)

        – david114
        Dec 13 '18 at 9:54








      1




      1





      Confirmed, this works for me on Chromium 47 on Linux.

      – Sundae
      Dec 9 '15 at 15:42





      Confirmed, this works for me on Chromium 47 on Linux.

      – Sundae
      Dec 9 '15 at 15:42




      1




      1





      Did the trick for me. My Chromium ignored the "exited_cleanly" Preferences.

      – cljk
      Feb 19 '16 at 6:59





      Did the trick for me. My Chromium ignored the "exited_cleanly" Preferences.

      – cljk
      Feb 19 '16 at 6:59













      doesn't work anymore (Chromium 65 on RaspberryPi)

      – david114
      Dec 13 '18 at 9:54





      doesn't work anymore (Chromium 65 on RaspberryPi)

      – david114
      Dec 13 '18 at 9:54











      5














      This finally worked for me, and it's pretty simple:




      1. Shut down Chromium gracefully

      2. Change the "Change content" permissions of ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences to "Nobody"


      That will lock the state of two variables, regardless of how Chromium
      was shut down:




      • "exit_type": "Normal"

      • "exited_cleanly": true


      Of course, only do that after you're done setting preferences






      share|improve this answer





















      • 1





        Please do not post the same answer to multiple questions. If the same information really answers both questions, then one question (usually the newer one) should be closed as a duplicate of the other. You can indicate this by voting to close it as a duplicate or, if you don't have enough reputation for that, raise a flag to indicate that it's a duplicate. Otherwise tailor your answer to this question and don't just paste the same answer in multiple places.

        – DavidPostill
        Oct 2 '17 at 5:01






      • 2





        Repeated admonishments from moderator aside, unlike every other suggested solution for this problem, this one actually worked for me. So thank you for sharing it.

        – Justin Force
        Dec 5 '17 at 20:55






      • 2





        This seemed like a great solution at first glance. The main problem is that when using this with WebDriver under Selenium, chromedriver complains (at least on a Windows node) that it can't write to the prefs file at startup, so it won't let you launch a session when the prefs file is read-only.

        – Scott Dudley
        Jul 11 '18 at 20:23
















      5














      This finally worked for me, and it's pretty simple:




      1. Shut down Chromium gracefully

      2. Change the "Change content" permissions of ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences to "Nobody"


      That will lock the state of two variables, regardless of how Chromium
      was shut down:




      • "exit_type": "Normal"

      • "exited_cleanly": true


      Of course, only do that after you're done setting preferences






      share|improve this answer





















      • 1





        Please do not post the same answer to multiple questions. If the same information really answers both questions, then one question (usually the newer one) should be closed as a duplicate of the other. You can indicate this by voting to close it as a duplicate or, if you don't have enough reputation for that, raise a flag to indicate that it's a duplicate. Otherwise tailor your answer to this question and don't just paste the same answer in multiple places.

        – DavidPostill
        Oct 2 '17 at 5:01






      • 2





        Repeated admonishments from moderator aside, unlike every other suggested solution for this problem, this one actually worked for me. So thank you for sharing it.

        – Justin Force
        Dec 5 '17 at 20:55






      • 2





        This seemed like a great solution at first glance. The main problem is that when using this with WebDriver under Selenium, chromedriver complains (at least on a Windows node) that it can't write to the prefs file at startup, so it won't let you launch a session when the prefs file is read-only.

        – Scott Dudley
        Jul 11 '18 at 20:23














      5












      5








      5







      This finally worked for me, and it's pretty simple:




      1. Shut down Chromium gracefully

      2. Change the "Change content" permissions of ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences to "Nobody"


      That will lock the state of two variables, regardless of how Chromium
      was shut down:




      • "exit_type": "Normal"

      • "exited_cleanly": true


      Of course, only do that after you're done setting preferences






      share|improve this answer















      This finally worked for me, and it's pretty simple:




      1. Shut down Chromium gracefully

      2. Change the "Change content" permissions of ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences to "Nobody"


      That will lock the state of two variables, regardless of how Chromium
      was shut down:




      • "exit_type": "Normal"

      • "exited_cleanly": true


      Of course, only do that after you're done setting preferences







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Oct 2 '17 at 14:51

























      answered Oct 2 '17 at 0:20









      Davide AndreaDavide Andrea

      19115




      19115








      • 1





        Please do not post the same answer to multiple questions. If the same information really answers both questions, then one question (usually the newer one) should be closed as a duplicate of the other. You can indicate this by voting to close it as a duplicate or, if you don't have enough reputation for that, raise a flag to indicate that it's a duplicate. Otherwise tailor your answer to this question and don't just paste the same answer in multiple places.

        – DavidPostill
        Oct 2 '17 at 5:01






      • 2





        Repeated admonishments from moderator aside, unlike every other suggested solution for this problem, this one actually worked for me. So thank you for sharing it.

        – Justin Force
        Dec 5 '17 at 20:55






      • 2





        This seemed like a great solution at first glance. The main problem is that when using this with WebDriver under Selenium, chromedriver complains (at least on a Windows node) that it can't write to the prefs file at startup, so it won't let you launch a session when the prefs file is read-only.

        – Scott Dudley
        Jul 11 '18 at 20:23














      • 1





        Please do not post the same answer to multiple questions. If the same information really answers both questions, then one question (usually the newer one) should be closed as a duplicate of the other. You can indicate this by voting to close it as a duplicate or, if you don't have enough reputation for that, raise a flag to indicate that it's a duplicate. Otherwise tailor your answer to this question and don't just paste the same answer in multiple places.

        – DavidPostill
        Oct 2 '17 at 5:01






      • 2





        Repeated admonishments from moderator aside, unlike every other suggested solution for this problem, this one actually worked for me. So thank you for sharing it.

        – Justin Force
        Dec 5 '17 at 20:55






      • 2





        This seemed like a great solution at first glance. The main problem is that when using this with WebDriver under Selenium, chromedriver complains (at least on a Windows node) that it can't write to the prefs file at startup, so it won't let you launch a session when the prefs file is read-only.

        – Scott Dudley
        Jul 11 '18 at 20:23








      1




      1





      Please do not post the same answer to multiple questions. If the same information really answers both questions, then one question (usually the newer one) should be closed as a duplicate of the other. You can indicate this by voting to close it as a duplicate or, if you don't have enough reputation for that, raise a flag to indicate that it's a duplicate. Otherwise tailor your answer to this question and don't just paste the same answer in multiple places.

      – DavidPostill
      Oct 2 '17 at 5:01





      Please do not post the same answer to multiple questions. If the same information really answers both questions, then one question (usually the newer one) should be closed as a duplicate of the other. You can indicate this by voting to close it as a duplicate or, if you don't have enough reputation for that, raise a flag to indicate that it's a duplicate. Otherwise tailor your answer to this question and don't just paste the same answer in multiple places.

      – DavidPostill
      Oct 2 '17 at 5:01




      2




      2





      Repeated admonishments from moderator aside, unlike every other suggested solution for this problem, this one actually worked for me. So thank you for sharing it.

      – Justin Force
      Dec 5 '17 at 20:55





      Repeated admonishments from moderator aside, unlike every other suggested solution for this problem, this one actually worked for me. So thank you for sharing it.

      – Justin Force
      Dec 5 '17 at 20:55




      2




      2





      This seemed like a great solution at first glance. The main problem is that when using this with WebDriver under Selenium, chromedriver complains (at least on a Windows node) that it can't write to the prefs file at startup, so it won't let you launch a session when the prefs file is read-only.

      – Scott Dudley
      Jul 11 '18 at 20:23





      This seemed like a great solution at first glance. The main problem is that when using this with WebDriver under Selenium, chromedriver complains (at least on a Windows node) that it can't write to the prefs file at startup, so it won't let you launch a session when the prefs file is read-only.

      – Scott Dudley
      Jul 11 '18 at 20:23











      4














      I believe --restore-last-session will also do the job.



      Source: http://peter.sh/experiments/chromium-command-line-switches/






      share|improve this answer




























        4














        I believe --restore-last-session will also do the job.



        Source: http://peter.sh/experiments/chromium-command-line-switches/






        share|improve this answer


























          4












          4








          4







          I believe --restore-last-session will also do the job.



          Source: http://peter.sh/experiments/chromium-command-line-switches/






          share|improve this answer













          I believe --restore-last-session will also do the job.



          Source: http://peter.sh/experiments/chromium-command-line-switches/







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 26 '14 at 3:40









          GiliGili

          1,05731327




          1,05731327























              3














              I have been trying to solve this problem for days. Incognito mode comes without cache, and changing Preferences file did not work for me.



              Finally I have been able to solve by following steps below:




              1. Go to chrome://flags url. Search for “Enable session restore bubble UI” and set it to Disabled.

              2. open chrome with --kiosk --disable-infobars options.






              share|improve this answer


























              • Looks like that flag no longer exists

                – AJ Richardson
                Feb 23 '18 at 18:12
















              3














              I have been trying to solve this problem for days. Incognito mode comes without cache, and changing Preferences file did not work for me.



              Finally I have been able to solve by following steps below:




              1. Go to chrome://flags url. Search for “Enable session restore bubble UI” and set it to Disabled.

              2. open chrome with --kiosk --disable-infobars options.






              share|improve this answer


























              • Looks like that flag no longer exists

                – AJ Richardson
                Feb 23 '18 at 18:12














              3












              3








              3







              I have been trying to solve this problem for days. Incognito mode comes without cache, and changing Preferences file did not work for me.



              Finally I have been able to solve by following steps below:




              1. Go to chrome://flags url. Search for “Enable session restore bubble UI” and set it to Disabled.

              2. open chrome with --kiosk --disable-infobars options.






              share|improve this answer















              I have been trying to solve this problem for days. Incognito mode comes without cache, and changing Preferences file did not work for me.



              Finally I have been able to solve by following steps below:




              1. Go to chrome://flags url. Search for “Enable session restore bubble UI” and set it to Disabled.

              2. open chrome with --kiosk --disable-infobars options.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Aug 4 '16 at 10:40









              Community

              1




              1










              answered Dec 15 '15 at 11:24









              yjcxy12yjcxy12

              1311




              1311













              • Looks like that flag no longer exists

                – AJ Richardson
                Feb 23 '18 at 18:12



















              • Looks like that flag no longer exists

                – AJ Richardson
                Feb 23 '18 at 18:12

















              Looks like that flag no longer exists

              – AJ Richardson
              Feb 23 '18 at 18:12





              Looks like that flag no longer exists

              – AJ Richardson
              Feb 23 '18 at 18:12











              0














              --restore-last-session argument when launching Chrome.






              share|improve this answer




























                0














                --restore-last-session argument when launching Chrome.






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  --restore-last-session argument when launching Chrome.






                  share|improve this answer













                  --restore-last-session argument when launching Chrome.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jan 7 at 18:39









                  MattMatt

                  13319




                  13319






























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