![]() ![]() I haven’t tried Ubuntu 22.04 on my other laptop as I was planning to switch to Fedora but might see if I can try a running from a live USB.įurther Update: I booted up a live USB for Ubuntu 22.04 and installed the same, latest version of Google-Chrome-Stable and I was successfully able to download and ‘save as’ files to sub-directories in my NTFS drives. Firefox can download to any chosen NTFS sub-folder. I’m convinced (as much as I can be with my limited knowledge of Linux) that this is not a permissions problem because I can right click in gnome file manager and create folders in any of my NTFS sub-folders, all my usual apps can read and write data to all the NTFS sub-folders, apps like GIMP, Darktable, Davinci Resolve, LibreOffice, etc. 1 mark mark 4096 ‘System Volume Information’ĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 mark mark 8192 May 10 19:11 ‘LINUX Distros’ĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 mark mark 4096 ‘CORE FOLDERS’ĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 mark mark 4096 May 10 19:15 BACKUPSĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 mark mark 4096 Dec 5 09:40 ‘$RECYCLE.BIN’ĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 4096 Mar 30 17:59 ‘System Volume Information’ĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 4096 May 13 18:02 PICTURESĭrwxrwxrwx. ![]() 1 root root 4096 May 10 19:06 OneDriveĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 0 May 14 09:41 ‘New Tab_files’ĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 12288 May 9 16:47 DOWNLOADSĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 8192 May 11 15:08 Documentsĭrwxrwxrwx. 1 root root 0 May 13 17:10 CacheClipĭrwxrwxrwx. I dual boot (rarely) hence why I have this NTFS drive as my shared data drive for Linux and Win10.ĭrwxrwxrwx. This is my directory listing of my NTFS partition, part of my laptop’s SSD. I’d appreciate any advice and guidance, particularly if anyone else has experienced this.ĮDIT 1700 AEST: I have just discovered I can download files to the root of the NTFS drives, but as soon as I select a sub-directory the download doesn’t happen. So I believe the issue seems narrowed down to Google-Chrome and NTFS, on Fedora. I have this same Chrome version on my other laptop that is still running Ubuntu and I’m able to download to the same external drives without issue. I’m using Google-Chrome version 1.64 (Official Build) (64-bit) installed using DNF from what I believe is the Google-Chrome repository enabled in f36. Chrome will only download files to my Fedora Home directory and also works to my exFAT USB drive. It opens the gnome file manager for a folder, and I select one on an NTFS drive, but then nothing happens after the file manager window closes.įirefox will download to the NTFS drives perfectly and I can read/write to them from all my other installed apps. Unfortunately I’m finding that Google Chrome doesn’t download files if the destination is a mounted internal NTFS partition, or if an external NTFS drive. I’m a new user to Fedora (Fedora 36), coming from Ubuntu 20.04. Learn how to fix file download errors.My first post. To move a downloaded file, in the Download tray, click the file and drag it to the target location. You can drag a downloaded file to another folder, program or website.To view all downloads if the Download tray isn't present to the right of the address bar, click More Downloads.Recently downloaded files will appear to the right of the address bar. If you download a file, or if you've recently downloaded a file, the Download tray will appear.To show extra actions like Show in folder, point to the filename.You can also click the file to open it.Once the download completes, the Download tray opens. When you begin a download, a Download in progress icon appears at the top right next to the address bar.If you're not sure about the contents of the download, click Discard. If asked, choose where you want to save the file, then click Save.Web pages: At the top right, click More More tools Save page as.PDFs: Right-click on the file and choose Save link as. ![]() If you can't do this action, the video's owner or hosting site has prevented downloads. Images: Right-click on the image and choose Save image as.You can also right-click on the file and choose Save as. ![]()
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