Spyke
firefoxΒ·FirefoxbyTreczoks

Why does file:// not work?

I've got an HTML file on my phone, and would like to view it. But Firefox on Android has neither a menu entry "Open File", nor does using the file:// method work, nor is any app associated with the .html file extension.

BTW, Chrome suffers from the same problem. And it is not an issue with the file, it works when opened via the https:// method from my home server.

Why, oh why, can't I open a local file on Android?

View original on lemmy.world

I think it's android that won't let Firefox access the local files. Doesn't work with Fennec either

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Treczoksreply
lemmy.world

Of course I entered the full file path, not just the method. Firefox did not recognize "file" as a method, to start with.

5

You are right, it was triple slash, but it does not work anyway, as it already balks at "file".

2

The Android way to do this is to open the file from some sort of file browser app and select Firefox from the list of apps that registered for that file type. Unfortunately it looks like Firefox doesn't register itself for html files.

4

I was pretty irritated when I noticed that myself. I'm guessing that there's some form of attack or class of attacks that this is designed to avoid (e.g. IIRC a webpage opened from a file:// URL can have Javascript access files via file:// as well, and I imagine theoretically could upload them somewhere or something), but it sure is goddamn obnoxious.

My guess is that you can probably fire up a local HTTP server on your phone and view it via that. I don't think that Android phones set up a firewall by default, so have it listen on a loopback address, like 127.0.0.1.

Based on this, you can use a file manager to share the HTML file with Firefox.

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lemmy.ca

It's clunky, but I can open files in firefox by using a file browser app (I use x-plore), selecting 'open with', then selecting firefox. Sometimes it's not in the list, but there's a selector for what type of file (text, video, audio, '*'). '*' lists all the apps.

Sometimes stuff still refuses to open, but things like pdfs and html files usually work

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SatyrSackreply
lemmy.sdf.org

I can do this with Amaze File Manager, just not with any of the various Firefox forks that I have installed, no matter which option I choose under "Open As". Vanadium (a Chrome fork) was an option when I tried to open as a text file. Using a file named test.html that is saved in my Download directory, this was the URL in Vanadium:

content://com.amaze.filemanager/storage_root/storage/emulated/0/Download/test.html

1

Yes, I am well aware that filenames under android are horribly convoluted. From a certain viewpoint, they probably make sense.

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