Firefox History
When I bring up Firefox, I have it set to restore all previously open tabs, but it didn't. Is there any way to restore the tabs I had open?
Opaite Mbohovái (18)
What do you have set here? see screenshot
That screen looks different from mine.
Wrong option for history. see screenshot Click settings to see the 2nd screenshot
Moambuepyre
You want to use Custom setting for history and then click on settings.
Ah! Okay. It is not checked.
See screenshot.
Then it should look like this. see screenshot
Okay, I did that.
Open a bunch of tabs, close the browser and reopen it and see what happens.
Firefox opened the tabs when I restarted it.
Mark it as resolved and get back to life. ;-))
But, my question was: how can I recover the tabs that were open before? Is there any way to retrieve them from history?
If the history is there, you use the "Recently Closed Tabs" option. see screenshot
When this problem first occurred, the Recently Closed Tabs option showed no tabs - even though there had been tabs open.
I just cleared my history and if your menu looked like this then the history was gone. see screenshot
Moambuepyre
I still have the older history. I just need the tabs that were open that should have reopened. How does Firefox know to reopen tabs? Is there a temporary cache I might access?
This may help you.
You will normally find these files in the sessionstore-backups folder:
- previous.jsonlz4 (cleanBackup: copy of sessionstore.jsonlz4 from previous session that was loaded successfully)
- recovery.jsonlz4 (latest version of sessionstore.jsonlz4 written during runtime)
- recovery.baklz4 (previous version of sessionstore.jsonlz4 written during runtime)
- upgrade.jsonlz4-<build_id> (backup created during an upgrade of Firefox)
You can copy a file from the sessionstore-backups folder to the main profile and rename the file to sessionstore.jsonlz4 to replace the current file with Firefox closed.
- make sure to backup the current sessionstore.jsonlz4
You can look at this tool to inspect a compressed sessionstore file.