Chrome wont download multiple files at the same time






















In this case, you will have to download the files individually. You would have the opportunity to download individual files on the "Thank you for downloading" page after completing your download.

Files larger than 1 GB may take much longer to download and might not download correctly. You might not be able to pause the active downloads or resume downloads that have failed. For an updated version of these redistributable packages, see KB Details Note: There are multiple files available for this download. Once you click on the "Download" button, you will be prompted to select the files you need. File Name:. Date Published:.

File Size:. System Requirements Supported Operating System. If this is true - the votes should be -ve. I agree, this is not a good answer, because aria2 cannot do web or ftp mirroring like wget or lftp. Don't forget -s to specify the number of splits, and -k to specify the minimum size per split segment - otherwise you might never reach the -x max connections.

Stephen this is to download very large files much faster from websites by using multiple sockets to the server instead of one. This is not mean for scraping a website. Show 2 more comments. Wget does not support multiple socket connections in order to speed up download of files. I think we can do a bit better than gmarian answer. Olivier Pons Thanks for elaborating on the parameters, Nick.

The option -s alone no longer split a file from a single server since the 1. One needs to use --max-connection-per-server together to force establish multiple connections. See aria2 documentation: About the number of connections Since 1. So whatever value you specify using -s option, it uses 1 connection per host. To make it behave like 1. The shorthand of SamuelLi's update is aria2c -x 4 -k 1M url and worked well for me a server with a limit of k per connection let me download at k with said parameters — EkriirkE.

Critically, aria2 does not support recursive HTTP downloads, making it a substandard replacement for wget if -r is desired. Show 1 more comment. Since GNU parallel was not mentioned yet, let me give another way: cat url. Nikolay Shmyrev Nikolay Shmyrev That's interesting approach.

Not really applicable when you need to download a huge file and you get limited speed per connection, but can be useful when downloading multiple files. Running this command would run the list 8 times, no? I did it the same way and instead of processing each line with 8 parallels, it just processes the whole list 8 times. No, it splits the list on 8 jobs — Nikolay Shmyrev. Okay, I'm definitely doing something weird. Will figure it out. Thanks for the quick response.

That's a useless use of cat , though. In this limited context, it's quite harmless, but maybe you don't want to perpetrate this antipattern. Show 3 more comments. I found probably a solution In the process of downloading a few thousand log files from one server to the next I suddenly had the need to do some serious multithreaded downloading in BSD, preferably with Wget as that was the simplest way I could think of handling this.

But doesn't that download the whole set of artifacts for each process? KaiMattern: add the -nc option: "no clobber" - it causes wget to ignore aready downloaded even partially files. I had a list of images I needed to download, and this worked for me as well: wget -i list. Anything you save to it or drag to it will automatically get uploaded to Drive, and the local folder and the Drive folder will always be identical.

Google's official Backup and Sync program makes it super-simple to move files back and forth between Drive and a Windows or Mac computer. And finally, if you want to get really geeky, you can actually use an FTP program to sign into your Drive account and then drag and drop things directly between it and your computer without any annoying interfaces or unnecessary time-wasters.

If that sounds too complicated or confusing for you, then it's probably not something you need. But if you use FTP in other parts of your life and find the possibility alluring, the specific program you'll want to grab to make it happen is a free and open-source FTP client called Cyberduck.

It's available for both Windows and Mac and there's really no need for it on Chrome OS, since the same basic capability is built directly into the system file manager on that platform. Once you've installed the program, click the Open Connection button, select "Google Drive" from the dropdown menu at the top of the connection box, then click Connect. A page will pop up in your browser prompting you to allow the app access to your Drive storage, after which you'll be given a special code that you'll need to copy and paste back into a prompt that'll be waiting for you in the app.

After you've done that, you'll have a file-system-like view of your Drive storage right in front of you — and you can drag and drop anything from your computer into it or anything from it into a local computer folder. As an extra-geeky bonus, Cyberduck can do the same thing with both Dropbox and OneDrive as well, in case you have any need to connect to either of those services.

I don't know about you, but I tend to get a whole lot of Word files sent my way. And since I long ago sent Microsoft's Office apps a-packin' and switched over to Google Docs for all of my own writing, I usually end up dragging those files into the Drive website to open 'em and do whatever's needed within my preferred environment. For years, Drive relied on a Chrome-connected system called Office Compatibility Mode to make that possible. It's a stripped-down interface where you can view and perform basic edits on Office files but where most advanced word processing features — including commenting — are missing in action.

And quite honestly, it's kind of irritating to use. There's actually a much better option, though — one you'd probably never know existed if you've been using Drive for long enough to have that Compatibility Mode system in place. So here it is: Since mid, Drive has supported native Microsoft Office file editing within the standard, fully featured Google Docs interface and without any conversions or stripped-down setups required.

If you're still seeing that old Compatibility Mode when dragging Office files into the Drive website, all you've gotta do is remove the Office Editing extension from your browser — by opening its Chrome Web Store page and clicking the Remove from Chrome button which will be present if the extension is installed — and then refresh the Drive website, if you already had it open.

The next time you drag an Office file into the site, Drive will automatically open it in an editor that looks and works exactly like the regular Docs editor, only with a blue ". DOCX" chip next to the file's name to let you know you're using the Word format. Just note that somewhat confusingly, you need to drag the file into the Drive website , not upload to the Docs website , for this to work.

Working with Office files in Drive is a delight — once you get everything set up correctly. The file will remain in its original format throughout any edits you make. So what would be the quickest way of increasing that number? Yes a loop is perfect in this case! I quickly tried making one but my browser limits the number of synchronous downloads. Some kind of timeout is needed which checks if the previous download succeeded before starting the next download.

I don't have time tonight to make a working script but if you are interested I will come back to it! Thank you very much man! I made a loop, and instead I used Safari which gets rid of that annoying multiple download limit!

Thanks very much. Ah nice to hear! No problem : — ToTheMax. Is there a possibility in javascript to define the file name before saving? Using the. The Overflow Blog. Who owns this outage?



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000