# User Data Directory [TOC] ## Introduction The user data directory contains profile data such as history, bookmarks, and cookies, as well as other per-installation local state. Each [profile](https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/2364824) is a subdirectory (often `Default`) within the user data directory. ## Current Location To determine the user data directory for a running Chrome instance: 1. Navigate to `chrome://version` 2. Look for the `Profile Path` field. This gives the path to the profile directory. 3. The user data directory is the parent of the profile directory. Example (Windows): * [Profile Path] `C:\Users\Alice\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default` * [User Data Dir] `C:\Users\Alice\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data` ## Default Location The default location of the user data directory is computed by [`chrome::GetDefaultUserDataDirectory`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/chrome/common/chrome_paths_internal.h?q=GetDefaultUserDataDirectory). Generally it varies by * OS platform, * branding ([Chrome vs. Chromium](chromium_browser_vs_google_chrome.md), based on `is_chrome_branded` in [GN args](https://www.chromium.org/developers/gn-build-configuration)), and * [release channel](https://www.chromium.org/getting-involved/dev-channel) (stable / beta / dev / canary). ### Windows The default location is in the local app data folder: * [Chrome] `%LOCALAPPDATA%\Google\Chrome\User Data` * [Chrome Canary] `%LOCALAPPDATA%\Google\Chrome SxS\User Data` * [Chromium] `%LOCALAPPDATA%\Chromium\User Data` (The canary channel suffix is determined using [`InstallConstants::install_suffix`](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/chrome/install_static/install_constants.h?q=install_suffix).) ### Mac OS X The default location is in the `Application Support` folder: * [Chrome] `~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome` * [Chrome Canary] `~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome Canary` * [Chromium] `~/Library/Application Support/Chromium` (The canary channel suffix is determined using the `CrProductDirName` key in the browser app's `Info.plist`.) ### Linux The default location is in `~/.config`: * [Chrome Stable] `~/.config/google-chrome` * [Chrome Beta] `~/.config/google-chrome-beta` * [Chrome Dev] `~/.config/google-chrome-unstable` * [Chromium] `~/.config/chromium` (The beta and dev channel suffixes are determined from `$CHROME_VERSION_EXTRA`, which is passed by the [launch wrapper script](https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/chrome/installer/linux/common/wrapper?q=CHROME_VERSION_EXTRA).) The `~/.config` portion of the default location can be overridden by `$CHROME_CONFIG_HOME` (since M61) or by `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME`. Note that `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME` affects all applications conforming to the [XDG Base Directory Spec](https://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/basedir-spec-latest.html), while `$CHROME_CONFIG_HOME` is specific to Chrome and Chromium. ### Chrome OS The default location is: `/home/chronos` ### Android The default location comes from [Context.getDir](https://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/Context.html#getDir%28java.lang.String,%20int%29) and is specific to the app. Example: `/data/user/0/com.android.chrome/app_chrome` ### iOS The default location is inside the application support directory in the app sandbox. * [Chrome] `Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome` * [Chromium] `Library/Application Support/Chromium` ## Overriding the User Data Directory ### Command Line On all platforms, the user data directory can be overridden by passing the `--user-data-dir` command-line flag to the Chrome binary. Example: * [Windows] `chrome.exe --user-data-dir=c:\foo` * [Linux] `google-chrome --user-data-dir=/path/to/foo` ### Environment (Linux) On Linux, the user data directory can also be overridden with the `$CHROME_USER_DATA_DIR` environment variable. The `--user-data-dir` flag takes precedence if both are present. ### Chrome Remote Desktop sessions (Linux) A single Chrome instance cannot show windows on multiple X displays, and two running Chrome instances cannot share the same user data directory. Therefore, it's desirable for Chrome to have a separate user data directory when running inside a [Chrome Remote Desktop](https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/1649523) (CRD) virtual session on a Linux host. By default, CRD achieves this by setting `$CHROME_USER_DATA_DIR` in the session. Unfortunately this means that inside the session we don't get separate defaults for different channels (Stable, Beta, Dev) or for Chrome vs. Chromium. This can lead to profile version errors ("Your profile can not be used because it is from a newer version of Google Chrome"). Since M61, this can be solved by setting `$CHROME_CONFIG_HOME` instead of `$CHROME_USER_DATA_DIR`. Specifically, put the following in `~/.chrome-remote-desktop-session`: ``` export CHROME_CONFIG_HOME="$HOME/.config/chrome-remote-desktop/chrome-config" unset CHROME_USER_DATA_DIR . /etc/chrome-remote-desktop-session ``` Then restart the host by running: `/etc/init.d/chrome-remote-desktop restart` ### Writing an AppleScript wrapper (Mac OS X) On Mac OS X, you can create an application that runs Chrome with a custom `--user-data-dir`: 1. Open Applications > Utilities > Script Editor. 2. Enter: ``` set chrome to "\"/Applications/Google Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google Chrome\"" set userdatadir to "\"$HOME/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome Alt\"" do shell script chrome & " --user-data-dir=" & userdatadir & " > /dev/null 2>&1 &" ``` 3. Modify as needed for your installation path, Chrome versus Chromium, and desired user data directory. 4. Save the script in your Applications directory with the file format "Application". 5. Close the Script Editor, find your newly created application, and run it. This opens a Chrome instance pointing to your new profile. If you want, you can give this application the same icon as Chrome: 1. Select the Google Chrome application and choose File > Get Info. 2. Select the icon at the top left of the info dialog. You will see a blue highlight around the icon. 3. Press ⌘C to copy the icon. 4. Open the info dialog for the new application and select the icon in the top left. 5. Press ⌘V to paste the copied icon. ## User Cache Directory On Windows and ChromeOS, the user cache dir is the same as the profile dir. (The profile dir is inside the user data dir.) On Mac OS X and iOS, the user cache dir is derived from the profile dir as follows: 1. If `Library/Application Support` is an ancestor of the profile dir, the user cache dir is `Library/Caches` plus the relative path from `Application Support` to the profile dir. 2. Otherwise, the user cache dir is the same as the profile dir. Example (Mac OS X): * [user data dir] `~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome` * [profile dir] `~/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default` * [user cache dir] `~/Library/Caches/Google/Chrome/Default` On Linux, the user cache dir is derived from the profile dir as follows: 1. Determine the system config dir. This is `~/.config`, unless overridden by `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME`. (This step ignores `$CHROME_CONFIG_HOME`.) 2. Determine the system cache dir. This is `~/.cache`, unless overridden by `$XDG_CACHE_HOME`. 3. If the system config dir is an ancestor of the profile dir, the user cache dir is the system cache dir plus the relative path from the system config dir to the profile dir. 4. Otherwise, the user cache dir is the same as the profile dir. Example (Linux): * [user data dir] `~/.config/google-chrome` * [profile dir] `~/.config/google-chrome/Default` * [user cache dir] `~/.cache/google-chrome/Default` On Android, the user cache directory comes from [Context.getCacheDir](https://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/Context.html#getCacheDir%28%29).