32

I want to export a few items from my localStorage to save it externally but in a format so that I can import it again later.

My attempt was to write executable code that can be pasted later in a textarea. Then the value of that textare will simply be eval()ed.

Problem: The data stored in localStorage were stored as

var data = [];
data.push('sampledata');
data.push({sample: 'object'});
localStorage.setItem('varname',data);

So it contains various chars I don't like, like ', " etc

My (not working) solution so far was:

var container = $('#localDataContainer');
container.append('localStorage.setItem("cockpitLastVisited","' + localStorage.getItem("cockpitLastVisited") + '");<br/>');
container.append('localStorage.setItem("cockpit_services","' + localStorage.getItem("cockpit_services") + '");<br/>');
container.append('localStorage.setItem("cockpit_users","' + localStorage.getItem("cockpit_users") + '");');

If my attempt seems to be OK, what is the best way to create code that can then be executed the way it is?

1
  • just in case someone needs a chrome extension solution: try StorageAce
    – CodeZila
    May 28 at 12:58

5 Answers 5

71

Here's how to import/export your entire localStorage

Export

copy(JSON.stringify(localStorage));

This will copy your localStorage to your clipboard. (You need two JSON.stringify()'s to get the quotes escaped.)

Import

var data = JSON.parse(/*paste stringified JSON from clipboard*/);
Object.keys(data).forEach(function (k) {
  localStorage.setItem(k, JSON.stringify(data[k]));
});
3
  • 1
    For importing we need two JSON.parse() as well
    – stckvrw
    Mar 28, 2016 at 8:14
  • 1
    Hm, shouldn't that be: localStorage.setItem(k, JSON.stringify(data[k])) so that the data goes back into local storage as strings?
    – EFC
    Feb 6, 2019 at 18:29
  • 1
    @EFC Using JSON.stringly can cause trouble by adding unwanted quotes.
    – Tomer
    Jan 10, 2022 at 18:12
27

Just an improved version of Jeremy. To simplify the process

copy('var data = '+JSON.stringify(localStorage)+';Object.keys(data).forEach(function (k){localStorage.setItem(k, data[k]);});');

Run this in console where you need to export, it copies localstorage content along with code to clipboard and just paste it in the console where you want to import.

0
13

You can encode Objects into Strings using JSON.stringify (object to String) and decode Strings into Objects using JSON.parse (String to Object).

Write to localStorage

localStorage.setItem("varname",JSON.stringify(originalVarname));

Read from localStorage

var originalVarname= JSON.parse(localStorage.getItem("varname"));
0
13

Export

copy(JSON.stringify(JSON.stringify(localStorage)));

Import

var data = JSON.parse(/*previously copied stringified JSON from clipboard*/);
Object.keys(data).forEach(function (k) {
  localStorage.setItem(k, data[k]);
});
1
  • I needed to stringify twice as above. One time stringification did not work for me.
    – oyalhi
    Apr 8, 2021 at 19:06
4

Just a modernized version of @iceLord answer.

Just run this in the console, it will put the code to restore the localStorage back into your clipboard.

copy(`Object.entries(${JSON.stringify(localStorage)})
.forEach(([k,v])=>localStorage.setItem(k,v))`)

Bookmarklet version

javascript:prompt(`localStorage from ${location.host}${new Date().toLocaleString()}`, `/* localStorage from ${location.host}${new Date().toLocaleString()}*/Object.entries(  ${JSON.stringify(localStorage)}).forEach(([k,v])=>localStorage.setItem(k,v))`)

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