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I'd like to have an html file that organizes certain files scattered throughout my hard drive. For example, I have two files that I would link to:

  • C:\Programs\sort.mw
  • C:\Videos\lecture.mp4

The problem is that I'd like the links to function as a shortcut to the file. I've tried the following:

<a href="C:\Programs\sort.mw">Link 1</a>
<a href="C:\Videos\lecture.mp4">Link 2</a>

... but the first link does nothing and the second link opens the file in Chrome, not VLC.

My questions are:

  1. Is there a way to adjust my HTML to treat the links as shortcuts to the files?

  2. If there isn't a way to adjust the HTML, are there any other ways to neatly link to files scattered throughout the hard drive?

My computer runs Windows 7 and my web browser is Chrome.

5 Answers 5

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You need to use the file:/// protocol (yes, that's three slashes) if you want to link to local files.

<a href="file:///C:\Programs\sort.mw">Link 1</a>
<a href="file:///C:\Videos\lecture.mp4">Link 2</a>

These will never open the file in your local applications automatically. That's for security reasons which I'll cover in the last section. If it opens, it will only ever open in the browser. If your browser can display the file, it will, otherwise it will probably ask you if you want to download the file.

You cannot cross from http(s) to the file protocol

Modern versions of many browsers (e.g. Firefox and Chrome) will refuse to cross from the http(s) protocol to the file protocol to prevent malicious behaviour.

This means a webpage hosted on a website somewhere will never be able to link to files on your hard drive. You'll need to open your webpage locally using the file protocol if you want to do this stuff at all.

Why does it get stuck without file:///?

The first part of a URL is the protocol. A protocol is a few letters, then a colon and two slashes. HTTP:// and FTP:// are valid protocols; C:/ isn't and I'm pretty sure it doesn't even properly resemble one.

C:/ also isn't a valid web address. The browser could assume it's meant to be http://c/ with a blank port specified, but that's going to fail.

Your browser may not assume it's referring to a local file. It has little reason to make that assumption because webpages generally don't try to link to peoples' local files.

So if you want to access local files: tell it to use the file protocol.

Why three slashes?

Because it's part of the File URI scheme. You have the option of specifying a host after the first two slashes. If you skip specifying a host it will just assume you're referring to a file on your own PC. This means file:///C:/etc is a shortcut for file://localhost/C:/etc.

These files will still open in your browser and that is good

Your browser will respond to these files the same way they'd respond to the same file anywhere on the internet. These files will not open in your default file handler (e.g. MS Word or VLC Media Player), and you will not be able to do anything like ask File Explorer to open the file's location.

This is an extremely good thing for your security.

Sites in your browser cannot interact with your operating system very well. If a good site could tell your machine to open lecture.mp4 in VLC.exe, a malicious site could tell it to open virus.bat in CMD.exe. Or it could just tell your machine to run a few Uninstall.exe files or open File Explorer a million times.

This may not be convenient for you, but HTML and browser security weren't really designed for what you're doing. If you want to be able to open lecture.mp4 in VLC.exe consider writing a desktop application instead.

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  • 1
    Thanks Jonathan. Do you know if there's a way to "show file in folder" as an alternative? Commented Aug 15, 2013 at 4:38
  • 7
    @Brian Your browser can't interact with your OS in that way, and you should be extremely glad it cannot. Commented Aug 15, 2013 at 4:45
  • 34
    Seems like Chrome won't download local files using the file:/// protocol anyway (giving you a Not allowed to load local resource error)
    – Loupax
    Commented Mar 24, 2014 at 16:09
  • 2
    I want to give a link like this "file:///..\..\sort.mw" so that it goes back two folders and gets the file there. Because we are using the word file in dropbox. So is there any solution. Commented Oct 28, 2015 at 9:55
  • 5
    It might also worth mentioning you can not link from a website (e.g. local dev server) to a local file. forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=1730
    – nuala
    Commented Feb 20, 2016 at 23:30
15

If you are running IIS on your PC you can add the directory that you are trying to reach as a Virtual Directory. To do this you right-click on your Site in ISS and press "Add Virtual Directory". Name the virtual folder. Point the virtual folder to your folder location on your local PC. You also have to supply credentials that has privileges to access the specific folder eg. HOSTNAME\username and password. After that you can access the file in the virtual folder as any other file on your site.

http://sitename.com/virtual_folder_name/filename.fileextension

By the way, this also works with Chrome that otherwise does not accept the file-protocol file://

Hope this helps someone :)

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  • 1
    Thanks for answer! I've put file:/// before a path to a file however when I click on it happends nothing. I have to open it with Ctrl (in new tab). Why is it so? Commented Jul 30, 2015 at 9:30
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Janky at best

<a href="file://///server/folders/x/x/filename.ext">right click </a></td>

and then right click, select "copy location" option, and then paste into url.

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  • 3
    are we forced to right click? does a way exists to just left click on it?
    – Bando
    Commented Aug 8, 2019 at 9:13
  • 2
    Did you find a way to open local link by simply left clicking? Commented Dec 26, 2020 at 9:14
4

back to 2017:

use URL.createObjectURL( file ) to create local link to file system that user select;

don't forgot to free memory by using URL.revokeObjectURL()

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  • The file argument here requires an actual file object constructed inside the browser client's JS runtime, meaning we'd have to have uploaded it to the browser client already (via a file upload form control for example). The URL generated is a blob URL for downloading or referencing that copy stored in memory inside the browser client's JS runtime. That's not going to help in creating a link to a local file; it's a link to a copy stored in memory (that otherwise won't behave differently once we try to access it). Commented Jul 26, 2018 at 13:31
  • 1
    Exactly what I needed. Use File Input to select a file, then open it in a tab using createObjectURL.
    – Tony Lugg
    Commented May 22, 2020 at 22:53
0

I've a way and work like this:

<'a href="FOLDER_PATH" target="_explorer.exe">Link Text<'/a>
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  • That does not look like a valid target value, even in Internet Explorer. Commented Oct 13, 2016 at 11:06
  • IE ignores (invalid) target (above). Following works fine with IE10, 11: <a href="C:/tmp">Link to tmp on drive C.</a> Commented Nov 9, 2016 at 10:29
  • It work well for me, using IE and a network drive path like 'file://servername/path\to\folder' in place of FOLDER_PATH. If you omit 'target="_explorer.exe"' the folder opens in IE instead of explorer.exe and it looks pretty much like explorer.
    – JonP
    Commented Apr 7, 2017 at 13:24

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