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I'm not sure in which languages those extensions are, I think the are written in Html, Javascript or JSON. As far as I know they are "compressed" in a .CRX file.

It is possible to directly modify the html, js, json of a Chrome Extension (or whatever language they use)?

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  • I wasted a lot of time trying to figure this out and I tried many of the approaches listed here. If you are on a Mac and unzipping does not work, download and try Keka. It is a free Mac utility based on 7-Zip. There is no need to rename the CRX file. Open the app and then drop your CRX file on it. It will extract the contents to a folder. keka.io
    – Trevor
    Aug 1, 2020 at 23:01

10 Answers 10

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Installed Chrome extension directories are listed below:

  1. Copy the folder of the extension you wish to modify. ( Named according to the extension ID, to find the ID of the extension, go to chrome://extensions/). Once copied, you have to remove the _metadata folder.

  2. From chrome://extensions in Developer mode select Load unpacked extension... and select your copied extension folder, if it contains a subfolder this is named by the version, select this version folder where there is a manifest file, this file is necessary for Chrome.

  3. Make your changes, then select reload and refresh the page for your extension to see your changes.


Chrome extension directories

Mac:

/Users/username/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Extensions

Windows 7:

C:\Users\username\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions

Windows XP:

C:\Documents and Settings\YourUserName\Local Settings\Application Data\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default

Ubuntu 14.04:

~/.config/google-chrome/Default/Extensions/
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  • 3
    FYI, at least on Windows, the \Default directory in the extension location path points to the profile that the extension is installed for. If you using multiple profiles in Chrome \Default is the default profile and \Profile1 is the 1st additional profile created. Feb 11, 2013 at 15:44
  • 2
    Check out this chrome extension to quickly access extension's source code: chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/extension-source-locator/…
    – Shaihi
    Feb 11, 2013 at 22:58
  • @Shaihi I'm guessing that it's your extension. There are a few problems with it — most importantly is that it hijacks the new tab — also, it returns null for the username so the copied path doesn't work — I'm on OS X — cool idea though, it just needs a little work. Oh and also, the slash between Extensions and the extension id is missing.
    – JDavis
    Feb 12, 2013 at 2:48
  • @JDavis - thanks for the input! It is mine... Fixed the slash - haven't tested Mac yet :s As for hijacking the new tab - I was thinking it will save some clicks, but once I'll get some input I'll consider changing it.
    – Shaihi
    Feb 12, 2013 at 7:51
  • 1
    Where do we copy the extension folder to? I copied it to another location and when I tried to "Load unpacked extensions...", I got "Error Loading Extension"..."Manifest file is missing or unreadable".
    – jbyrd
    Nov 11, 2015 at 5:16
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I searched it in Google and I found this:

The Google Chrome Extension file type is CRX. It is essentially a compression format. So if you want to see what is behind an extension, the scripts and the code, just change the file-type from “CRX” to “ZIP” .

Unzip the file and you will get all the info you need. This way you can see the guts, learn how to write an extension yourself, or modify it for your own needs.

Then you can pack it back up with Chrome’s internal tools which automatically create the file back into CRX. Installing it just requires a click.

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  • 15
    crx file has an additional header before zipped content developer.chrome.com/extensions/crx.html
    – se_pavel
    Mar 14, 2013 at 15:22
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    After unzipping the file becomes something.zip.cpgz?
    – f01
    Apr 28, 2016 at 3:50
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    Renaming the extension from crx to zip and clicking on it won't work. the unzip command will work even on crx extension.
    – iRonin
    May 19, 2016 at 6:59
  • 1
    In MacOS, CRX can not be extracted by changing the file-type from “CRX” to “ZIP” because when I try to extract that zip file it make another file FileName.zip.cpgz Jan 10, 2017 at 19:16
  • For anyone coming to this late: @iRonin had it correct. But you have to open terminal and do it from the command line: unzip /path/to/extension.crx
    – John Smith
    Jul 16, 2021 at 2:50
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A signed CRX file has a header that will cause most/all unzippers to barf. This is not the easiest way to go about it, but here's how to do it from a bash command line.

The basic idea is to find where the original unsigned zipfile begins, then copy the CRX file to a zip file but exclude the CRX header.

  1. hexdump -C the_extension.crx | more
  2. Look in the output for the start of the zip file, which are the ASCII bytes "PK". In the sample I tried, the PK was at offset 0x132. (From reading the CRX spec, I think this number will vary from file to file because of different signature lengths.) That number is what we'll use in the next step.
  3. dd if=the_extension.crx of=the_extension.zip bs=1 skip=0x132 (For the skip parameter, substitute the offset you found in the previous step.)
  4. Now unzip the .zip that you just created.
  5. Fiddle with the files in the unzipped directory, then either install the unsigned/unpacked extension into your Chrome installation, or else repackage it just as you would any other Chrome extension.

I'm sure that there is a more concise way to do this. Bash experts, please improve on my answer.

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  • 3
    Great hint! My PK offset was also 0x132 Aug 15, 2012 at 21:37
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    I was actually able to unzip it with the command line utility unzip. It complained about the additional 306 bytes of the header, but did it anyway.
    – Lexi
    Sep 12, 2012 at 20:04
  • 2
    unzip works perfectly: warning [YouTubeCenter.crx]: 304 extra bytes at beginning or within zipfile (attempting to process anyway)
    – Navin
    Apr 27, 2016 at 9:13
  • how do you figure out the offset for hexdump? I have the following line that contains pk 00000230 63 d5 11 76 bf 9f 50 4b 03 04 14 00 08 08 08 00 |c..v..PK........|
    – kchoi
    Aug 29, 2016 at 8:22
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    I dunno if I qualify as a "Bash expert" but this works for me: webext="Downloads/Extension_v0.1.crx" dd if="$webext" of="${webext%.crx}.zip" bs=1 skip=$(hexdump "$webext" | awk '/50 4b/{a=$1; for(i=2;i<=NF;i++){if($i=="50" && $(i+1)=="4b"){print "0x"substr(a,0,6)i-2;exit}}}')
    – miken32
    Aug 23, 2017 at 20:49
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Note that some zip programs have trouble unzipping a CRX like sathish described - if this is the case, try using 7-Zip - http://www.7-zip.org/

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    Woah! at least on vista you don't even have to change the file extension, 7-zip just goes to town on that bad boy!
    – JKirchartz
    Mar 18, 2011 at 18:44
  • Nope, it sure doesn't. I renamed .crx to.zip and 7-ZIP gives me an error that it can't open the ZIP.
    – Jez
    Sep 5, 2018 at 12:03
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I have read the other answers and found it important to note a few other things:

1.) For Mac users: When you click "Load unpacked extension...", the Library folder is by default hidden and (even if the Show Hidden files option is toggled on your Mac) it might not show up in Chrome's finder window.

2.) The sub folder containing the extension is a random alpha-numeric string named after the extension's ID, which can be found on Chrome's extension page if Developer flag is set to true. (Upper right hand checkbox on the extensions page)

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  • So what's the solution to #1? I'm already showing hidden folders but like you say, the directory is not visible when trying to select the location of the extension directory.
    – o_O
    Mar 18, 2016 at 3:43
  • @o_O - This has been a long time coming, but... here ya go: macworld.com/article/2057221/…
    – jenming
    Feb 15, 2017 at 20:07
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(Already said) I found this out while making some Chrome themes (which are long gone now... :-P)

Chrome themes, extensions, etc. are just compressed files. Get 7-zip or WinRar to unzip it. Each extension/theme has a manifest.json file. Open the manifest.json file in notepad. Then, if you know the coding, modify the code. There will be some other files. If you look in the manifest file you might be able to figure out what the are for. Then, you can change everything...

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.CRX files are like .ZIP files, just change the extension and right click > Extract Files and you are done.

Once you have extracted files --> modify them and add to zip and change extension back to .crx.

Other way around --> Open Chrome --> Settings --> Extensions --> Enable Developer Options --> Load unpacked Extension (modified extracted files folder) and then click pack extension.

Source

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Now Chrome is multi-user so Extensions should be nested under the OS user profile then the Chrome user profile, My first Chrome user was called Profile 1, my Extensions path was C:\Users\ username \AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\ Profile 1 \Extensions\.

To find yours Navigate to chrome://version/ (I use about: out of laziness).

Notice the Profile Path and just append \Extensions\ and you have yours.

Hope this brings this info on this question up to date more.

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It's possible to modify the code of .CRX extension, because it's a simple .zip archive. You can download extension, extract it's source code, modify it (test and debug it as it's on your side), and package back into .CRX file.

I googled out this tool to simply download .CRX extension and extract the source code and it worked for me: http://crxextractor.com

Everything it does is parses .CRX file format and extracts actual .zip containing the source code.

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If you have installed the Portable version of Chrome, or have it installed in a custom directory - the extensions won't be available in directory referenced in above answers.

Try right-clicking on Chrome's shortcut & Check the "Target" directory. From there, navigate to one directory above and you should be able to see the User Data folder and then can use the answers mentioned above

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