How do I disable Google Chrome extension autoupdate?
7 Answers
Solutions I've found for this:
1. Disabling a concrete extension update
That's what I wanted!
You can do this by editing the extension's manifest.json file:
On Windows:
C:\Users\<USERNAME>\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions\<EXTENSION-ID>\<VERSION>\manifest.json(find out the extension's ID by enabling Developer Mode in the extension settings page)On MacOS: Open
/Users/USERNAME/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Extensions/EXTENSION-ID/VERSION/manifest.jsonin a text editor.On Ubuntu for Chromium:
${HOME}/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences
In this file, set the "update_url" property to something invalid like "https://localhost" for example. For the given url, it makes auto-updating that extension as simply impossible.
Source: https://productforums.google.com/d/msg/chrome/l3zOZeO-5-M/Y7VaR0KCWNIJ
2. Disabling all Google Chrome extension updates
For any OS: Just type
chrome://plugins/at address bar and turn Google Update plugin off. Source: How to disable Google Chrome auto update?For Windows OS: Set Registry values:
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Google\Update]
"AutoUpdateCheckPeriodMinutes"=dword:00000000
"UpdateDefault"=dword:00000000
-
2
-
2for Chrome the file is
.config/google-chrome/Default/PreferencesMay 10, 2015 at 18:32 -
2to disable all at once, with chromium stopped I did this:
sed -r 's@(.*update_url.*)(clients2.google.com/service/update2/crx)(.*)@\1127.0.0.1\3@' ~/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences| grep update_url(the missing-ised option is intentional so you can backup everything and check it all before applying). May 10, 2015 at 18:35 -
2On MacOS 10.12.1 and Chrome 54.0.2840.98 I found the Preferences file at: HD/Users/$Username/Library/Application Support/Google/Chrome/Default/Preferences– gerbzDec 4, 2016 at 2:35
-
13Not sure if anyone else noticed... but your solution 2 is no more: “This site can’t be reached. The web page at
chrome://plugins/might be temporarily down or it may have moved permanently to a new web address.” Google (and now Mozilla too) are evidently on war against the user. The only remaining logical response is not using extensions and not using Chrome and Firefox until someone invents the web browser again. (One that doesn’t intentionally make users vulnerable to harm and exploits.) Feb 5, 2019 at 21:02
If the chrome extension is on Github (which many if not most of them are), you can simply:
(1.) clone the Github repo,
(2.) reset the head to the version that you want, and
(3.) enable Developer Mode at chrome://extensions/
(4.) select the "Load unpacked" option from chrome://extensions/, and then select the folder enclosing the source code for the extension.
I recently used this technique to downgrade my version of Reddit Link Opener, which no longer supports users who have opted out of using that site's redesign. This worked for me on MacOS, but should work on all platforms.
If the extension is loaded as an unpacked extension (in the manner described above), it will NOT auto-update to a newer version.
-
1Didn't work for me with the forked The Great Suspender (that's on GitHub) - chrome still auto-updated it for me. Feb 17, 2021 at 15:30
Disabling update for a specific extension:
This can be achieved with the system policies, (more details here)
For Linux :
- Get the installed extensions list (IDs), this can be found with
ls -l ~/.config/google-chrome/Default/Extensionsorchrome://extensions - Create the necessary directory if not present
mkdir -p /etc/opt/chrome/policies/managed(with root) - Create the needed file policies file
touch /etc/opt/chrome/policies/managed/google-chrome.json - Edit that file with the code bellow
- open the page
chrome://policy/and reload the policies
{
"ExtensionSettings": {
"ghijklmnopabcdefghijklmnopabcdef": {
"update_url": "https://127.0.0.1/update_url",
"override_update_url": true
},
"YOUR-EXTENSION-ID-LIKE-THE-PREVIOUS-EXAMPLE": {
"update_url": "https://127.0.0.1/update_url",
"override_update_url": true
}
}
}
Note: this can not be applied widely to all extensions in a single rule and also for each newly installed extension the file need to be updated
-
For Windows and macOS users, see support.google.com/chrome/a/answer/187202 for policy path and further instructions.– Arnie97Sep 21, 2022 at 7:33
Hi all those solitions for me have one disadvantage is that all extensions have no updates, I needed to stop only for one extension in this case and wanted al the other to keep making updates.
I think I found the solutuion for windows
Go to C:\Users\YOUR_NAME_HERE\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions\YOUR_FOLDER APP HERE\
In that folder app click in properties and select read only an aplly that to all subfolders and files... for now for me solved the problem !!!
Regards xichas
Just (re)install the extension via Load unpacked.
Let's suppose "Roboform Password Manager" extension version 8.6.5.5 dropped some important functionality, so you want to keep version 8.6.2.2 installed.
- Go to
chrome://extensions/ Enable Developer mode
Get the required version of the plugin:
If Chrome still got the version you need:
- Utilize Pack extension button on the plugin details page.
- Just copy the extension folder, e.g.
C:\Users\%USERNAME%\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Extensions\pnlccmojcmeohlpggmfnbbiapkmbliob. The extension id is visible in the url bar, on the plugin details page, e.g.chrome://extensions/?id=pnlccmojcmeohlpggmfnbbiapkmbliob.
If the version you need was overwritten already:
- Get appropriate ".crx" from some extensions archive
- Look for ".crx" in "C:\Program Files\..." (applications/installers sometimes bundle original ".crx" versions, unaffected by any updates)
Unzip (e.g. with 7-zip) your ".crx" (or paste the extension folder contents) to a non-temporary folder - you would have to keep those files in place until you uninstall the extension.
Click Load unpacked, select that folder.
If you just drag&drop the ".crx" file, Chrome extension details would show Source=Chrome Web Store, and it would get updated as soon as you click Update extensions now. But for an unpacked extension, you get a special "Unpacked extension" overlay icon, Source=Unpacked extension and it won't get updated.
Just tested on Chrome 79.0.3945.88 (64-bit), Windows.
Now, Chrome shows "Disable developer mode extensions" popup on each startup. Personally, I just manually dismiss them each time. I do not re-start Chrome too often.
-
It didn't work for me, they still auto-update. Tested in Chromium 71.0.3578.98, Ubuntu Aug 26, 2020 at 20:00
-
1@AlejandroGarcia, sorry for the delay. Still works for me in Chrome 89.0.4389.90 though. Was there a "unpacked extension" overlay icon shown in your case, at least?– IgorApr 17, 2021 at 15:12
-
-
1@AlejandroGarcia, is there a chance that you just left the "Developer Mode" at some point? The answers 1 and 2 seem to confirm that unpacked extension should not get auto-updated, normally (only reloaded from the same local folder). They also note the "pinned extension id" case (but if you're using that, you should probably know its effects better than me). Sorry, I'm not sure about further details.– IgorApr 20, 2021 at 20:55
-
Weird.. I did it again and now they don't update anymore, guess your answeer still works! Jun 20, 2021 at 20:14
this is a complementary answer to the accepted one https://stackoverflow.com/a/27657703/1422630 , allowing disable all at once on chromium
this is also only for linux (may be run on windows thru cygwin tho, not tested..)
this script will
- backup the prefs file,
- modify it,
- if didnt succeed will output "FAILED"
- show the differences using meld if installed
#!/bin/bash
set -ue
strPref="$HOME/.config/chromium/Default/Preferences"
cat "$strPref" |egrep "\"update_url[^,]*," -o |sort -u
read -p "existing unique urls above..." -n 1
strBkp="${strPref}.`date +"%Y%m%d%H%M%S"`.bkp"
if cp -v "$strPref" "$strBkp";then
strUpdUrl="clients2.google.com/service/update2/crx" #change this if needed #TODO should match any URL...
sed -i -r "s@(update_url\":\"https{,1}://)(${strUpdUrl})@\1127.0.0.1@g" "$strPref"
if grep "$strUpdUrl" "$strPref";then echo FAILED >&2;exit 1;fi
cmdDiff=colordiff
if which meld;then cmdDiff=meld;fi
#$cmdDiff <(cat "$strPref" |egrep "\"update_url[^,]*," -o) <(cat "$strBkp" |egrep "\"update_url[^,]*," -o)
$cmdDiff <(cat "$strPref" |sed -r 's@","@",\n"@g') <(cat "$strBkp" |sed -r 's@","@",\n"@g')
fi
tested on chromium: Version 63.0.3239.84 (Official Build) Built on Ubuntu , running on Ubuntu 16.04 (64-bit)
obs.: that script also works for google-chrome, just change the preferences file path
After updating Google Chrome to v60, no solution found on the Internet has helped me
So i just blocked IP addresses, used for updating, by doing following steps:
- Opened Chrome with blank browser tab
- Waited, until extension autoupdate begins, by looking on to network tab in Resource Monitor
- Wrote out all the IP addresses with high download rate. My IP address list was:
64.233.161.94
64.233.161.102
64.233.163.95
74.125.238.132
108.177.14.138
173.194.73.132
173.194.222.102
216.58.209.110
216.58.209.97
173.194.222.99
173.194.32.227
173.194.113.172
173.194.32.224
195.216.237.77
74.125.232.170
143.215.130.61
74.125.238.147
173.194.122.137
173.194.44.66
173.194.44.67
173.194.44.95
173.194.122.136
74.125.232.183
74.125.232.171
- Created outbound rule for chrome.exe in Windows Firewall and added listed IP addresses to blocklist
After I enabled this rule, chrome was unable to update my extensions.