Mad apps download manager for chrome crashing
Collectives on Stack Overflow. Learn more. App crashes when enqueuing request to DownloadManager Ask Question. Asked 4 years, 5 months ago. Active 4 years, 5 months ago. Viewed 1k times. Here the error I get in the Android Monitor : java. SecurityException: Permission Denial: writing com. Improve this question. VictorGalisson VictorGalisson 7 7 silver badges 22 22 bronze badges. Please edit your question and post the entire manifest, in case you have those elements in the wrong spot.
If you are testing app in Marshmallow or Nougat, it's normal. You should grant permissions in Activity. CommonsWare I have edited the post with the entire manifest — VictorGalisson.
Your permissions should be outside the application tag in manifest — Alex. Show 1 more comment. Active Oldest Votes. First of grant permissions which you need. Improve this answer.
JavadKhan JavadKhan 6 6 silver badges 16 16 bronze badges. Add a comment. Sign up or log in Sign up using Google. Sign up using Facebook. This time, do the following: Close every tab except for the one that's displaying the error message.
Close other programs on your computer that are still open. If you're currently downloading a file in Chrome, pause the download. To do this, click the three vertical dots, select Downloads , and then click Pause on the download. Refresh the page by clicking the curved arrow icon in the upper-left corner. If the page loads as normal, it's likely that your computer ran out of available RAM and couldn't display the page.
Try keeping fewer tabs and other apps open while you're using Chrome. Restart Chrome. Check the Chrome task manager. Chrome's built-in task manager gives you information about all processing running within Google Chrome, including individual tabs and extensions. If any one tab or extension is consuming too many resources, you can end the process. Here's how: Click the three-dot menu at the top-right corner of Chrome. Select the More Tools menu.
Click Task manager. Click the Memory footprint column at the top of the task manager to show the most memory-consuming processes at the top of the list.
The "Browser" option will usually be taking up the most resources. If there's a tab or extension that has a much higher number than the rest, you can click it once and click End process to kill it. This should free up some memory. If something seems much higher than the other options, select it and click End process. Close the task manager and refresh the page. Remove unneeded extensions. If you found an extension taking up a lot of RAM or CPU power in the last step, or you've simply noticed that Chrome slows down or crashes when you use an extension, remove it.
Select the More tools menu. Click Extensions. To delete an extension you don't use, click Remove on the extension, and click Remove again to confirm. If there's an extension you're not sure you want to remove just yet, you can click its corresponding switch to temporarily deactivate it. If deactivating an extension prevents Chrome from crashing again, consider finding an alternative extension. If Chrome is crashing because there's a corrupt file in your browsing data, this should clear up the problem: Click the three-dot menu at the top-right and select History.
Select All time from the drop-down menu. Select all three options on the "Basic" tab. Click Clear data and wait for the data to be deleted. Then try using Chrome again. Check for malware in Chrome Windows only. Chrome has a built-in tool that will check your computer for malware. Here's how to use the tool: Click the three-dot menu at the top-right and select Settings. Click Advanced at the bottom.
Click Clean up computer under "Reset and clean up. If malware is found, click Remove when prompted to remove it. If there's a problem with how your PC or Mac's hardware works with Chrome, it may crash the browser. Make the following change to rule this out: Click the three-dot menu at the top-right and select Settings. Click the switch next to "Use hardware acceleration when available" to turn it off. It's near the bottom of the page.
If Chrome is still crashing, now would be a great time to save all of your open work and restart your computer. When it comes back up, restart Chrome and try using it again. If you're still running into trouble, continue to the next method. If you're still experiencing crashes, you can reset your Chrome settings.
This change your preferences back to the default options, disable all extensions, and clear your cache and cookies. It won't affect your history, passwords, or bookmarks, so don't worry! Here's how to reset: Click the three-dot menu at the top-right and select Settings. Click Restore settings to their original defaults at the bottom. Click Reset Settings to confirm. This should clear up any remaining issues. Hopefully you're all set by now, but there's still one last thing to try.
If Chrome is still crashing, you can uninstall it and then reinstall it. If there are issues of corruption, this should clear them up. Windows: Press the Windows key and click Settings or the gear on the menu. Click Apps. Click Google Chrome and select Uninstall. Click Uninstall. If you want to delete your browsing data and bookmarks, you can check the "Also delete your browsing data" option as well.
This isn't mandatory, but could help you resolve the issue.
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