Reputation: 37590
I'm loading a html file hosted on the OS X built in Apache server, within that file I am linking to another html file in the same directory as follows:
<a href="2ndFile.html"><button type="submit">Local file</button>
This works. However (for reasons too lengthy to go into) I am experimenting using the file: scheme instead, however I cannot get anything to work. Here is how I am re-writing the above line using file:
<a href="file://192.168.1.57/~User/2ndFile.html"><button type="submit">Local file</button>
(192.168.1.57 is my current IP address)
Changing it to the following does also not work:
<a href="file://Name-Of-MacBookPro/~User/2ndFile.html"><button type="submit">Local file</button>
But the file cannot be found, how should it be specified using the file: scheme?
Upvotes: 72
Views: 324287
Reputation: 42959
The 'file' protocol is not a network protocol. Therefore file://192.168.1.57/~User/2ndFile.html simply does not make much sense.
Question is how you load the first file. Is that really done using a web server? Does not really sound like. If it is, then why not use the same protocol, most likely http? You cannot expect to simply switch the protocol and use two different protocols the same way...
I suspect the first file is not really loaded using an apache http server at all, but simply by opening the file? href="2ndFile.html" simply works because it uses a "relative url". This makes the browser use the same protocol and path as where he got the first (current) file from.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 45
For apache look up SymLink or you can solve via the OS with Symbolic Links or on linux set up a library link/etc
My answer is one method specifically to windows 10.
So my method involves mapping a network drive to U:/ (e.g. I use G:/ for Google Drive)
open cmd
and type hostname
(example result: LAPTOP-G666P000
, you could use your ip instead, but using a static hostname for identifying yourself makes more sense if your network stops)
Press Windows_key + E
> right click 'This PC'
> press N
(It's Map Network drive, NOT add a network location)
If you are right clicking the shortcut on the desktop you need to press N then enter
Fill out U:
or G:
or Z:
or whatever you want
Example Address: \\LAPTOP-G666P000\c$\Users\username\
Then you can use <a href="file:///u:/2ndFile.html"><button type="submit">Local file</button>
like in your question
related: You can also use this method for FTPs, and setup multiple drives for different relative paths on that same network.
related2: I have used http://localhost/c$
etc before on some WAMP/apache servers too before, you can use .htaccess
for control/security but I recommend to not do so on a live/production machine -- or any other symlink documentroot example you can google
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 41
I had similar issue before and in my case the file was in another machine so i have mapped network drive z to the folder location where my file is then i created a context in tomcat so in my web project i could access the HTML file via context
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2882
the "file://" url protocol can only be used to locate files in the file system of the local machine. since this html code is interpreted by a browser, the "local machine" is the machine that is running the browser.
if you are getting file not found errors, i suspect it is because the file is not found. however, it could also be a security limitation of the browser. some browsers will not let you reference a filesystem file from a non-filesystem html page. you could try using the file path from the command line on the machine running the browser to confirm that this is a browser limitation and not a legitimate missing file.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 333146
The file:
URL scheme refers to a file on the client machine. There is no hostname in the file:
scheme; you just provide the path of the file. So, the file on your local machine would be file:///~User/2ndFile.html
. Notice the three slashes; the hostname part of the URL is empty, so the slash at the beginning of the path immediately follows the double slash at the beginning of the URL. You will also need to expand the user's path; ~
does no expand in a file:
URL. So you would need file:///home/User/2ndFile.html
(on most Unixes), file:///Users/User/2ndFile.html
(on Mac OS X), or file:///C:/Users/User/2ndFile.html
(on Windows).
Many browsers, for security reasons, do not allow linking from a file that is loaded from a server to a local file. So, you may not be able to do this from a page loaded via HTTP; you may only be able to link to file:
URLs from other local pages.
Upvotes: 100