30

I have the following scenario:

Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial Xerus) machine with Firefox and Google Chrome installed, Chrome being my default browser.

I check these actions in the shell:

cat /usr/share/applications/defaults.list
cat /etc/mailcap
cat /.config/mimeapps.list
cat /.local/share/applications/mimeinfo.cache

x-www-browser-> chrome is launch
xdg-mime query default text/html
response:
google-chrome.desktop

And it does not appear Firefox by any side, always Chrome. This is fine. Also check:

Click on a desktop file file.html → Chrome is launched.

And now comes the strange behaviour. Say I run:

xdg-open "http://www.example.com"

For some strange reason, it always opens Firefox. What should I do?

Peter Mortensen
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mike
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  • What is meant by *"it does not appear Firefox by any side"*? A [machine translation](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Translate) masterpiece? – Peter Mortensen Oct 09 '22 at 20:16

3 Answers3

50

To set a default browser, make sure that a .desktop file exists for your preferred browser. I'll be setting Mozilla Iceweasel for this example:

ls /usr/share/applications/iceweasel.desktop

Output:

iceweasel.desktop

Assured you have the file, run:

xdg-settings set default-web-browser iceweasel.desktop

# Test that it works
xdg-open "http://example.com"

If you don't have a .desktop file:

I use the program surf, which doesn't have a .desktop file. To set this as your web browser, first create the file ~/.local/share/applications/surf.desktop with this following content:

[Desktop Entry]
Type=Application
Name=surf
Comment=Surf minimal web browser
Terminal=false
Exec=surf
Categories=Network;WebBrowser

While not all of this content is required, it helps categorize the file for any future use.

Set the default browser like normal:

xdg-settings set default-web-browser surf.desktop

And now you're good to go!

Peter Mortensen
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Nolan Akash
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    For me "xdg-settings get default-web-browser" returned "firefox.desktop" already. But running "xdg-settings set default-web-browser firefox.desktop" fixed my problem anyway. – user2707671 Jan 27 '19 at 22:47
  • I faced with same problem after adding Postman **.desktop** file following [their doc](https://learning.getpostman.com/docs/postman/launching_postman/installation_and_updates/#linux-installation) `xdg-settings get default-web-browser` returned proper value. Running @user2707671 advice to try to setup proper browser again fixed the problem – Pavlo Zhukov Apr 30 '19 at 20:31
  • I use Luuntu and still cannot fix this. `xdg-open` always open Firefox. – Minh Nghĩa Feb 18 '20 at 08:24
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    on kde, if set fails, try: https://askubuntu.com/questions/62182/how-do-i-change-the-default-browser-that-konsole-opens-urls-with#comment1584875_216342 – geekley Sep 01 '20 at 06:34
  • Also if you're on Ubuntu and your browser is packaged using a Snap, your application's desktop is _not_ named like `firefox.desktop` (as you see under `/snap/`), it's like `firefox_firefox.desktop` or `chromium_chromium.desktop`, as found under `/var/lib/snapd/desktop/applications/` – Inductiveload Dec 01 '22 at 14:14
9

text/html is for HTML files, i.e., if you open an HTML file then it would open in Google Chrome. For opening URLs, you need to have the x-scheme-handler/https and x-scheme-handler/http entries.

You can set that either with xdg-mime. For example, to set Google Chrome as the default browser for xdg-open:

xdg-mime default google-chrome.desktop x-scheme-handler/https
xdg-mime default google-chrome.desktop x-scheme-handler/http

Or you can add the following lines in file ~/.config/mimeapps.list:

x-scheme-handler/http=google-chrome.desktop
x-scheme-handler/https=google-chrome.desktop

The above commands basically insert these lines into that file.

Note: you should obviously have the google-chrome.desktop file under ~/.local/share/applications or the system-wide alternative location - /usr/share/applications.

For changing the default browser overall, you also have to use xdg-settings as shown by Nolan Akash. xdg-settings changes the value of $BROWSER, so another way to change it is to explicitly assign the program (not the .desktop file) to the $BROWSER environment variable and export it.

export BROWSER=google-chrome

You usually would want to keep this like in ~/.bashrc file (or the equivalent for the shell you use) or in the ~/.profile file and log out and log in to have the environment updated and available for other programs to see.

Peter Mortensen
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Just Khaithang
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-8

Just open the Chrome browser and set as the default browser.

Peter Mortensen
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mike
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