We're calling on all EU-based Mozillians with iOS or iPadOS devices to help us monitor Apple’s new browser choice screens. Join the effort to hold Big Tech to account!

Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Can I access firefox bookmarks that are in Windows through Max OS X using bootcamp?

  • 2 replies
  • 1 has this problem
  • 12 views
  • Last reply by John99

more options

I have a dual boot mac running bootcamp running Mac OS X and Windows XP. My Windows portion crashed and I cannot recover it without a full install. However, I have several bookmarked pages in Firefox on the Windows side that I would really like to get. I cannot get to windows to properly export the bookmarks from Firefox. Question is: is there a file where bookmarks are kept that I can retrieve though a command line and save it to my MAC side.

I have a dual boot mac running bootcamp running Mac OS X and Windows XP. My Windows portion crashed and I cannot recover it without a full install. However, I have several bookmarked pages in Firefox on the Windows side that I would really like to get. I cannot get to windows to properly export the bookmarks from Firefox. Question is: is there a file where bookmarks are kept that I can retrieve though a command line and save it to my MAC side.

All Replies (2)

more options

¡Hola!

Firefox Sync should do the trick.

Please see How do I set up Sync on my computer?

Let us know if this solves your question.

¡Gracias!

more options

Yes I image it is trivially easy for you to do.

I do not use OS-X or bootcamp but do have multi boot systems.

You need to find the Firefox profile in Windows and then you need to look for either profiles.sqlite which is the bookmarks database, or the bookmarks backups folder which has backups you may restore.

Although not fully applicable look at

I may not be able to help with OX-X or bootcamp specifics but may be able to help with more general advice. (Or explain how to boot from and do it in Linux)