Dropbox context menu missing in OS X
Problem
My Dropbox context menu is missing in OS X Snow Leopard (10.6.8). While the Dropbox service runs normally, Finder doesn't show the icons and also doesn't give me the ability to browse files on the website or copy the public link.
What I've tried
- Removed
~/.dropbox
and~/Dropbox/.dropbox.cache
- Reinstalled Dropbox.app (both 1.4.7 stable and 1.5.0 experimental), went through the setup again
- Restarted Finder
- Logged out and back in
- Removed
/Library/DropboxHelperTools
entirely, upon which the installer required me to enter the password and recreated the folder
Manually run
/Library/DropboxHelperTools/DropboxHelperInstaller
, results in this console output (also withsudo
):
<pid>28642</pid>
usage
<failure> 22
I know now that Dropbox hacks the Finder to insert these icons and context menu items, based on the
FinderLoadBundle
architecture (similar to this), but manually running the executables insideFinderLoadBundle.tgz
under Dropbox.app » Contents » Resources doesn't do anything either.
All of these I've done over and over again, in random permutations.
I've made sure that
- Dropbox appears in the Login Items under my Account (and I've never touched that)
Folder Actions Setup is enabled under Keyboard Shortcuts » Services.- Everything works fine on a newly created user account.
In any case, I can't get the icons or the menu to appear.
macos finder dropbox context-menu
add a comment |
Problem
My Dropbox context menu is missing in OS X Snow Leopard (10.6.8). While the Dropbox service runs normally, Finder doesn't show the icons and also doesn't give me the ability to browse files on the website or copy the public link.
What I've tried
- Removed
~/.dropbox
and~/Dropbox/.dropbox.cache
- Reinstalled Dropbox.app (both 1.4.7 stable and 1.5.0 experimental), went through the setup again
- Restarted Finder
- Logged out and back in
- Removed
/Library/DropboxHelperTools
entirely, upon which the installer required me to enter the password and recreated the folder
Manually run
/Library/DropboxHelperTools/DropboxHelperInstaller
, results in this console output (also withsudo
):
<pid>28642</pid>
usage
<failure> 22
I know now that Dropbox hacks the Finder to insert these icons and context menu items, based on the
FinderLoadBundle
architecture (similar to this), but manually running the executables insideFinderLoadBundle.tgz
under Dropbox.app » Contents » Resources doesn't do anything either.
All of these I've done over and over again, in random permutations.
I've made sure that
- Dropbox appears in the Login Items under my Account (and I've never touched that)
Folder Actions Setup is enabled under Keyboard Shortcuts » Services.- Everything works fine on a newly created user account.
In any case, I can't get the icons or the menu to appear.
macos finder dropbox context-menu
No problem, hope someones comes along with a proper answer.
– Hassan
Jun 9 '12 at 22:27
If you create a new account on your Mac and log into that, can you get it working there?
– Spiff
Jun 10 '12 at 0:51
Unfortunately, yes, @Spiff. I have no idea what I did to Finder though that makes it refuse to add these icons.
– slhck
Jun 10 '12 at 7:08
add a comment |
Problem
My Dropbox context menu is missing in OS X Snow Leopard (10.6.8). While the Dropbox service runs normally, Finder doesn't show the icons and also doesn't give me the ability to browse files on the website or copy the public link.
What I've tried
- Removed
~/.dropbox
and~/Dropbox/.dropbox.cache
- Reinstalled Dropbox.app (both 1.4.7 stable and 1.5.0 experimental), went through the setup again
- Restarted Finder
- Logged out and back in
- Removed
/Library/DropboxHelperTools
entirely, upon which the installer required me to enter the password and recreated the folder
Manually run
/Library/DropboxHelperTools/DropboxHelperInstaller
, results in this console output (also withsudo
):
<pid>28642</pid>
usage
<failure> 22
I know now that Dropbox hacks the Finder to insert these icons and context menu items, based on the
FinderLoadBundle
architecture (similar to this), but manually running the executables insideFinderLoadBundle.tgz
under Dropbox.app » Contents » Resources doesn't do anything either.
All of these I've done over and over again, in random permutations.
I've made sure that
- Dropbox appears in the Login Items under my Account (and I've never touched that)
Folder Actions Setup is enabled under Keyboard Shortcuts » Services.- Everything works fine on a newly created user account.
In any case, I can't get the icons or the menu to appear.
macos finder dropbox context-menu
Problem
My Dropbox context menu is missing in OS X Snow Leopard (10.6.8). While the Dropbox service runs normally, Finder doesn't show the icons and also doesn't give me the ability to browse files on the website or copy the public link.
What I've tried
- Removed
~/.dropbox
and~/Dropbox/.dropbox.cache
- Reinstalled Dropbox.app (both 1.4.7 stable and 1.5.0 experimental), went through the setup again
- Restarted Finder
- Logged out and back in
- Removed
/Library/DropboxHelperTools
entirely, upon which the installer required me to enter the password and recreated the folder
Manually run
/Library/DropboxHelperTools/DropboxHelperInstaller
, results in this console output (also withsudo
):
<pid>28642</pid>
usage
<failure> 22
I know now that Dropbox hacks the Finder to insert these icons and context menu items, based on the
FinderLoadBundle
architecture (similar to this), but manually running the executables insideFinderLoadBundle.tgz
under Dropbox.app » Contents » Resources doesn't do anything either.
All of these I've done over and over again, in random permutations.
I've made sure that
- Dropbox appears in the Login Items under my Account (and I've never touched that)
Folder Actions Setup is enabled under Keyboard Shortcuts » Services.- Everything works fine on a newly created user account.
In any case, I can't get the icons or the menu to appear.
macos finder dropbox context-menu
macos finder dropbox context-menu
edited Jun 10 '12 at 7:08
asked Jun 4 '12 at 9:09
slhck
159k47439463
159k47439463
No problem, hope someones comes along with a proper answer.
– Hassan
Jun 9 '12 at 22:27
If you create a new account on your Mac and log into that, can you get it working there?
– Spiff
Jun 10 '12 at 0:51
Unfortunately, yes, @Spiff. I have no idea what I did to Finder though that makes it refuse to add these icons.
– slhck
Jun 10 '12 at 7:08
add a comment |
No problem, hope someones comes along with a proper answer.
– Hassan
Jun 9 '12 at 22:27
If you create a new account on your Mac and log into that, can you get it working there?
– Spiff
Jun 10 '12 at 0:51
Unfortunately, yes, @Spiff. I have no idea what I did to Finder though that makes it refuse to add these icons.
– slhck
Jun 10 '12 at 7:08
No problem, hope someones comes along with a proper answer.
– Hassan
Jun 9 '12 at 22:27
No problem, hope someones comes along with a proper answer.
– Hassan
Jun 9 '12 at 22:27
If you create a new account on your Mac and log into that, can you get it working there?
– Spiff
Jun 10 '12 at 0:51
If you create a new account on your Mac and log into that, can you get it working there?
– Spiff
Jun 10 '12 at 0:51
Unfortunately, yes, @Spiff. I have no idea what I did to Finder though that makes it refuse to add these icons.
– slhck
Jun 10 '12 at 7:08
Unfortunately, yes, @Spiff. I have no idea what I did to Finder though that makes it refuse to add these icons.
– slhck
Jun 10 '12 at 7:08
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
In this thread, the person reported that Context menu is shown upon restarting the computer. can you please try that?
of course after install/reinstall :-).
You know what? That actually worked. I have no idea what service could have been related to this that would not have been restarted with a simple login/logout. It seems I just got used to not having to restart my computer every now and then like I used to do with Windows.
– slhck
Jun 16 '12 at 16:01
ya, i was also forgetting that a restart may be needed for such cases but recently i've installed some WiMAX modem drives that also required me to reboot :(. however, nice to know that it worked for you.
– HungryCoder
Jun 16 '12 at 17:27
add a comment |
Common fix to missing contextual menus in macOS: Confirm that the "Folder Actions Setup..." service is enabled in System Preferences.
System Preferences -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Services -> Files and Folders. Make sure "Folder Actions Setup..." is enabled. (This has worked since Mac OS X 10.6.8, tested again in macOS 10.13.6)
Original info source: https://forums.dropbox.com/topic.php?id=16490&replies=18#post-104122 (link is now broken)
NOTE: This step was already attempted by the OP, as indicated in their initial question. I'm including this answer anyway, since taking this initial first step is what instantly brought back my Dropbox contextual menu (and others). It could be a helpful first step for someone else missing their context menu, so I request my answer to be left in as a quick reference for future user queries.
add a comment |
I had the same problem and found that if I quit and restarted the Dropbox application it would work again.
I found that sometimes I would reboot/log out and in and it would work, other times a reboot/log out wouldn't help.
I just restarted the app and it worked, my options came back in finder.
– swt83
Sep 15 '14 at 16:42
add a comment |
Definitively, Dropbox was the problem. This work for my on Mac OSX Snow Leopard and Lion.
- Go to Preferences > Keyboard > Keyboard shortcuts
- Look for Services then Files and Folders
- Probably "Folder actions setup..." will be enable. Uncheck it, then close Preferences and force quit Finder
- To force quit Finder press Opt+Cmnd+Esc, select Finder then Relaunch
- Go again to Preferences and repeat steps 1 and 2, then check "Folder actions setup..." in order it be enable again.
- Close Preferences and Force quit Finder again.
Doesn't work any more on Mavericks to disable Dropbox ugly context menu:( Ho to disable it now?
– Dmitry
Nov 11 '13 at 14:34
It worked for me. I was able to get "Move to Dropbox" back.
– Azat
Jul 26 at 17:31
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
In this thread, the person reported that Context menu is shown upon restarting the computer. can you please try that?
of course after install/reinstall :-).
You know what? That actually worked. I have no idea what service could have been related to this that would not have been restarted with a simple login/logout. It seems I just got used to not having to restart my computer every now and then like I used to do with Windows.
– slhck
Jun 16 '12 at 16:01
ya, i was also forgetting that a restart may be needed for such cases but recently i've installed some WiMAX modem drives that also required me to reboot :(. however, nice to know that it worked for you.
– HungryCoder
Jun 16 '12 at 17:27
add a comment |
In this thread, the person reported that Context menu is shown upon restarting the computer. can you please try that?
of course after install/reinstall :-).
You know what? That actually worked. I have no idea what service could have been related to this that would not have been restarted with a simple login/logout. It seems I just got used to not having to restart my computer every now and then like I used to do with Windows.
– slhck
Jun 16 '12 at 16:01
ya, i was also forgetting that a restart may be needed for such cases but recently i've installed some WiMAX modem drives that also required me to reboot :(. however, nice to know that it worked for you.
– HungryCoder
Jun 16 '12 at 17:27
add a comment |
In this thread, the person reported that Context menu is shown upon restarting the computer. can you please try that?
of course after install/reinstall :-).
In this thread, the person reported that Context menu is shown upon restarting the computer. can you please try that?
of course after install/reinstall :-).
answered Jun 16 '12 at 6:58
HungryCoder
1916
1916
You know what? That actually worked. I have no idea what service could have been related to this that would not have been restarted with a simple login/logout. It seems I just got used to not having to restart my computer every now and then like I used to do with Windows.
– slhck
Jun 16 '12 at 16:01
ya, i was also forgetting that a restart may be needed for such cases but recently i've installed some WiMAX modem drives that also required me to reboot :(. however, nice to know that it worked for you.
– HungryCoder
Jun 16 '12 at 17:27
add a comment |
You know what? That actually worked. I have no idea what service could have been related to this that would not have been restarted with a simple login/logout. It seems I just got used to not having to restart my computer every now and then like I used to do with Windows.
– slhck
Jun 16 '12 at 16:01
ya, i was also forgetting that a restart may be needed for such cases but recently i've installed some WiMAX modem drives that also required me to reboot :(. however, nice to know that it worked for you.
– HungryCoder
Jun 16 '12 at 17:27
You know what? That actually worked. I have no idea what service could have been related to this that would not have been restarted with a simple login/logout. It seems I just got used to not having to restart my computer every now and then like I used to do with Windows.
– slhck
Jun 16 '12 at 16:01
You know what? That actually worked. I have no idea what service could have been related to this that would not have been restarted with a simple login/logout. It seems I just got used to not having to restart my computer every now and then like I used to do with Windows.
– slhck
Jun 16 '12 at 16:01
ya, i was also forgetting that a restart may be needed for such cases but recently i've installed some WiMAX modem drives that also required me to reboot :(. however, nice to know that it worked for you.
– HungryCoder
Jun 16 '12 at 17:27
ya, i was also forgetting that a restart may be needed for such cases but recently i've installed some WiMAX modem drives that also required me to reboot :(. however, nice to know that it worked for you.
– HungryCoder
Jun 16 '12 at 17:27
add a comment |
Common fix to missing contextual menus in macOS: Confirm that the "Folder Actions Setup..." service is enabled in System Preferences.
System Preferences -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Services -> Files and Folders. Make sure "Folder Actions Setup..." is enabled. (This has worked since Mac OS X 10.6.8, tested again in macOS 10.13.6)
Original info source: https://forums.dropbox.com/topic.php?id=16490&replies=18#post-104122 (link is now broken)
NOTE: This step was already attempted by the OP, as indicated in their initial question. I'm including this answer anyway, since taking this initial first step is what instantly brought back my Dropbox contextual menu (and others). It could be a helpful first step for someone else missing their context menu, so I request my answer to be left in as a quick reference for future user queries.
add a comment |
Common fix to missing contextual menus in macOS: Confirm that the "Folder Actions Setup..." service is enabled in System Preferences.
System Preferences -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Services -> Files and Folders. Make sure "Folder Actions Setup..." is enabled. (This has worked since Mac OS X 10.6.8, tested again in macOS 10.13.6)
Original info source: https://forums.dropbox.com/topic.php?id=16490&replies=18#post-104122 (link is now broken)
NOTE: This step was already attempted by the OP, as indicated in their initial question. I'm including this answer anyway, since taking this initial first step is what instantly brought back my Dropbox contextual menu (and others). It could be a helpful first step for someone else missing their context menu, so I request my answer to be left in as a quick reference for future user queries.
add a comment |
Common fix to missing contextual menus in macOS: Confirm that the "Folder Actions Setup..." service is enabled in System Preferences.
System Preferences -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Services -> Files and Folders. Make sure "Folder Actions Setup..." is enabled. (This has worked since Mac OS X 10.6.8, tested again in macOS 10.13.6)
Original info source: https://forums.dropbox.com/topic.php?id=16490&replies=18#post-104122 (link is now broken)
NOTE: This step was already attempted by the OP, as indicated in their initial question. I'm including this answer anyway, since taking this initial first step is what instantly brought back my Dropbox contextual menu (and others). It could be a helpful first step for someone else missing their context menu, so I request my answer to be left in as a quick reference for future user queries.
Common fix to missing contextual menus in macOS: Confirm that the "Folder Actions Setup..." service is enabled in System Preferences.
System Preferences -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts -> Services -> Files and Folders. Make sure "Folder Actions Setup..." is enabled. (This has worked since Mac OS X 10.6.8, tested again in macOS 10.13.6)
Original info source: https://forums.dropbox.com/topic.php?id=16490&replies=18#post-104122 (link is now broken)
NOTE: This step was already attempted by the OP, as indicated in their initial question. I'm including this answer anyway, since taking this initial first step is what instantly brought back my Dropbox contextual menu (and others). It could be a helpful first step for someone else missing their context menu, so I request my answer to be left in as a quick reference for future user queries.
edited Dec 14 at 1:21
answered Nov 30 '12 at 1:07
Emeraldo
413
413
add a comment |
add a comment |
I had the same problem and found that if I quit and restarted the Dropbox application it would work again.
I found that sometimes I would reboot/log out and in and it would work, other times a reboot/log out wouldn't help.
I just restarted the app and it worked, my options came back in finder.
– swt83
Sep 15 '14 at 16:42
add a comment |
I had the same problem and found that if I quit and restarted the Dropbox application it would work again.
I found that sometimes I would reboot/log out and in and it would work, other times a reboot/log out wouldn't help.
I just restarted the app and it worked, my options came back in finder.
– swt83
Sep 15 '14 at 16:42
add a comment |
I had the same problem and found that if I quit and restarted the Dropbox application it would work again.
I found that sometimes I would reboot/log out and in and it would work, other times a reboot/log out wouldn't help.
I had the same problem and found that if I quit and restarted the Dropbox application it would work again.
I found that sometimes I would reboot/log out and in and it would work, other times a reboot/log out wouldn't help.
answered Feb 3 '13 at 23:21
user125026
211
211
I just restarted the app and it worked, my options came back in finder.
– swt83
Sep 15 '14 at 16:42
add a comment |
I just restarted the app and it worked, my options came back in finder.
– swt83
Sep 15 '14 at 16:42
I just restarted the app and it worked, my options came back in finder.
– swt83
Sep 15 '14 at 16:42
I just restarted the app and it worked, my options came back in finder.
– swt83
Sep 15 '14 at 16:42
add a comment |
Definitively, Dropbox was the problem. This work for my on Mac OSX Snow Leopard and Lion.
- Go to Preferences > Keyboard > Keyboard shortcuts
- Look for Services then Files and Folders
- Probably "Folder actions setup..." will be enable. Uncheck it, then close Preferences and force quit Finder
- To force quit Finder press Opt+Cmnd+Esc, select Finder then Relaunch
- Go again to Preferences and repeat steps 1 and 2, then check "Folder actions setup..." in order it be enable again.
- Close Preferences and Force quit Finder again.
Doesn't work any more on Mavericks to disable Dropbox ugly context menu:( Ho to disable it now?
– Dmitry
Nov 11 '13 at 14:34
It worked for me. I was able to get "Move to Dropbox" back.
– Azat
Jul 26 at 17:31
add a comment |
Definitively, Dropbox was the problem. This work for my on Mac OSX Snow Leopard and Lion.
- Go to Preferences > Keyboard > Keyboard shortcuts
- Look for Services then Files and Folders
- Probably "Folder actions setup..." will be enable. Uncheck it, then close Preferences and force quit Finder
- To force quit Finder press Opt+Cmnd+Esc, select Finder then Relaunch
- Go again to Preferences and repeat steps 1 and 2, then check "Folder actions setup..." in order it be enable again.
- Close Preferences and Force quit Finder again.
Doesn't work any more on Mavericks to disable Dropbox ugly context menu:( Ho to disable it now?
– Dmitry
Nov 11 '13 at 14:34
It worked for me. I was able to get "Move to Dropbox" back.
– Azat
Jul 26 at 17:31
add a comment |
Definitively, Dropbox was the problem. This work for my on Mac OSX Snow Leopard and Lion.
- Go to Preferences > Keyboard > Keyboard shortcuts
- Look for Services then Files and Folders
- Probably "Folder actions setup..." will be enable. Uncheck it, then close Preferences and force quit Finder
- To force quit Finder press Opt+Cmnd+Esc, select Finder then Relaunch
- Go again to Preferences and repeat steps 1 and 2, then check "Folder actions setup..." in order it be enable again.
- Close Preferences and Force quit Finder again.
Definitively, Dropbox was the problem. This work for my on Mac OSX Snow Leopard and Lion.
- Go to Preferences > Keyboard > Keyboard shortcuts
- Look for Services then Files and Folders
- Probably "Folder actions setup..." will be enable. Uncheck it, then close Preferences and force quit Finder
- To force quit Finder press Opt+Cmnd+Esc, select Finder then Relaunch
- Go again to Preferences and repeat steps 1 and 2, then check "Folder actions setup..." in order it be enable again.
- Close Preferences and Force quit Finder again.
edited Jun 20 '13 at 1:13
sblair
11.4k64068
11.4k64068
answered Jun 20 '13 at 0:06
Vicente
211
211
Doesn't work any more on Mavericks to disable Dropbox ugly context menu:( Ho to disable it now?
– Dmitry
Nov 11 '13 at 14:34
It worked for me. I was able to get "Move to Dropbox" back.
– Azat
Jul 26 at 17:31
add a comment |
Doesn't work any more on Mavericks to disable Dropbox ugly context menu:( Ho to disable it now?
– Dmitry
Nov 11 '13 at 14:34
It worked for me. I was able to get "Move to Dropbox" back.
– Azat
Jul 26 at 17:31
Doesn't work any more on Mavericks to disable Dropbox ugly context menu:( Ho to disable it now?
– Dmitry
Nov 11 '13 at 14:34
Doesn't work any more on Mavericks to disable Dropbox ugly context menu:( Ho to disable it now?
– Dmitry
Nov 11 '13 at 14:34
It worked for me. I was able to get "Move to Dropbox" back.
– Azat
Jul 26 at 17:31
It worked for me. I was able to get "Move to Dropbox" back.
– Azat
Jul 26 at 17:31
add a comment |
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No problem, hope someones comes along with a proper answer.
– Hassan
Jun 9 '12 at 22:27
If you create a new account on your Mac and log into that, can you get it working there?
– Spiff
Jun 10 '12 at 0:51
Unfortunately, yes, @Spiff. I have no idea what I did to Finder though that makes it refuse to add these icons.
– slhck
Jun 10 '12 at 7:08