Where can I download old stable builds of Chromium from? [closed]
I've found a Website containing a lot of builds of Chromium but the folders are named after the build number (those numbers are not visibly connected to Chromium version numbers) and there is no information if the builds are developer, beta or stable builds.
Here is the link:
I would like to be able to chose from those folders only the stable builds of Chromium.
For example if I want a stable build of Chromium 35.0, how can I find it?
Thanks
Later edit: I need 64-bit binary releases for Windows 7
chromium
closed as off-topic by Máté Juhász, Pimp Juice IT, BillP3rd, Tim_Stewart, music2myear Feb 11 at 16:34
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question." – Máté Juhász, Pimp Juice IT, BillP3rd, Tim_Stewart, music2myear
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
I've found a Website containing a lot of builds of Chromium but the folders are named after the build number (those numbers are not visibly connected to Chromium version numbers) and there is no information if the builds are developer, beta or stable builds.
Here is the link:
I would like to be able to chose from those folders only the stable builds of Chromium.
For example if I want a stable build of Chromium 35.0, how can I find it?
Thanks
Later edit: I need 64-bit binary releases for Windows 7
chromium
closed as off-topic by Máté Juhász, Pimp Juice IT, BillP3rd, Tim_Stewart, music2myear Feb 11 at 16:34
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question." – Máté Juhász, Pimp Juice IT, BillP3rd, Tim_Stewart, music2myear
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
what OS are you running?
– td512
May 28 '15 at 5:32
add a comment |
I've found a Website containing a lot of builds of Chromium but the folders are named after the build number (those numbers are not visibly connected to Chromium version numbers) and there is no information if the builds are developer, beta or stable builds.
Here is the link:
I would like to be able to chose from those folders only the stable builds of Chromium.
For example if I want a stable build of Chromium 35.0, how can I find it?
Thanks
Later edit: I need 64-bit binary releases for Windows 7
chromium
I've found a Website containing a lot of builds of Chromium but the folders are named after the build number (those numbers are not visibly connected to Chromium version numbers) and there is no information if the builds are developer, beta or stable builds.
Here is the link:
I would like to be able to chose from those folders only the stable builds of Chromium.
For example if I want a stable build of Chromium 35.0, how can I find it?
Thanks
Later edit: I need 64-bit binary releases for Windows 7
chromium
chromium
edited May 28 '15 at 18:27
Francisco Tapia
2,23331340
2,23331340
asked May 28 '15 at 5:29
BearCodeBearCode
4893719
4893719
closed as off-topic by Máté Juhász, Pimp Juice IT, BillP3rd, Tim_Stewart, music2myear Feb 11 at 16:34
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question." – Máté Juhász, Pimp Juice IT, BillP3rd, Tim_Stewart, music2myear
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as off-topic by Máté Juhász, Pimp Juice IT, BillP3rd, Tim_Stewart, music2myear Feb 11 at 16:34
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question." – Máté Juhász, Pimp Juice IT, BillP3rd, Tim_Stewart, music2myear
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
what OS are you running?
– td512
May 28 '15 at 5:32
add a comment |
what OS are you running?
– td512
May 28 '15 at 5:32
what OS are you running?
– td512
May 28 '15 at 5:32
what OS are you running?
– td512
May 28 '15 at 5:32
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Source
You can find the stable channel releases here. For instance, the last v35 release is this one.
Binary
If you want a binary, you it should be easy to find one based on the v35 stable build.
- If you run GNU/Linux, you should be able to find an old package (eg. the Ubuntu 64-bit package is here).
- For Windows, you might download a Portable Apps version.
- I'm not sure where the best place is for OS X, but as an example, here's a build based on v35 stable from the FreeSMUG user group.
Thanks, those links are very useful. However, I downloaded and installed three versions of Chromium from Portable Apps and one of them crashes after install when I try to launch it, and the other two work but they are are developer builds.
– BearCode
May 31 '15 at 6:27
Tried two more, they are both developer versions.
– BearCode
Jun 5 '15 at 17:17
Actually, I'm not sure if there's even such a thing officially as a "stable" binary. GNU/Linux distros, etc, use that term for Chromium releases, but I don't think the Chromium devs themselves do. If you want a Windows binary, your best bet may be to find a version that's packaged for a major distro and regard that as a stable build. See if you can download matching binary from Portable Apps (or elsewhere). Otherwise you could try to build it yourself.
– pyrocrasty
Jun 8 '15 at 12:46
Shortcut for macOS : sourceforge.net/projects/osxportableapps/files/Chromium
– Antoine F.
Feb 22 '17 at 15:09
@pyrocrasty Where I can find 64 bits old Windows builds ?
– user2284570
Dec 10 '17 at 15:42
add a comment |
Another way, as described here:
- Look up the version number (for example "44.0.2403.157") in the Position Lookup
- In this case it returns a base position of "330231". This is the commit of where the 44 release was branched, back in May 2015.
- Open the continuous builds archive
- Click through on your platform (Linux/Mac/Win)
- Paste "330231" into the filter field at the top and wait for all the results to XHR in.
- Eventually I get a perfect hit: https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-snapshots/index.html?prefix=Mac/330231/
- Sometimes you may have to decrement the commit number until you find one.
1
This should be the accepted answer.
– Nicholas DiPiazza
Feb 9 at 15:55
add a comment |
All Chromium Portable releases for Windows (binary format):
https://sourceforge.net/projects/crportable/files/
add a comment |
I would try to look at https://github.com/henrypp/chromium/releases, and search "(stable)" text in notes. Using the "next" button somewhere on the bottom of website you can go back to previous versions. There is no archaic versions but few previous stable versions can be found.
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Source
You can find the stable channel releases here. For instance, the last v35 release is this one.
Binary
If you want a binary, you it should be easy to find one based on the v35 stable build.
- If you run GNU/Linux, you should be able to find an old package (eg. the Ubuntu 64-bit package is here).
- For Windows, you might download a Portable Apps version.
- I'm not sure where the best place is for OS X, but as an example, here's a build based on v35 stable from the FreeSMUG user group.
Thanks, those links are very useful. However, I downloaded and installed three versions of Chromium from Portable Apps and one of them crashes after install when I try to launch it, and the other two work but they are are developer builds.
– BearCode
May 31 '15 at 6:27
Tried two more, they are both developer versions.
– BearCode
Jun 5 '15 at 17:17
Actually, I'm not sure if there's even such a thing officially as a "stable" binary. GNU/Linux distros, etc, use that term for Chromium releases, but I don't think the Chromium devs themselves do. If you want a Windows binary, your best bet may be to find a version that's packaged for a major distro and regard that as a stable build. See if you can download matching binary from Portable Apps (or elsewhere). Otherwise you could try to build it yourself.
– pyrocrasty
Jun 8 '15 at 12:46
Shortcut for macOS : sourceforge.net/projects/osxportableapps/files/Chromium
– Antoine F.
Feb 22 '17 at 15:09
@pyrocrasty Where I can find 64 bits old Windows builds ?
– user2284570
Dec 10 '17 at 15:42
add a comment |
Source
You can find the stable channel releases here. For instance, the last v35 release is this one.
Binary
If you want a binary, you it should be easy to find one based on the v35 stable build.
- If you run GNU/Linux, you should be able to find an old package (eg. the Ubuntu 64-bit package is here).
- For Windows, you might download a Portable Apps version.
- I'm not sure where the best place is for OS X, but as an example, here's a build based on v35 stable from the FreeSMUG user group.
Thanks, those links are very useful. However, I downloaded and installed three versions of Chromium from Portable Apps and one of them crashes after install when I try to launch it, and the other two work but they are are developer builds.
– BearCode
May 31 '15 at 6:27
Tried two more, they are both developer versions.
– BearCode
Jun 5 '15 at 17:17
Actually, I'm not sure if there's even such a thing officially as a "stable" binary. GNU/Linux distros, etc, use that term for Chromium releases, but I don't think the Chromium devs themselves do. If you want a Windows binary, your best bet may be to find a version that's packaged for a major distro and regard that as a stable build. See if you can download matching binary from Portable Apps (or elsewhere). Otherwise you could try to build it yourself.
– pyrocrasty
Jun 8 '15 at 12:46
Shortcut for macOS : sourceforge.net/projects/osxportableapps/files/Chromium
– Antoine F.
Feb 22 '17 at 15:09
@pyrocrasty Where I can find 64 bits old Windows builds ?
– user2284570
Dec 10 '17 at 15:42
add a comment |
Source
You can find the stable channel releases here. For instance, the last v35 release is this one.
Binary
If you want a binary, you it should be easy to find one based on the v35 stable build.
- If you run GNU/Linux, you should be able to find an old package (eg. the Ubuntu 64-bit package is here).
- For Windows, you might download a Portable Apps version.
- I'm not sure where the best place is for OS X, but as an example, here's a build based on v35 stable from the FreeSMUG user group.
Source
You can find the stable channel releases here. For instance, the last v35 release is this one.
Binary
If you want a binary, you it should be easy to find one based on the v35 stable build.
- If you run GNU/Linux, you should be able to find an old package (eg. the Ubuntu 64-bit package is here).
- For Windows, you might download a Portable Apps version.
- I'm not sure where the best place is for OS X, but as an example, here's a build based on v35 stable from the FreeSMUG user group.
edited May 28 '15 at 6:52
answered May 28 '15 at 6:43
pyrocrastypyrocrasty
1,232918
1,232918
Thanks, those links are very useful. However, I downloaded and installed three versions of Chromium from Portable Apps and one of them crashes after install when I try to launch it, and the other two work but they are are developer builds.
– BearCode
May 31 '15 at 6:27
Tried two more, they are both developer versions.
– BearCode
Jun 5 '15 at 17:17
Actually, I'm not sure if there's even such a thing officially as a "stable" binary. GNU/Linux distros, etc, use that term for Chromium releases, but I don't think the Chromium devs themselves do. If you want a Windows binary, your best bet may be to find a version that's packaged for a major distro and regard that as a stable build. See if you can download matching binary from Portable Apps (or elsewhere). Otherwise you could try to build it yourself.
– pyrocrasty
Jun 8 '15 at 12:46
Shortcut for macOS : sourceforge.net/projects/osxportableapps/files/Chromium
– Antoine F.
Feb 22 '17 at 15:09
@pyrocrasty Where I can find 64 bits old Windows builds ?
– user2284570
Dec 10 '17 at 15:42
add a comment |
Thanks, those links are very useful. However, I downloaded and installed three versions of Chromium from Portable Apps and one of them crashes after install when I try to launch it, and the other two work but they are are developer builds.
– BearCode
May 31 '15 at 6:27
Tried two more, they are both developer versions.
– BearCode
Jun 5 '15 at 17:17
Actually, I'm not sure if there's even such a thing officially as a "stable" binary. GNU/Linux distros, etc, use that term for Chromium releases, but I don't think the Chromium devs themselves do. If you want a Windows binary, your best bet may be to find a version that's packaged for a major distro and regard that as a stable build. See if you can download matching binary from Portable Apps (or elsewhere). Otherwise you could try to build it yourself.
– pyrocrasty
Jun 8 '15 at 12:46
Shortcut for macOS : sourceforge.net/projects/osxportableapps/files/Chromium
– Antoine F.
Feb 22 '17 at 15:09
@pyrocrasty Where I can find 64 bits old Windows builds ?
– user2284570
Dec 10 '17 at 15:42
Thanks, those links are very useful. However, I downloaded and installed three versions of Chromium from Portable Apps and one of them crashes after install when I try to launch it, and the other two work but they are are developer builds.
– BearCode
May 31 '15 at 6:27
Thanks, those links are very useful. However, I downloaded and installed three versions of Chromium from Portable Apps and one of them crashes after install when I try to launch it, and the other two work but they are are developer builds.
– BearCode
May 31 '15 at 6:27
Tried two more, they are both developer versions.
– BearCode
Jun 5 '15 at 17:17
Tried two more, they are both developer versions.
– BearCode
Jun 5 '15 at 17:17
Actually, I'm not sure if there's even such a thing officially as a "stable" binary. GNU/Linux distros, etc, use that term for Chromium releases, but I don't think the Chromium devs themselves do. If you want a Windows binary, your best bet may be to find a version that's packaged for a major distro and regard that as a stable build. See if you can download matching binary from Portable Apps (or elsewhere). Otherwise you could try to build it yourself.
– pyrocrasty
Jun 8 '15 at 12:46
Actually, I'm not sure if there's even such a thing officially as a "stable" binary. GNU/Linux distros, etc, use that term for Chromium releases, but I don't think the Chromium devs themselves do. If you want a Windows binary, your best bet may be to find a version that's packaged for a major distro and regard that as a stable build. See if you can download matching binary from Portable Apps (or elsewhere). Otherwise you could try to build it yourself.
– pyrocrasty
Jun 8 '15 at 12:46
Shortcut for macOS : sourceforge.net/projects/osxportableapps/files/Chromium
– Antoine F.
Feb 22 '17 at 15:09
Shortcut for macOS : sourceforge.net/projects/osxportableapps/files/Chromium
– Antoine F.
Feb 22 '17 at 15:09
@pyrocrasty Where I can find 64 bits old Windows builds ?
– user2284570
Dec 10 '17 at 15:42
@pyrocrasty Where I can find 64 bits old Windows builds ?
– user2284570
Dec 10 '17 at 15:42
add a comment |
Another way, as described here:
- Look up the version number (for example "44.0.2403.157") in the Position Lookup
- In this case it returns a base position of "330231". This is the commit of where the 44 release was branched, back in May 2015.
- Open the continuous builds archive
- Click through on your platform (Linux/Mac/Win)
- Paste "330231" into the filter field at the top and wait for all the results to XHR in.
- Eventually I get a perfect hit: https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-snapshots/index.html?prefix=Mac/330231/
- Sometimes you may have to decrement the commit number until you find one.
1
This should be the accepted answer.
– Nicholas DiPiazza
Feb 9 at 15:55
add a comment |
Another way, as described here:
- Look up the version number (for example "44.0.2403.157") in the Position Lookup
- In this case it returns a base position of "330231". This is the commit of where the 44 release was branched, back in May 2015.
- Open the continuous builds archive
- Click through on your platform (Linux/Mac/Win)
- Paste "330231" into the filter field at the top and wait for all the results to XHR in.
- Eventually I get a perfect hit: https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-snapshots/index.html?prefix=Mac/330231/
- Sometimes you may have to decrement the commit number until you find one.
1
This should be the accepted answer.
– Nicholas DiPiazza
Feb 9 at 15:55
add a comment |
Another way, as described here:
- Look up the version number (for example "44.0.2403.157") in the Position Lookup
- In this case it returns a base position of "330231". This is the commit of where the 44 release was branched, back in May 2015.
- Open the continuous builds archive
- Click through on your platform (Linux/Mac/Win)
- Paste "330231" into the filter field at the top and wait for all the results to XHR in.
- Eventually I get a perfect hit: https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-snapshots/index.html?prefix=Mac/330231/
- Sometimes you may have to decrement the commit number until you find one.
Another way, as described here:
- Look up the version number (for example "44.0.2403.157") in the Position Lookup
- In this case it returns a base position of "330231". This is the commit of where the 44 release was branched, back in May 2015.
- Open the continuous builds archive
- Click through on your platform (Linux/Mac/Win)
- Paste "330231" into the filter field at the top and wait for all the results to XHR in.
- Eventually I get a perfect hit: https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-snapshots/index.html?prefix=Mac/330231/
- Sometimes you may have to decrement the commit number until you find one.
edited Feb 9 at 19:22
answered Sep 25 '18 at 21:50
MotselMotsel
48127
48127
1
This should be the accepted answer.
– Nicholas DiPiazza
Feb 9 at 15:55
add a comment |
1
This should be the accepted answer.
– Nicholas DiPiazza
Feb 9 at 15:55
1
1
This should be the accepted answer.
– Nicholas DiPiazza
Feb 9 at 15:55
This should be the accepted answer.
– Nicholas DiPiazza
Feb 9 at 15:55
add a comment |
All Chromium Portable releases for Windows (binary format):
https://sourceforge.net/projects/crportable/files/
add a comment |
All Chromium Portable releases for Windows (binary format):
https://sourceforge.net/projects/crportable/files/
add a comment |
All Chromium Portable releases for Windows (binary format):
https://sourceforge.net/projects/crportable/files/
All Chromium Portable releases for Windows (binary format):
https://sourceforge.net/projects/crportable/files/
answered Aug 31 '17 at 20:02
TonatioTonatio
1413
1413
add a comment |
add a comment |
I would try to look at https://github.com/henrypp/chromium/releases, and search "(stable)" text in notes. Using the "next" button somewhere on the bottom of website you can go back to previous versions. There is no archaic versions but few previous stable versions can be found.
add a comment |
I would try to look at https://github.com/henrypp/chromium/releases, and search "(stable)" text in notes. Using the "next" button somewhere on the bottom of website you can go back to previous versions. There is no archaic versions but few previous stable versions can be found.
add a comment |
I would try to look at https://github.com/henrypp/chromium/releases, and search "(stable)" text in notes. Using the "next" button somewhere on the bottom of website you can go back to previous versions. There is no archaic versions but few previous stable versions can be found.
I would try to look at https://github.com/henrypp/chromium/releases, and search "(stable)" text in notes. Using the "next" button somewhere on the bottom of website you can go back to previous versions. There is no archaic versions but few previous stable versions can be found.
answered Aug 30 '17 at 10:29
Bronek DzikusBronek Dzikus
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
what OS are you running?
– td512
May 28 '15 at 5:32