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

how to stop Firefox from creating 15000 files for 300 Mb every day

  • 9 replies
  • 10 have this problem
  • 215 views
  • Last reply by cor-el

more options

Firefox creates "file" files in C:\Users\LeRicain\AppData\Local\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\dnm04rk5.default\cache2 there are about 10 000 to 20 000 files that i must delete to gain about 300 Mb space each day

how to stop Firefox from creating these files

Firefox creates "file" files in C:\Users\LeRicain\AppData\Local\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\dnm04rk5.default\cache2 there are about 10 000 to 20 000 files that i must delete to gain about 300 Mb space each day how to stop Firefox from creating these files

Chosen solution

These are cache files. It basically takes websites that you access a lot and saves bits of them so they'll load faster the next time you visit them. E.G. If you visit Google.com a lot, Firefox will save some elements of that page in the cache so the next time you visit Google.com, it won't have to re-download them.

Read this answer in context 👍 1

All Replies (9)

more options

Chosen Solution

These are cache files. It basically takes websites that you access a lot and saves bits of them so they'll load faster the next time you visit them. E.G. If you visit Google.com a lot, Firefox will save some elements of that page in the cache so the next time you visit Google.com, it won't have to re-download them.

more options

I wouldn't recommend permanently disabling the cache, but you can delete these files when you want by clearing the cache. If you want to automatically clear the cache, click here.

more options

If you want to limit how much space Firefox can use for the cache, click the menu button, Options button, click the Advanced tab, click the Network sub-tab, check Override Automatic Cache Management, and select how much space you want to give to Firefox for caching. If you set this to 300 MB, Firefox will be able to store up to 300 MB of cache on your computer, but can't go over 300 MB resulting in the oldest files being deleted to make way for new files.

more options

I have original poster beat. I just had NO CHOICE but to delete ALL entries in the cache2 folder because there was almost 90,000 entries taking 1.4 GIG. And YES, I triede all normal ideas short of turning cache off including the various automatically cleaning and all that, I even had CCleaner scan Firefox and those file NEVER showed as cache. So, now I have NO choice but to see what happens after I completely disable the cache. I mean having it accumulate that much data and NO way to clean up after itself is ludicrous. This needs fixed properly in next release or 2 (I have v39).

more options

Besides, 1.) I had the cache set in the FF config for ONLY 128 MEG, NOTHING IN THE gig RANGE. AND 2.) the cache clean after shutdown acted like it could not even see that stuff. So, like I stated, NO CHOICE but to manually delete the entire contents.

more options

CyberWolf64,

Please start your own thread here - https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/new

more options

It is possible that using external software like CCleaner has caused such an issue in the first place or the cache management files got broken otherwise (crashes) although Firefox should detect the latter due the presence of a dirty cache flag, so always use such external cleaners with care.

If all files do not show on the about:cache page then best is to clear the entire cache2 location as shown on the about:cache page.

more options

After some testing, I do actually be;lieve that somehow CCleaner may have "broken" the database files both in Firefox and Thunderbird. So, no longer allowing it to "clean" those 2 programs.

more options

places.sqlite is not a simple database file, but has a lot of tables that are all linked to each other via specific fields. Because of that the database gets easily corrupted if you allow other software to make changes to this file.