How can I get Chrome to stop killing my tabs in the background?

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up vote
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I have a chat page open at https://app.purechat.com/quick-links and after a few hours, I come back to the page and Chrome reloads it because it has killed it in the background. The app thinks that I am offline and I am not getting chat notifications. How can I stop Chrome from killing the tab it is loaded in? I have 32GB.







share|improve this question
















  • 7




    Chrome is not killing your tab, its hibernating it, to consume memory. See also: developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
    – LPChip
    Aug 30 at 21:12






  • 3




    @3D1T0R OK I pinned it. But then it moves it to the far left, while I normally keep my development environment on tab CTRL+1 and the chat in CTRL+4.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 21:14






  • 10




    @LPChip: According to that page Chrome is killing it: "What do we mean by discarding? ... We kill it but it's still visible on the Chrome tab strip." however it also points to a solution for @​Chloe: "A new page called chrome://discards lets you list what tabs are currently open and we try to share some insight into how interesting (we think) they are to you, from most to least." From that description it may not seem like a solution, but going to there in current versions of Chrome gives me a list of tabs it might discard, and offers a "toggle" option to prevent discarding certain tabs.
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 21:23






  • 17




    @3D1T0R Isn't it obvious that 32GB refers to RAM? The asker is surely saying, "I have plenty of RAM so Chrome doesn't need to junk this tab to save memory." 32GB of disc space would be pretty much irrelevant.
    – David Richerby
    Aug 30 at 23:05






  • 6




    @DavidRicherby: Yes & No. It's obvious to someone who knows computers inside and out that that's what it should be referring to, but those of us answering questions on SE sites don't necessarily know how much experience with computers an asker has, and there's a chance (for all I know) that @​Chloe is using a netbook with a 32GB SSD and is saying "I have 32GB." because they bought "the 32GB model" of that particular netbook & didn't realize that it has very little RAM. (Note: I'm not saying that's the case, but without clarification from the OP, we don't actually know.)
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 23:35














up vote
34
down vote

favorite
8












I have a chat page open at https://app.purechat.com/quick-links and after a few hours, I come back to the page and Chrome reloads it because it has killed it in the background. The app thinks that I am offline and I am not getting chat notifications. How can I stop Chrome from killing the tab it is loaded in? I have 32GB.







share|improve this question
















  • 7




    Chrome is not killing your tab, its hibernating it, to consume memory. See also: developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
    – LPChip
    Aug 30 at 21:12






  • 3




    @3D1T0R OK I pinned it. But then it moves it to the far left, while I normally keep my development environment on tab CTRL+1 and the chat in CTRL+4.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 21:14






  • 10




    @LPChip: According to that page Chrome is killing it: "What do we mean by discarding? ... We kill it but it's still visible on the Chrome tab strip." however it also points to a solution for @​Chloe: "A new page called chrome://discards lets you list what tabs are currently open and we try to share some insight into how interesting (we think) they are to you, from most to least." From that description it may not seem like a solution, but going to there in current versions of Chrome gives me a list of tabs it might discard, and offers a "toggle" option to prevent discarding certain tabs.
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 21:23






  • 17




    @3D1T0R Isn't it obvious that 32GB refers to RAM? The asker is surely saying, "I have plenty of RAM so Chrome doesn't need to junk this tab to save memory." 32GB of disc space would be pretty much irrelevant.
    – David Richerby
    Aug 30 at 23:05






  • 6




    @DavidRicherby: Yes & No. It's obvious to someone who knows computers inside and out that that's what it should be referring to, but those of us answering questions on SE sites don't necessarily know how much experience with computers an asker has, and there's a chance (for all I know) that @​Chloe is using a netbook with a 32GB SSD and is saying "I have 32GB." because they bought "the 32GB model" of that particular netbook & didn't realize that it has very little RAM. (Note: I'm not saying that's the case, but without clarification from the OP, we don't actually know.)
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 23:35












up vote
34
down vote

favorite
8









up vote
34
down vote

favorite
8






8





I have a chat page open at https://app.purechat.com/quick-links and after a few hours, I come back to the page and Chrome reloads it because it has killed it in the background. The app thinks that I am offline and I am not getting chat notifications. How can I stop Chrome from killing the tab it is loaded in? I have 32GB.







share|improve this question












I have a chat page open at https://app.purechat.com/quick-links and after a few hours, I come back to the page and Chrome reloads it because it has killed it in the background. The app thinks that I am offline and I am not getting chat notifications. How can I stop Chrome from killing the tab it is loaded in? I have 32GB.









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Aug 30 at 21:05









Chloe

2,296123473




2,296123473







  • 7




    Chrome is not killing your tab, its hibernating it, to consume memory. See also: developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
    – LPChip
    Aug 30 at 21:12






  • 3




    @3D1T0R OK I pinned it. But then it moves it to the far left, while I normally keep my development environment on tab CTRL+1 and the chat in CTRL+4.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 21:14






  • 10




    @LPChip: According to that page Chrome is killing it: "What do we mean by discarding? ... We kill it but it's still visible on the Chrome tab strip." however it also points to a solution for @​Chloe: "A new page called chrome://discards lets you list what tabs are currently open and we try to share some insight into how interesting (we think) they are to you, from most to least." From that description it may not seem like a solution, but going to there in current versions of Chrome gives me a list of tabs it might discard, and offers a "toggle" option to prevent discarding certain tabs.
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 21:23






  • 17




    @3D1T0R Isn't it obvious that 32GB refers to RAM? The asker is surely saying, "I have plenty of RAM so Chrome doesn't need to junk this tab to save memory." 32GB of disc space would be pretty much irrelevant.
    – David Richerby
    Aug 30 at 23:05






  • 6




    @DavidRicherby: Yes & No. It's obvious to someone who knows computers inside and out that that's what it should be referring to, but those of us answering questions on SE sites don't necessarily know how much experience with computers an asker has, and there's a chance (for all I know) that @​Chloe is using a netbook with a 32GB SSD and is saying "I have 32GB." because they bought "the 32GB model" of that particular netbook & didn't realize that it has very little RAM. (Note: I'm not saying that's the case, but without clarification from the OP, we don't actually know.)
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 23:35












  • 7




    Chrome is not killing your tab, its hibernating it, to consume memory. See also: developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
    – LPChip
    Aug 30 at 21:12






  • 3




    @3D1T0R OK I pinned it. But then it moves it to the far left, while I normally keep my development environment on tab CTRL+1 and the chat in CTRL+4.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 21:14






  • 10




    @LPChip: According to that page Chrome is killing it: "What do we mean by discarding? ... We kill it but it's still visible on the Chrome tab strip." however it also points to a solution for @​Chloe: "A new page called chrome://discards lets you list what tabs are currently open and we try to share some insight into how interesting (we think) they are to you, from most to least." From that description it may not seem like a solution, but going to there in current versions of Chrome gives me a list of tabs it might discard, and offers a "toggle" option to prevent discarding certain tabs.
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 21:23






  • 17




    @3D1T0R Isn't it obvious that 32GB refers to RAM? The asker is surely saying, "I have plenty of RAM so Chrome doesn't need to junk this tab to save memory." 32GB of disc space would be pretty much irrelevant.
    – David Richerby
    Aug 30 at 23:05






  • 6




    @DavidRicherby: Yes & No. It's obvious to someone who knows computers inside and out that that's what it should be referring to, but those of us answering questions on SE sites don't necessarily know how much experience with computers an asker has, and there's a chance (for all I know) that @​Chloe is using a netbook with a 32GB SSD and is saying "I have 32GB." because they bought "the 32GB model" of that particular netbook & didn't realize that it has very little RAM. (Note: I'm not saying that's the case, but without clarification from the OP, we don't actually know.)
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 23:35







7




7




Chrome is not killing your tab, its hibernating it, to consume memory. See also: developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
– LPChip
Aug 30 at 21:12




Chrome is not killing your tab, its hibernating it, to consume memory. See also: developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
– LPChip
Aug 30 at 21:12




3




3




@3D1T0R OK I pinned it. But then it moves it to the far left, while I normally keep my development environment on tab CTRL+1 and the chat in CTRL+4.
– Chloe
Aug 30 at 21:14




@3D1T0R OK I pinned it. But then it moves it to the far left, while I normally keep my development environment on tab CTRL+1 and the chat in CTRL+4.
– Chloe
Aug 30 at 21:14




10




10




@LPChip: According to that page Chrome is killing it: "What do we mean by discarding? ... We kill it but it's still visible on the Chrome tab strip." however it also points to a solution for @​Chloe: "A new page called chrome://discards lets you list what tabs are currently open and we try to share some insight into how interesting (we think) they are to you, from most to least." From that description it may not seem like a solution, but going to there in current versions of Chrome gives me a list of tabs it might discard, and offers a "toggle" option to prevent discarding certain tabs.
– 3D1T0R
Aug 30 at 21:23




@LPChip: According to that page Chrome is killing it: "What do we mean by discarding? ... We kill it but it's still visible on the Chrome tab strip." however it also points to a solution for @​Chloe: "A new page called chrome://discards lets you list what tabs are currently open and we try to share some insight into how interesting (we think) they are to you, from most to least." From that description it may not seem like a solution, but going to there in current versions of Chrome gives me a list of tabs it might discard, and offers a "toggle" option to prevent discarding certain tabs.
– 3D1T0R
Aug 30 at 21:23




17




17




@3D1T0R Isn't it obvious that 32GB refers to RAM? The asker is surely saying, "I have plenty of RAM so Chrome doesn't need to junk this tab to save memory." 32GB of disc space would be pretty much irrelevant.
– David Richerby
Aug 30 at 23:05




@3D1T0R Isn't it obvious that 32GB refers to RAM? The asker is surely saying, "I have plenty of RAM so Chrome doesn't need to junk this tab to save memory." 32GB of disc space would be pretty much irrelevant.
– David Richerby
Aug 30 at 23:05




6




6




@DavidRicherby: Yes & No. It's obvious to someone who knows computers inside and out that that's what it should be referring to, but those of us answering questions on SE sites don't necessarily know how much experience with computers an asker has, and there's a chance (for all I know) that @​Chloe is using a netbook with a 32GB SSD and is saying "I have 32GB." because they bought "the 32GB model" of that particular netbook & didn't realize that it has very little RAM. (Note: I'm not saying that's the case, but without clarification from the OP, we don't actually know.)
– 3D1T0R
Aug 30 at 23:35




@DavidRicherby: Yes & No. It's obvious to someone who knows computers inside and out that that's what it should be referring to, but those of us answering questions on SE sites don't necessarily know how much experience with computers an asker has, and there's a chance (for all I know) that @​Chloe is using a netbook with a 32GB SSD and is saying "I have 32GB." because they bought "the 32GB model" of that particular netbook & didn't realize that it has very little RAM. (Note: I'm not saying that's the case, but without clarification from the OP, we don't actually know.)
– 3D1T0R
Aug 30 at 23:35










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
55
down vote



accepted










Alternative 1



To stop Chrome from reloading pages when you return to them after they have been in the background:



  1. Enter the following into your Chrome address bar:
    chrome://flags/

  2. Search for the "Automatic tab discarding" flag

  3. Set it to "Disabled"

You may also want to set the "Offline Auto-Reload Mode" flag to "Disabled".




Alternative 2



If you don't want to disable Automatic tab discarding for all the tabs, alternatively, you also have the option to discard select tabs manually via chrome://discards.



On that page, if you have automatic tab discarding still enabled, you can click "Toggle" next to any tab to prevent it from being discarded automatically.




Alternative 3



Pinning the tab will also prevent it from being automatically discarded, however, the pinned tab is moved to the far left which may be unacceptable behavior (particularly for those who use keyboard shortcuts to navigate through their first few tabs). Pinned tabs are also smaller than regular tabs.




References:



https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
https://www.guidingtech.com/stop-chrome-reloading-tabs-automatically-switching/
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/10-hidden-chrome-settings-changing/






share|improve this answer


















  • 3




    Can you add the bit about chrome://discards and the Auto Discardable Toggle link? No one wants to disable the feature for all the tabs.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 22:16











  • I have now added that information. Thanks.
    – jlevis
    Aug 30 at 23:09






  • 1




    Regarding Option 1, I do not have that chrome flag on my chrome://flags page. Any idea why? I am on Chrome 68.
    – Gaurang Tandon
    Aug 31 at 3:37










  • Regarding the third option, do Ctrl+1 etc. work for switching to pinned tabs?
    – deltab
    Aug 31 at 5:53











  • Does Chrome also discard "tabs" that are opened in a custom window (as done with Menu > More tools > Create shortcut... > Check "Open as Window"? It would explain why Discord is not creating any notifications anymore for me after having that window minimized for some time.
    – Ray Koopa
    Aug 31 at 8:08


















up vote
6
down vote













I was able to go to chrome://discards/ from the link in the comments and toggle a setting on the tab to prevent it from being killed.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer
















  • 6




    Does this persist after exiting and reopening Chrome? or do you have to toggle it each time you launch Chrome?
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 22:19






  • 1




    @3D1T0R On my version of chrome (68.0.3440.106 - 64-bit) across a relaunch (from the flags page's "Relaunch" button) the toggle did not stay disabled
    – Taelsin
    Aug 31 at 14:27











  • Then you may be better off just pinning the tab, as that persists to the next time you launch Chrome (as long as you don't close the window it's pinned in prior to exiting Chrome, e.g. close that window last, or use Menu > Exit or Ctrl+Shift+Q to quit).
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 31 at 16:34











  • This doesn't actually work. Even when toggled off, it still discards the tab.
    – Chloe
    Sep 6 at 17:25










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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
55
down vote



accepted










Alternative 1



To stop Chrome from reloading pages when you return to them after they have been in the background:



  1. Enter the following into your Chrome address bar:
    chrome://flags/

  2. Search for the "Automatic tab discarding" flag

  3. Set it to "Disabled"

You may also want to set the "Offline Auto-Reload Mode" flag to "Disabled".




Alternative 2



If you don't want to disable Automatic tab discarding for all the tabs, alternatively, you also have the option to discard select tabs manually via chrome://discards.



On that page, if you have automatic tab discarding still enabled, you can click "Toggle" next to any tab to prevent it from being discarded automatically.




Alternative 3



Pinning the tab will also prevent it from being automatically discarded, however, the pinned tab is moved to the far left which may be unacceptable behavior (particularly for those who use keyboard shortcuts to navigate through their first few tabs). Pinned tabs are also smaller than regular tabs.




References:



https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
https://www.guidingtech.com/stop-chrome-reloading-tabs-automatically-switching/
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/10-hidden-chrome-settings-changing/






share|improve this answer


















  • 3




    Can you add the bit about chrome://discards and the Auto Discardable Toggle link? No one wants to disable the feature for all the tabs.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 22:16











  • I have now added that information. Thanks.
    – jlevis
    Aug 30 at 23:09






  • 1




    Regarding Option 1, I do not have that chrome flag on my chrome://flags page. Any idea why? I am on Chrome 68.
    – Gaurang Tandon
    Aug 31 at 3:37










  • Regarding the third option, do Ctrl+1 etc. work for switching to pinned tabs?
    – deltab
    Aug 31 at 5:53











  • Does Chrome also discard "tabs" that are opened in a custom window (as done with Menu > More tools > Create shortcut... > Check "Open as Window"? It would explain why Discord is not creating any notifications anymore for me after having that window minimized for some time.
    – Ray Koopa
    Aug 31 at 8:08















up vote
55
down vote



accepted










Alternative 1



To stop Chrome from reloading pages when you return to them after they have been in the background:



  1. Enter the following into your Chrome address bar:
    chrome://flags/

  2. Search for the "Automatic tab discarding" flag

  3. Set it to "Disabled"

You may also want to set the "Offline Auto-Reload Mode" flag to "Disabled".




Alternative 2



If you don't want to disable Automatic tab discarding for all the tabs, alternatively, you also have the option to discard select tabs manually via chrome://discards.



On that page, if you have automatic tab discarding still enabled, you can click "Toggle" next to any tab to prevent it from being discarded automatically.




Alternative 3



Pinning the tab will also prevent it from being automatically discarded, however, the pinned tab is moved to the far left which may be unacceptable behavior (particularly for those who use keyboard shortcuts to navigate through their first few tabs). Pinned tabs are also smaller than regular tabs.




References:



https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
https://www.guidingtech.com/stop-chrome-reloading-tabs-automatically-switching/
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/10-hidden-chrome-settings-changing/






share|improve this answer


















  • 3




    Can you add the bit about chrome://discards and the Auto Discardable Toggle link? No one wants to disable the feature for all the tabs.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 22:16











  • I have now added that information. Thanks.
    – jlevis
    Aug 30 at 23:09






  • 1




    Regarding Option 1, I do not have that chrome flag on my chrome://flags page. Any idea why? I am on Chrome 68.
    – Gaurang Tandon
    Aug 31 at 3:37










  • Regarding the third option, do Ctrl+1 etc. work for switching to pinned tabs?
    – deltab
    Aug 31 at 5:53











  • Does Chrome also discard "tabs" that are opened in a custom window (as done with Menu > More tools > Create shortcut... > Check "Open as Window"? It would explain why Discord is not creating any notifications anymore for me after having that window minimized for some time.
    – Ray Koopa
    Aug 31 at 8:08













up vote
55
down vote



accepted







up vote
55
down vote



accepted






Alternative 1



To stop Chrome from reloading pages when you return to them after they have been in the background:



  1. Enter the following into your Chrome address bar:
    chrome://flags/

  2. Search for the "Automatic tab discarding" flag

  3. Set it to "Disabled"

You may also want to set the "Offline Auto-Reload Mode" flag to "Disabled".




Alternative 2



If you don't want to disable Automatic tab discarding for all the tabs, alternatively, you also have the option to discard select tabs manually via chrome://discards.



On that page, if you have automatic tab discarding still enabled, you can click "Toggle" next to any tab to prevent it from being discarded automatically.




Alternative 3



Pinning the tab will also prevent it from being automatically discarded, however, the pinned tab is moved to the far left which may be unacceptable behavior (particularly for those who use keyboard shortcuts to navigate through their first few tabs). Pinned tabs are also smaller than regular tabs.




References:



https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
https://www.guidingtech.com/stop-chrome-reloading-tabs-automatically-switching/
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/10-hidden-chrome-settings-changing/






share|improve this answer














Alternative 1



To stop Chrome from reloading pages when you return to them after they have been in the background:



  1. Enter the following into your Chrome address bar:
    chrome://flags/

  2. Search for the "Automatic tab discarding" flag

  3. Set it to "Disabled"

You may also want to set the "Offline Auto-Reload Mode" flag to "Disabled".




Alternative 2



If you don't want to disable Automatic tab discarding for all the tabs, alternatively, you also have the option to discard select tabs manually via chrome://discards.



On that page, if you have automatic tab discarding still enabled, you can click "Toggle" next to any tab to prevent it from being discarded automatically.




Alternative 3



Pinning the tab will also prevent it from being automatically discarded, however, the pinned tab is moved to the far left which may be unacceptable behavior (particularly for those who use keyboard shortcuts to navigate through their first few tabs). Pinned tabs are also smaller than regular tabs.




References:



https://developers.google.com/web/updates/2015/09/tab-discarding
https://www.guidingtech.com/stop-chrome-reloading-tabs-automatically-switching/
https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/10-hidden-chrome-settings-changing/







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 31 at 8:20









ratchet freak

2,72911214




2,72911214










answered Aug 30 at 21:33









jlevis

51626




51626







  • 3




    Can you add the bit about chrome://discards and the Auto Discardable Toggle link? No one wants to disable the feature for all the tabs.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 22:16











  • I have now added that information. Thanks.
    – jlevis
    Aug 30 at 23:09






  • 1




    Regarding Option 1, I do not have that chrome flag on my chrome://flags page. Any idea why? I am on Chrome 68.
    – Gaurang Tandon
    Aug 31 at 3:37










  • Regarding the third option, do Ctrl+1 etc. work for switching to pinned tabs?
    – deltab
    Aug 31 at 5:53











  • Does Chrome also discard "tabs" that are opened in a custom window (as done with Menu > More tools > Create shortcut... > Check "Open as Window"? It would explain why Discord is not creating any notifications anymore for me after having that window minimized for some time.
    – Ray Koopa
    Aug 31 at 8:08













  • 3




    Can you add the bit about chrome://discards and the Auto Discardable Toggle link? No one wants to disable the feature for all the tabs.
    – Chloe
    Aug 30 at 22:16











  • I have now added that information. Thanks.
    – jlevis
    Aug 30 at 23:09






  • 1




    Regarding Option 1, I do not have that chrome flag on my chrome://flags page. Any idea why? I am on Chrome 68.
    – Gaurang Tandon
    Aug 31 at 3:37










  • Regarding the third option, do Ctrl+1 etc. work for switching to pinned tabs?
    – deltab
    Aug 31 at 5:53











  • Does Chrome also discard "tabs" that are opened in a custom window (as done with Menu > More tools > Create shortcut... > Check "Open as Window"? It would explain why Discord is not creating any notifications anymore for me after having that window minimized for some time.
    – Ray Koopa
    Aug 31 at 8:08








3




3




Can you add the bit about chrome://discards and the Auto Discardable Toggle link? No one wants to disable the feature for all the tabs.
– Chloe
Aug 30 at 22:16





Can you add the bit about chrome://discards and the Auto Discardable Toggle link? No one wants to disable the feature for all the tabs.
– Chloe
Aug 30 at 22:16













I have now added that information. Thanks.
– jlevis
Aug 30 at 23:09




I have now added that information. Thanks.
– jlevis
Aug 30 at 23:09




1




1




Regarding Option 1, I do not have that chrome flag on my chrome://flags page. Any idea why? I am on Chrome 68.
– Gaurang Tandon
Aug 31 at 3:37




Regarding Option 1, I do not have that chrome flag on my chrome://flags page. Any idea why? I am on Chrome 68.
– Gaurang Tandon
Aug 31 at 3:37












Regarding the third option, do Ctrl+1 etc. work for switching to pinned tabs?
– deltab
Aug 31 at 5:53





Regarding the third option, do Ctrl+1 etc. work for switching to pinned tabs?
– deltab
Aug 31 at 5:53













Does Chrome also discard "tabs" that are opened in a custom window (as done with Menu > More tools > Create shortcut... > Check "Open as Window"? It would explain why Discord is not creating any notifications anymore for me after having that window minimized for some time.
– Ray Koopa
Aug 31 at 8:08





Does Chrome also discard "tabs" that are opened in a custom window (as done with Menu > More tools > Create shortcut... > Check "Open as Window"? It would explain why Discord is not creating any notifications anymore for me after having that window minimized for some time.
– Ray Koopa
Aug 31 at 8:08













up vote
6
down vote













I was able to go to chrome://discards/ from the link in the comments and toggle a setting on the tab to prevent it from being killed.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer
















  • 6




    Does this persist after exiting and reopening Chrome? or do you have to toggle it each time you launch Chrome?
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 22:19






  • 1




    @3D1T0R On my version of chrome (68.0.3440.106 - 64-bit) across a relaunch (from the flags page's "Relaunch" button) the toggle did not stay disabled
    – Taelsin
    Aug 31 at 14:27











  • Then you may be better off just pinning the tab, as that persists to the next time you launch Chrome (as long as you don't close the window it's pinned in prior to exiting Chrome, e.g. close that window last, or use Menu > Exit or Ctrl+Shift+Q to quit).
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 31 at 16:34











  • This doesn't actually work. Even when toggled off, it still discards the tab.
    – Chloe
    Sep 6 at 17:25














up vote
6
down vote













I was able to go to chrome://discards/ from the link in the comments and toggle a setting on the tab to prevent it from being killed.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer
















  • 6




    Does this persist after exiting and reopening Chrome? or do you have to toggle it each time you launch Chrome?
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 22:19






  • 1




    @3D1T0R On my version of chrome (68.0.3440.106 - 64-bit) across a relaunch (from the flags page's "Relaunch" button) the toggle did not stay disabled
    – Taelsin
    Aug 31 at 14:27











  • Then you may be better off just pinning the tab, as that persists to the next time you launch Chrome (as long as you don't close the window it's pinned in prior to exiting Chrome, e.g. close that window last, or use Menu > Exit or Ctrl+Shift+Q to quit).
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 31 at 16:34











  • This doesn't actually work. Even when toggled off, it still discards the tab.
    – Chloe
    Sep 6 at 17:25












up vote
6
down vote










up vote
6
down vote









I was able to go to chrome://discards/ from the link in the comments and toggle a setting on the tab to prevent it from being killed.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer












I was able to go to chrome://discards/ from the link in the comments and toggle a setting on the tab to prevent it from being killed.



enter image description here







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Aug 30 at 21:26









Chloe

2,296123473




2,296123473







  • 6




    Does this persist after exiting and reopening Chrome? or do you have to toggle it each time you launch Chrome?
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 22:19






  • 1




    @3D1T0R On my version of chrome (68.0.3440.106 - 64-bit) across a relaunch (from the flags page's "Relaunch" button) the toggle did not stay disabled
    – Taelsin
    Aug 31 at 14:27











  • Then you may be better off just pinning the tab, as that persists to the next time you launch Chrome (as long as you don't close the window it's pinned in prior to exiting Chrome, e.g. close that window last, or use Menu > Exit or Ctrl+Shift+Q to quit).
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 31 at 16:34











  • This doesn't actually work. Even when toggled off, it still discards the tab.
    – Chloe
    Sep 6 at 17:25












  • 6




    Does this persist after exiting and reopening Chrome? or do you have to toggle it each time you launch Chrome?
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 30 at 22:19






  • 1




    @3D1T0R On my version of chrome (68.0.3440.106 - 64-bit) across a relaunch (from the flags page's "Relaunch" button) the toggle did not stay disabled
    – Taelsin
    Aug 31 at 14:27











  • Then you may be better off just pinning the tab, as that persists to the next time you launch Chrome (as long as you don't close the window it's pinned in prior to exiting Chrome, e.g. close that window last, or use Menu > Exit or Ctrl+Shift+Q to quit).
    – 3D1T0R
    Aug 31 at 16:34











  • This doesn't actually work. Even when toggled off, it still discards the tab.
    – Chloe
    Sep 6 at 17:25







6




6




Does this persist after exiting and reopening Chrome? or do you have to toggle it each time you launch Chrome?
– 3D1T0R
Aug 30 at 22:19




Does this persist after exiting and reopening Chrome? or do you have to toggle it each time you launch Chrome?
– 3D1T0R
Aug 30 at 22:19




1




1




@3D1T0R On my version of chrome (68.0.3440.106 - 64-bit) across a relaunch (from the flags page's "Relaunch" button) the toggle did not stay disabled
– Taelsin
Aug 31 at 14:27





@3D1T0R On my version of chrome (68.0.3440.106 - 64-bit) across a relaunch (from the flags page's "Relaunch" button) the toggle did not stay disabled
– Taelsin
Aug 31 at 14:27













Then you may be better off just pinning the tab, as that persists to the next time you launch Chrome (as long as you don't close the window it's pinned in prior to exiting Chrome, e.g. close that window last, or use Menu > Exit or Ctrl+Shift+Q to quit).
– 3D1T0R
Aug 31 at 16:34





Then you may be better off just pinning the tab, as that persists to the next time you launch Chrome (as long as you don't close the window it's pinned in prior to exiting Chrome, e.g. close that window last, or use Menu > Exit or Ctrl+Shift+Q to quit).
– 3D1T0R
Aug 31 at 16:34













This doesn't actually work. Even when toggled off, it still discards the tab.
– Chloe
Sep 6 at 17:25




This doesn't actually work. Even when toggled off, it still discards the tab.
– Chloe
Sep 6 at 17:25

















 

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