David
David

Reputation: 3266

How would one handle a file upload with Meteor?

What would be the canonical way to handle a file upload with Meteor?

Upvotes: 77

Views: 34808

Answers (12)

I've just come up with an implementation of file uploads using Meteor.methods and HTML5 File's API. Let me know what you think.

Upvotes: 19

Sean L
Sean L

Reputation: 827

To accomplish the same action as the most upvoted answer without the cost of filepicker.io, follow the instructions for this package: https://github.com/Lepozepo/S3

Then to obtain the link, use code similar to below. Finally, plug the url returned by secureLink into the DB.

Template.YourTemplate.events({
  "click button.upload": function() {
    var files = $("input.file_bag")[0].files;
    S3.upload(files, "/subfolder", function(e,r) {
      console.log(r);
      Session.set('secureLink', r.secure_url);
    })
  }
});
Template.YourTemplate.helpers({
  "files": function() {
    return S3.collection.find();
  },

  "secureLink": function() {
    return Session.get('secureLink');
  }
});

Upvotes: 2

d_inevitable
d_inevitable

Reputation: 4451

There is a new package: edgee:slingshot. It does not upload the files to your meteor server, but it is better that way as it allows the meteor server to focus on its primary objective of serving the meteor app instead of handling costly file transfers.

Instead it uploads files to cloud storage services. Currently it supports AWS S3 and Google Cloud Files, but it will also support Rackspace Cloud Files and perhaps Cloudinary in the future.

Your meteor server merely acts as as a coordinator.

Direct VS Indirect uploads

It is also a very versatile and light-weight package.

Upvotes: 11

tomitrescak
tomitrescak

Reputation: 1110

here is yet another solution:

https://doctorllama.wordpress.com/2014/11/06/meteor-upload-package-with-jquery-file-upload/

This one is using Blueimp's upload solution that supports chunked uploads, progress bars and more.

Upvotes: 2

Raz
Raz

Reputation: 7923

Here is the best solution for this time. It uses collectionFS.

meteor add cfs:standard-packages
meteor add cfs:filesystem

Client:

Template.yourTemplate.events({
    'change .your-upload-class': function(event, template) {
        FS.Utility.eachFile(event, function(file) {
            var yourFile = new FS.File(file);
            yourFile.creatorId = Meteor.userId(); // add custom data
            YourFileCollection.insert(yourFile, function (err, fileObj) {
                if (!err) {
                   // do callback stuff
                }
            });
        });
    }
});

Server:

YourFileCollection = new FS.Collection("yourFileCollection", {
    stores: [new FS.Store.FileSystem("yourFileCollection", {path: "~/meteor_uploads"})]
});
YourFileCollection.allow({
    insert: function (userId, doc) {
        return !!userId;
    },
    update: function (userId, doc) {
        return doc.creatorId == userId
    },
    download: function (userId, doc) {
        return doc.creatorId == userId
    }
});

Template:

<template name="yourTemplate">
    <input class="your-upload-class" type="file">
</template>

Upvotes: 7

Steeve Cannon
Steeve Cannon

Reputation: 3682

If you do not require significantly large files or maybe only storing the files for a short period of time then this simple solution works very well.

In your html...

<input id="files" type="file" />

In your template event map...

Template.template.events({
  'submit': function(event, template){
    event.preventDefault();
    if (window.File && window.FileReader && window.FileList && window.Blob) {
      _.each(template.find('#files').files, function(file) {
        if(file.size > 1){
          var reader = new FileReader();
          reader.onload = function(e) {
            Collection.insert({
              name: file.name,
              type: file.type,
              dataUrl: reader.result
            });
          }
          reader.readAsDataURL(file);
        }
      });
    }
  }
});

Subscribe to the Collection and in a template render a link...

<a href="{{dataUrl}}" target="_blank">{{name}}</a>

While this might not be the most robust or elegant solution for large files or a file intensive application it works very well for all kind of file formats if you want to implement simple upload and download/rendering of the files.

Upvotes: 4

nha
nha

Reputation: 18005

You can see on the meteor roadmap that the feature "File upload pattern" is scheduled for "After 1.0". So we have to wait to see an official way.

For now, one of the best ways is to use "collectionFS" (which is 0.3.x dev preview at the time of writting).

Or inkfilepicker (ex. filepicker.io) as suggested here. It is easy enough to use, although this obviously requires and Internet connection from the user side.

If it just to play around, you could as well take advantage of the html5 feature. Something like that.

Upvotes: 2

Micha Roon
Micha Roon

Reputation: 4007

there is an atmosphere package called router which allows just that.

actually, the best way to handle file uploads is now collectionFS

Upvotes: 7

Harry Love
Harry Love

Reputation: 1910

For images, I use a method similar to Dario's except I don't write the file to disk. I store the data directly in the database as a field on the model. This works for me because I only need to support browsers that support the HTML5 File API. And I only need simple image support.

Template.myForm.events({
  'submit form': function(e, template) {
    e.preventDefault();
    var file = template.find('input type=["file"]').files[0];
    var reader = new FileReader();
    reader.onload = function(e) {
      // Add it to your model
      model.update(id, { $set: { src: e.target.result }});

      // Update an image on the page with the data
      $(template.find('img')).attr('src', e.target.result);
    }
    reader.readAsDataURL(file);
  }
});

Upvotes: 26

jlg_foil
jlg_foil

Reputation: 668

I used http://filepicker.io. They'll upload the file, store it into your S3, and return you a URL where the file is. Then I just plop the url into a DB.

  1. Wget the filepicker script into your client folder.

    wget https://api.filepicker.io/v0/filepicker.js
    
  2. Insert a filepicker input tag

    <input type="filepicker" id="attachment">
    
  3. In the startup, initialize it:

    Meteor.startup( function() {
        filepicker.setKey("YOUR FILEPICKER API KEY");
        filepicker.constructWidget(document.getElementById('attachment'));
    });
    
  4. Attach a event handler

    Templates.template.events({
        'change #attachment': function(evt){
            console.log(evt.files);
        }
    });
    

Upvotes: 44

Luan
Luan

Reputation: 402

You could try uploading directly to amazon S3, doing some tricks with js uploaders and stuff. http://aws.amazon.com/articles/1434

Upvotes: 3

Raynos
Raynos

Reputation: 169373

There currently doesn't seem to be a way to interact with the HTTP server or do anything related to HTTP.

The only things you can do is talk to server over the RPC methods exposed by Meteor.methods or talk to mongoDB directly over the mongoDB API exposed.

Upvotes: 17

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