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Frequently Asked Questions
It is possible to upload files up to 4 GB with the jQuery File Upload plugin.
By making use of Chunked file uploads (with chunks smaller than 4GB), the potential file size is unlimited.
The restriction of 4 GB is due to some browser limitations, which might be fixed in future updates to those browsers:
Firefox bug references:
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=215450
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=660159
Chrome bug references:
http://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=139815
If you define the url (and probably paramName) Options, you can call the plugin on any element - no form or file input field required - and the drag&drop functionality will still work.
To support browsers without XHR file upload capabilities, a file input field has to be part of the widget, or defined using the fileInput option.
You can use the accept attribute of the file input field to limit the file type selection, though this seems to be supported only on Google Chrome and Opera.
An example limiting files to PNG images:
<input type="file" name="files[]" accept="image/png" multiple>
Note that this will not limit files added by drag&drop and is not supported across all browsers.
Lower the loadImageMaxFileSize setting or remove the "preview" class from the upload template to avoid rendering large preview images, which have the potential to block the main JS thread.
Invoking a click event on the file input field programmatically is not supported across browsers - see Style Guide.
However, another file input button can be used to trigger the file selection and passed as parameter to the fileupload add or send API:
$('#some-file-input-field').bind('change', function (e) {
$('#fileupload').fileupload('add', {
files: e.target.files || [{name: this.value}],
fileInput: $(this)
});
});
Just make use of jQuery's each method to set the this keyword to the element node:
$('#fileupload').each(function () {
$(this).fileupload({
fileInput: $(this).find('input:file')
});
});
Just remove the multiple attribute from the file input:
<input type="file" name="files[]">
Note that users can still drag&drop multiple files. To enforce a one file upload limit, you can make use of the maxNumberOfFiles option (see Options).
This has been built-in and is currently supported by the latest versions of Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome. Please have a look at the process Options.
Yes, with the latest version of Google Chrome it is possible.
It is also possible to allow selecting a folder (instead of files) via the file input element by adding browser-vendor specific "directory" attributes, though this seems to be only supported in Google Chrome so far:
<input type="file" name="files[]" multiple directory webkitdirectory mozdirectory>
This is called a protocol relative url and a perfectly valid way to define a resource, relative to the current URL protocol.
This ensures that the referenced scripts are loaded via the same protocol as the current page, which avoids security notifications when loading resources via unencrypted HTTP on a page loaded via HTTPS.
However, it also requires that the current protocol is either "http:" or "https:" and will not work on a "file:" url.
The template will be rendered for each add call.
As long as the option singleFileUploads is set to true (which is the default), multiple selects/drops get split up into single add calls, so the index will always be 0.
See Firefox Bug #642463.
This bug has been addressed with commit f60bbfb2546bc08fe9538d3af56be8d07e634675.
The plugin makes use of metric prefixes in conformance of the International System of Units. This is the same unit system that is used by hard drive manufacturers and e.g. the Mac OSX operating system to report hard drive capacities. Unfortunately, the terms "kilobytes", "megabytes", etc. have historically been used in ambiguous meanings. Please have a look at the Binary Prefix article on Wikipedia for background information.
The plugin provides CSS classes for a custom file input button, which doesn't display the selected file name. However they can be removed to display the native browser file input button - see Style Guide.
By default, the plugin also replaces the file input button after each file(s) selection. This behaviour can be disabled by setting the option replaceFileInput to false.
The cloning is done for two reasons:
- First to make sure a change event is fired even if the same file (or filename) is selected subsequently.
- Second to allow upload queues for the iframe transport.
If you have one file input and select e.g. the file "example.jpg" and then you abort the upload for some reason, there will be no change event fired if you select the same file to retry the upload. Replacing the original file input with a clone (and resetting the clone's value property) fixes this problem.
Uploads using the iframe transport rely on the file input field, as iframe transport uploads are simple HTML form uploads with an iframe as POST target. If you select a file with a file input field, the file reference is tied to the input field. Modern browsers also allow to access the selected files via the File API, but for the iframe transport, the input field itself is the only usable reference. You can't select another file with this file input field until the associated form has been submitted, else you will loose the original selection. To allow queuing files with the iframe transport, you have to keep the original input field and add a new input field for the next user selection. So, replacing the original file input with a clone (and keeping the original until it has been used for a form submission) also fixes the queuing problem.
The fileInput option is supposed to be a reference to the collection of file input fields the plugin is listening to for change events. So when the original file input fields are replaced with their clones, the clones have to take their place and the fileInput reference needs to be updated.
When you create a file with a slash as part of the filename on OSX, it's actually represented with a colon instead if you list the file on the Terminal.
You can test it by renaming an existing file in Finder to e.g. "test/example" and then list the contents of the file's directory using the OSX Terminal, where it will show up as "test:example".
The Terminal version is the one that gets reported as file name if you select or drop this file on a website.
This is done because the slash is actually a directory separator on OSX:
http://stackoverflow.com/a/13298479
The name property of File objects is actually readonly, so the plugin doesn't do anything here:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/File#Properties
The only thing the plugin does regarding file names is remove path information from files reported by older browsers (old IE versions) that don't support the File API.
Why do multiple selected files only show one start/cancel button when the forceIframeTransport option is set to true?
If you force the use of the Iframe Transport, it is still possible to select multiple files on modern browsers.
However, the Iframe Transport requires that all selections have to be uploaded in one request, simply because the file input is used for a standard HTML form submit to a hidden iframe and it's not possible to separate the selected files this way.
The UI reflects this by showing only one set of start/cancel buttons for each selection to be uploaded. It might not be the ideal user interface for this kind of situation, but it allows to reuse the same upload templates with minimal code additions.
Only browsers with support for XHR file upload support setting custom headers.
See Browser support for more information.
The plugin only has its own dragover event handler to be able to apply the copy drop effect and to call the preventDefault method on the event object, which are both required to make cross-browser file drag&drop possible.
The plugin's dragover callback trigger allows to prevent that behavior by returning false in the callback, which can be useful in some situations.
You can easily bind event handlers for any drag event independently of the plugin with jQuery alone, e.g.:
$('#dropzone').bind('dragleave', function (e) {
// dragleave event handler code
});
The file upload plugin makes use of an Iframe Transport module for browsers like Microsoft Internet Explorer and Opera, which do not yet support XHR file uploads.
Iframe based uploads require a Content-type of text/plain or text/html for the JSON response - they will show an undesired download dialog if the iframe response is set to application/json.
Please have a look at the Content-Type Negotiation section of the Setup instructions.
This is due to how the response content is parsed when using the iframe transport, which is required by Internet Explorer.
Your JSON response is probably not valid JSON.
You can test your JSON response for validity on jsonlint.com.
To retrieve the JSON response, make use of the network tab of your browser development tools (e.g. Google Chrome's and Safari's developer console or Firebug).
You probably have a server-side setting preventing you to upload larger files.
Try adding the following to a .htaccess file in the php directory:
php_value upload_max_filesize 9G
php_value post_max_size 9G
php_value max_execution_time 200
php_value max_input_time 200
php_value memory_limit 256M
If this doesn't work, try creating a php.ini file in the php directory and add the following lines:
upload_max_filesize 9G
post_max_size 9G
max_execution_time 200
max_input_time 200
memory_limit 256M
If this also doesn't work, contact your hosting provider.
By default, the PHP upload handler only correctly handles unicode file names on Linux and Windows hosts.
Please see this in-depth article for an explanation and recommendation on how to handle unicode file names on Windows server platforms:
http://evertpot.com/filesystem-encoding-and-php/
Depending on your server-environment, you might have to do Unicode normalization, to achieve the same binary representation of strings with Unicode characters.
The File Upload plugin will properly handle HTTP response codes when the browser supports XHR file uploads. It even displays the correct error message, e.g. "Error: Service Unavailable" for the following HTTP header :
HTTP/1.0 503 Service Unavailable
However, for browsers without support for XHR file uploads - which includes Internet Explorer before IE10 - the Iframe Transport is used and there is no way to retrieve the HTTP status code from an iframe load event.
Therefore, the Iframe Transport will trigger the done event for each upload, even if the server returns an error status code. However, it's possible to trigger a fail event instead based on the response content conversion, e.g.:
// By default, the iFrame Transport handles all responses as success,
// so we override the iFrame to JSON converter to handle error responses:
$.ajaxSetup({
converters: {
'iframe json': function (iframe) {
var result = iframe && $.parseJSON($(iframe[0].body).text());
if (result.error) {
// Handling JSON responses with error property:
// {"error": "Upload failed"}
throw result.error;
}
return result;
}
}
});
Also be weary for IE8, if you pass back an error response with http status code other than 200 (INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR for example), IE replaces the content of the iframe with an error message loaded from the disk (res://ieframe.dll/http_500.htm).
This happens in IE9 also. Iframe is undefined causing fail callback.