§Handling file upload
§Uploading files in a form using multipart/form-data
The standard way to upload files in a web application is to use a form with a special multipart/form-data
encoding, which lets you mix standard form data with file attachment data. Please note: the HTTP method for the form have to be POST (not GET).
Start by writing an HTML form:
@helper.form(action = routes.Application.upload, 'enctype -> "multipart/form-data") {
<input type="file" name="picture">
<p>
<input type="submit">
</p>
}
Now define the upload
action using a multipartFormData
body parser:
def upload = Action(parse.multipartFormData) { request =>
request.body.file("picture").map { picture =>
import java.io.File
val filename = picture.filename
val contentType = picture.contentType
picture.ref.moveTo(new File("/tmp/picture"))
Ok("File uploaded")
}.getOrElse {
Redirect(routes.Application.index).flashing(
"error" -> "Missing file"
)
}
}
The ref
attribute give you a reference to a TemporaryFile
. This is the default way the mutipartFormData
parser handles file upload.
Note: As always, you can also use the
anyContent
body parser and retrieve it asrequest.asMultipartFormData
.
§Direct file upload
Another way to send files to the server is to use Ajax to upload the file asynchronously in a form. In this case the request body will not have been encoded as multipart/form-data
, but will just contain the plain file content.
In this case we can just use a body parser to store the request body content in a file. For this example, let’s use the temporaryFile
body parser:
def upload = Action(parse.temporaryFile) { request =>
request.body.moveTo(new File("/tmp/picture"))
Ok("File uploaded")
}
§Writing your own body parser
If you want to handle the file upload directly without buffering it in a temporary file, you can just write your own BodyParser
. In this case, you will receive chunks of data that you are free to push anywhere you want.
If you want to use multipart/form-data
encoding, you can still use the default mutipartFormData
parser by providing your own PartHandler[FilePart[A]]
. You receive the part headers, and you have to provide an Iteratee[Array[Byte], FilePart[A]]
that will produce the right FilePart
.