Multer is a node.js middleware for handling multipart/form-data
.
It is written on top of busboy for maximum efficiency.
$ npm install multer
var express = require('express')
var multer = require('multer')
var app = express()
app.use(multer({ dest: './uploads/'}))
You can access the fields and files in the request
object:
console.log(req.body)
console.log(req.files)
IMPORTANT: Multer will not process any form which is not multipart/form-data
.
A multer file object is a JSON object with the following properties.
fieldname
- Field name specified in the formoriginalname
- Name of the file on the user's computername
- Renamed file nameencoding
- Encoding type of the filemimetype
- Mime type of the filepath
- Location of the uploaded fileextension
- Extension of the filesize
- Size of the file in bytestruncated
- If the file was truncated due to size limitationbuffer
- Raw data (is null unless the inMemory option is true)
Multer accepts an options object, the most basic of which is the dest
property, which tells Multer where to upload the files. In case you omit the options object, the file will be renamed and uploaded to the temporary directory of the system. If the inMemory
option is true, no data is written to disk but data is kept in a buffer accessible in the file object.
By the default, Multer will rename the files so as to avoid name conflicts. The renaming function can be customized according to your needs.
The following are the options that can be passed to Multer.
dest
limits
includeEmptyFields
inMemory
rename(fieldname, filename, req, res)
changeDest(dest, req, res)
onFileUploadStart(file, req, res)
onFileUploadData(file, data, req, res)
onFileUploadComplete(file, req, res)
onParseStart()
onParseEnd(req, next)
onError()
onFileSizeLimit(file)
onFilesLimit()
onFieldsLimit()
onPartsLimit()
Apart from these, Multer also supports more advanced busboy options like highWaterMark
, fileHwm
, and defCharset
.
In an average web app, only dest
and rename
might be required, and configured as shown in the example.
app.use(multer({
dest: './uploads/',
rename: function (fieldname, filename) {
return filename.replace(/\W+/g, '-').toLowerCase() + Date.now()
}
}))
The details of the properties of the options object is explained in the following sections.
The destination directory for the uploaded files.
dest: './uploads/'
An object specifying the size limits of the following optional properties. This object is passed to busboy directly, and the details of properties can be found on busboy's page
fieldNameSize
- integer - Max field name size (Default: 100 bytes)fieldSize
- integer - Max field value size (Default: 1MB)fields
- integer - Max number of non-file fields (Default: Infinity)fileSize
- integer - For multipart forms, the max file size (in bytes) (Default: Infinity)files
- integer - For multipart forms, the max number of file fields (Default: Infinity)parts
- integer - For multipart forms, the max number of parts (fields + files) (Default: Infinity)headerPairs
- integer - For multipart forms, the max number of header key=>value pairs to parse Default: 2000 (same as node's http).
limits: {
fieldNameSize: 100,
files: 2,
fields: 5
}
Specifying the limits can help protect your site against denial of service (DoS) attacks.
A Boolean value to specify whether empty submitted values should be processed and applied to req.body
; defaults to false
;
includeEmptyFields: true
NOTE In the next major version, putSingleFilesInArray
will go away and all req.files
key-value pairs will point to an array of file objects. Begin migrating your code to use putSingleFilesInArray: true
. This will become the default in the next version. An explanation follows.
In the current version putSingleFilesInArray
is false. Activate it by setting the property to true.
putSingleFilesInArray: true
Some applications or libraries, such as Object Modelers, expect req.files
key-value pairs to always point to arrays. If putSingleFilesInArray
is true, multer will ensure all values point to an array.
// the value points to a single file object
req.files['file1'] = [fileObject1]
// the value points to an array of file objects
req.files['file1'] = [fileObject1, fileObject2]
Contrast this with Multer's default behavior, where putSingleFilesInArray
is false. If the value for any key in req.files
is a single file, then the value will equal a single file object. And if the value points to multiple files, then the value will equal an array of file objects.
// the value points to a single file object
req.files['file1'] = fileObject1
// the value points to an array of file objects
req.files['file1'] = [fileObject1, fileObject2]
If this Boolean value is true
, the file.buffer
property holds the data in-memory that Multer would have written to disk. The dest option is still populated and the path property contains the proposed path to save the file. Defaults to false
.
inMemory: true
WARNING: Uploading very large files, or relatively small files in large numbers very quickly, can cause your application to run out of memory when inMemory
is set to true
.
Function to rename the uploaded files. Whatever the function returns will become the new name of the uploaded file (extension is not included). The fieldname
and filename
of the file will be available in this function, use them if you need to.
rename: function (fieldname, filename, req, res) {
return fieldname + filename + Date.now()
}
Note that req.body Warnings applies to this function.
Function to rename the directory in which to place uploaded files. The dest
parameter is the default value originally assigned or passed into multer. The req
and res
parameters are also passed into the function because they may contain information (eg session data) needed to create the path (eg get userid from the session).
changeDest: function(dest, req, res) {
return dest + '/user1';
}
You might want to check that the subdirectory has been created. Here is a synchronous way to do it. The mkdirp module can be used to automatically create nested child directories.
changeDest: function(dest, req, res) {
var stat = null;
try {
// using fs.statSync; NOTE that fs.existsSync is now deprecated; fs.accessSync could be used but is only nodejs >= v0.12.0
stat = fs.statSync(dest);
} catch(err) {
// for nested folders, look at npm package "mkdirp"
fs.mkdirSync(dest);
}
if (stat && !stat.isDirectory()) {
// Woh! This file/link/etc already exists, so isn't a directory. Can't save in it. Handle appropriately.
throw new Error('Directory cannot be created because an inode of a different type exists at "' + dest + '"');
}
return dest;
}
Note that req.body Warnings applies to this function.
Event handler triggered when a file starts to be uploaded. A file object, with the following properties, is available to this function: fieldname
, originalname
, name
, encoding
, mimetype
, path
, and extension
.
onFileUploadStart: function (file, req, res) {
console.log(file.fieldname + ' is starting ...')
}
You can even stop a file from being uploaded - just return false
from the event handler. The file won't be processed or reach the file system.
onFileUploadStart: function (file, req, res) {
if (file.originalname == 'virus.exe') return false;
}
Note that req.body Warnings applies to this function.
Event handler triggered when a chunk of buffer is received. A buffer object along with a file object is available to the function.
onFileUploadData: function (file, data, req, res) {
console.log(data.length + ' of ' + file.fieldname + ' arrived')
}
Note that req.body Warnings applies to this function.
Event handler trigger when a file is completely uploaded. A file object is available to the function.
onFileUploadComplete: function (file, req, res) {
console.log(file.fieldname + ' uploaded to ' + file.path)
}
Note that req.body Warnings applies to this function.
Event handler triggered when the form parsing starts.
onParseStart: function () {
console.log('Form parsing started at: ', new Date())
}
Event handler triggered when the form parsing completes. The request
object and the next
objects are are passed to the function.
onParseEnd: function (req, next) {
console.log('Form parsing completed at: ', new Date());
// usage example: custom body parse
req.body = require('qs').parse(req.body);
// call the next middleware
next();
}
Note: If you have created a onParseEnd
event listener, you must manually call the next()
function, else the request will be left hanging.
Event handler for any errors encountering while processing the form. The error
object and the next
object is available to the function. If you are handling errors yourself, make sure to terminate the request or call the next()
function, else the request will be left hanging.
onError: function (error, next) {
console.log(error)
next(error)
}
Event handler triggered when a file size exceeds the specification in the limit
object. No more files will be parsed after the limit is reached.
onFileSizeLimit: function (file) {
console.log('Failed: ', file.originalname)
fs.unlink('./' + file.path) // delete the partially written file
}
Event handler triggered when the number of files exceed the specification in the limit
object. No more files will be parsed after the limit is reached.
onFilesLimit: function () {
console.log('Crossed file limit!')
}
Event handler triggered when the number of fields exceed the specification in the limit
object. No more fields will be parsed after the limit is reached.
onFieldsLimit: function () {
console.log('Crossed fields limit!')
}
Event handler triggered when the number of parts exceed the specification in the limit
object. No more files or fields will be parsed after the limit is reached.
onPartsLimit: function () {
console.log('Crossed parts limit!')
}
WARNING: req.body
is fully parsed after file uploads have finished. Accessing req.body
prematurely may cause errors. The req
and res
parameters are added to some functions to allow the developer to access properties other than req.body
, such as session variables or socket.io objects. You have been forwarned! :)