How to send PDF file to frontend? - javascript

I have a saved .PDF file on my system, and I am trying to send the file to the frontend using node/express.
I'm getting the file to send to the frontend as a stream (binary string), but when running some code on the frontend to get the .PDF to download onto the users computer, the .PDF file shows up blank.
Here is my route on the server:
app.post('/someroute', (req, res) => {
let pdfPath = './somepath/where/the/pdf/is'
// if the file does not exist
if (!fs.existsSync(pdfPath)) {
console.log(`The PDF does NOT exist # ${pdfPath}`)
return res.json({ success: false });
}
res.download(pdfPath, (err) => {
if (err) {
console.log('there was error in res.downoad!', err)
} else {
fs.unlink(pdfPath, (err) => {
if (err) {
console.log('there was error in unlinking the pdf file!', err)
} else {
console.log('success!')
}
})
}
})
})
Here is the code on the frontend:
$.post("/someroute", function(data) {
console.log('creating PDF...', data)
var downloadLink = document.createElement('a')
downloadLink.target = '_blank'
downloadLink.download = 'new_pdf_haha.pdf'
var blob = new Blob([data], { type: 'application/pdf' })
var URL = window.URL || window.webkitURL
var downloadUrl = URL.createObjectURL(blob)
// set object URL as the anchor's href
downloadLink.href = downloadUrl
// append the anchor to document body
document.body.append(downloadLink)
// fire a click event on the anchor
downloadLink.click()
// cleanup: remove element and revoke object URL
document.body.removeChild(downloadLink)
URL.revokeObjectURL(downloadUrl)
})
Here is the stream i'm receiving on the frontend:
stream on the frontend
Here is the PDF i'm expecting to be downloaded on the frontend:
Here is what's actually being downloaded:
If anyone can lend any insight or help it would be very much appreciated, thanks!

I think the main reason this isn't working for you is because jQuery doesn't support the 'blob' data type.
I did some research and found an example of how to get this to work with jQuery:
http://www.henryalgus.com/reading-binary-files-using-jquery-ajax/
You need to include the jQuery plugin from the blog post then convert your $.post call to a $.ajax call (with method POST) and specify that the transfer data type be 'binary' (to load the plugin).
After including the plugin, change your code to look like this:
$.ajax({
method: "POST",
url: "/someroute",
dataType: 'binary' // USE THE PLUGIN
})
.then(function (data) {
console.log("Got the PDF file!");
// Do with the PDF data as you please.
var downloadLink = document.createElement('a')
downloadLink.target = '_blank'
downloadLink.download = 'new_pdf_haha.pdf'
var blob = new Blob([data], { type: 'application/pdf' })
var URL = window.URL || window.webkitURL
var downloadUrl = URL.createObjectURL(blob)
downloadLink.href = downloadUrl
document.body.append(downloadLink) // THIS LINE ISN'T NECESSARY
downloadLink.click()
document.body.removeChild(downloadLink); // THIS LINE ISN'T NECESSARY
URL.revokeObjectURL(downloadUrl);
})
.catch(function (err) {
console.error("An error occurred.");
console.error(err);
});
There's a full working example for you here:
https://github.com/ashleydavis/pdf-server-example
Note that my server setup is different to yours, that may or may not be an issue for you. I have included example code for streaming and non-streaming PDF file download for comparison - streaming is used by default because I think that's what you wanted.
Also note that it does not appear necessary to add your synthesized link to the document and I have marked those lines as unnecessary.
I should also note that it is probably best to do this kind of thing with HTTP GET rather than HTTP POST. If you did that you could simplify your browser download code to be the following:
var downloadLink = document.createElement('a');
downloadLink.target = '_blank';
downloadLink.download = 'new_pdf_haha.pdf';
downloadLink.href = "someroute";
document.body.append(downloadLink)
downloadLink.click()
document.body.removeChild(downloadLink);

Related

How to automatically save a file received from server onto client [duplicate]

I have a javascript app that sends ajax POST requests to a certain URL. Response might be a JSON string or it might be a file (as an attachment). I can easily detect Content-Type and Content-Disposition in my ajax call, but once I detect that the response contains a file, how do I offer the client to download it? I've read a number of similar threads here but none of them provide the answer I'm looking for.
Please, please, please do not post answers suggesting that I shouldn't use ajax for this or that I should redirect the browser, because none of this is an option. Using a plain HTML form is also not an option. What I do need is to show a download dialog to the client. Can this be done and how?
Don't give up so quickly, because this can be done (in modern browsers) using parts of the FileAPI:
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('POST', url, true);
xhr.responseType = 'blob';
xhr.onload = function () {
if (this.status === 200) {
var blob = this.response;
var filename = "";
var disposition = xhr.getResponseHeader('Content-Disposition');
if (disposition && disposition.indexOf('attachment') !== -1) {
var filenameRegex = /filename[^;=\n]*=((['"]).*?\2|[^;\n]*)/;
var matches = filenameRegex.exec(disposition);
if (matches != null && matches[1]) filename = matches[1].replace(/['"]/g, '');
}
if (typeof window.navigator.msSaveBlob !== 'undefined') {
// IE workaround for "HTML7007: One or more blob URLs were revoked by closing the blob for which they were created. These URLs will no longer resolve as the data backing the URL has been freed."
window.navigator.msSaveBlob(blob, filename);
} else {
var URL = window.URL || window.webkitURL;
var downloadUrl = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
if (filename) {
// use HTML5 a[download] attribute to specify filename
var a = document.createElement("a");
// safari doesn't support this yet
if (typeof a.download === 'undefined') {
window.location.href = downloadUrl;
} else {
a.href = downloadUrl;
a.download = filename;
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
}
} else {
window.location.href = downloadUrl;
}
setTimeout(function () { URL.revokeObjectURL(downloadUrl); }, 100); // cleanup
}
}
};
xhr.setRequestHeader('Content-type', 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded');
xhr.send($.param(params, true));
Or if using jQuery.ajax:
$.ajax({
type: "POST",
url: url,
data: params,
xhrFields: {
responseType: 'blob' // to avoid binary data being mangled on charset conversion
},
success: function(blob, status, xhr) {
// check for a filename
var filename = "";
var disposition = xhr.getResponseHeader('Content-Disposition');
if (disposition && disposition.indexOf('attachment') !== -1) {
var filenameRegex = /filename[^;=\n]*=((['"]).*?\2|[^;\n]*)/;
var matches = filenameRegex.exec(disposition);
if (matches != null && matches[1]) filename = matches[1].replace(/['"]/g, '');
}
if (typeof window.navigator.msSaveBlob !== 'undefined') {
// IE workaround for "HTML7007: One or more blob URLs were revoked by closing the blob for which they were created. These URLs will no longer resolve as the data backing the URL has been freed."
window.navigator.msSaveBlob(blob, filename);
} else {
var URL = window.URL || window.webkitURL;
var downloadUrl = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
if (filename) {
// use HTML5 a[download] attribute to specify filename
var a = document.createElement("a");
// safari doesn't support this yet
if (typeof a.download === 'undefined') {
window.location.href = downloadUrl;
} else {
a.href = downloadUrl;
a.download = filename;
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
}
} else {
window.location.href = downloadUrl;
}
setTimeout(function () { URL.revokeObjectURL(downloadUrl); }, 100); // cleanup
}
}
});
Create a form, use the POST method, submit the form - there's no need for an iframe. When the server page responds to the request, write a response header for the mime type of the file, and it will present a download dialog - I've done this a number of times.
You want content-type of application/download - just search for how to provide a download for whatever language you're using.
I faced the same issue and successfully solved it. My use-case is this.
"Post JSON data to the server and receive an excel file.
That excel file is created by the server and returned as a response to the client. Download that response as a file with custom name in browser"
$("#my-button").on("click", function(){
// Data to post
data = {
ids: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
};
// Use XMLHttpRequest instead of Jquery $ajax
xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
var a;
if (xhttp.readyState === 4 && xhttp.status === 200) {
// Trick for making downloadable link
a = document.createElement('a');
a.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(xhttp.response);
// Give filename you wish to download
a.download = "test-file.xls";
a.style.display = 'none';
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
}
};
// Post data to URL which handles post request
xhttp.open("POST", excelDownloadUrl);
xhttp.setRequestHeader("Content-Type", "application/json");
// You should set responseType as blob for binary responses
xhttp.responseType = 'blob';
xhttp.send(JSON.stringify(data));
});
The above snippet is just doing following
Posting an array as JSON to the server using XMLHttpRequest.
After fetching content as a blob(binary), we are creating a downloadable URL and attaching it to invisible "a" link then clicking it.
Here we need to carefully set few things at the server side. I set few headers in Python Django HttpResponse. You need to set them accordingly if you use other programming languages.
# In python django code
response = HttpResponse(file_content, content_type="application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet")
Since I download xls(excel) here, I adjusted contentType to above one. You need to set it according to your file type. You can use this technique to download any kind of files.
What server-side language are you using? In my app I can easily download a file from an AJAX call by setting the correct headers in PHP's response:
Setting headers server-side
header("HTTP/1.1 200 OK");
header("Pragma: public");
header("Cache-Control: must-revalidate, post-check=0, pre-check=0");
// The optional second 'replace' parameter indicates whether the header
// should replace a previous similar header, or add a second header of
// the same type. By default it will replace, but if you pass in FALSE
// as the second argument you can force multiple headers of the same type.
header("Cache-Control: private", false);
header("Content-type: " . $mimeType);
// $strFileName is, of course, the filename of the file being downloaded.
// This won't have to be the same name as the actual file.
header("Content-Disposition: attachment; filename=\"{$strFileName}\"");
header("Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary");
header("Content-Length: " . mb_strlen($strFile));
// $strFile is a binary representation of the file that is being downloaded.
echo $strFile;
This will in fact 'redirect' the browser to this download page, but as #ahren alread said in his comment, it won't navigate away from the current page.
It's all about setting the correct headers so I'm sure you'll find a suitable solution for the server-side language you're using if it's not PHP.
Handling the response client side
Assuming you already know how to make an AJAX call, on the client side you execute an AJAX request to the server. The server then generates a link from where this file can be downloaded, e.g. the 'forward' URL where you want to point to.
For example, the server responds with:
{
status: 1, // ok
// unique one-time download token, not required of course
message: 'http://yourwebsite.com/getdownload/ska08912dsa'
}
When processing the response, you inject an iframe in your body and set the iframe's SRC to the URL you just received like this (using jQuery for the ease of this example):
$("body").append("<iframe src='" + data.message +
"' style='display: none;' ></iframe>");
If you've set the correct headers as shown above, the iframe will force a download dialog without navigating the browser away from the current page.
Note
Extra addition in relation to your question; I think it's best to always return JSON when requesting stuff with AJAX technology. After you've received the JSON response, you can then decide client-side what to do with it. Maybe, for example, later on you want the user to click a download link to the URL instead of forcing the download directly, in your current setup you would have to update both client and server-side to do so.
Here is how I got this working
https://stackoverflow.com/a/27563953/2845977
$.ajax({
url: '<URL_TO_FILE>',
success: function(data) {
var blob=new Blob([data]);
var link=document.createElement('a');
link.href=window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
link.download="<FILENAME_TO_SAVE_WITH_EXTENSION>";
link.click();
}
});
Updated answer using download.js
$.ajax({
url: '<URL_TO_FILE>',
success: download.bind(true, "<FILENAME_TO_SAVE_WITH_EXTENSION>", "<FILE_MIME_TYPE>")
});
For those looking for a solution from an Angular perspective, this worked for me:
$http.post(
'url',
{},
{responseType: 'arraybuffer'}
).then(function (response) {
var headers = response.headers();
var blob = new Blob([response.data],{type:headers['content-type']});
var link = document.createElement('a');
link.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
link.download = "Filename";
link.click();
});
For those looking for a more modern approach, you can use the fetch API. The following code shows how to download a spreadsheet file.
fetch(url, {
body: JSON.stringify(data),
method: 'POST',
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'application/json; charset=utf-8'
},
})
.then(response => response.blob())
.then(response => {
const blob = new Blob([response], {type: 'application/application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet'});
const downloadUrl = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
const a = document.createElement("a");
a.href = downloadUrl;
a.download = "file.xlsx";
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
})
I believe this approach to be much easier to understand than other XMLHttpRequest solutions. Also, it has a similar syntax to the jQuery approach, without the need to add any additional libraries.
Of course, I would advise checking to which browser you are developing, since this new approach won't work on IE. You can find the full browser compatibility list on the following [link][1].
Important: In this example I am sending a JSON request to a server listening on the given url. This url must be set, on my example I am assuming you know this part. Also, consider the headers needed for your request to work. Since I am sending a JSON, I must add the Content-Type header and set it to application/json; charset=utf-8, as to let the server know the type of request it will receive.
I see you've already found out a solution, however I just wanted to add some information which may help someone trying to achieve the same thing with big POST requests.
I had the same issue a couple of weeks ago, indeed it isn't possible to achieve a "clean" download through AJAX, the Filament Group created a jQuery plugin which works exactly how you've already found out, it is called jQuery File Download however there is a downside to this technique.
If you're sending big requests through AJAX (say files +1MB) it will negatively impact responsiveness. In slow Internet connections you'll have to wait a lot until the request is sent and also wait for the file to download. It isn't like an instant "click" => "popup" => "download start". It's more like "click" => "wait until data is sent" => "wait for response" => "download start" which makes it appear the file double its size because you'll have to wait for the request to be sent through AJAX and get it back as a downloadable file.
If you're working with small file sizes <1MB you won't notice this. But as I discovered in my own app, for bigger file sizes it is almost unbearable.
My app allow users to export images dynamically generated, these images are sent through POST requests in base64 format to the server (it is the only possible way), then processed and sent back to users in form of .png, .jpg files, base64 strings for images +1MB are huge, this force users to wait more than necessary for the file to start downloading. In slow Internet connections it can be really annoying.
My solution for this was to temporary write the file to the server, once it is ready, dynamically generate a link to the file in form of a button which changes between "Please wait..." and "Download" states and at the same time, print the base64 image in a preview popup window so users can "right-click" and save it. This makes all the waiting time more bearable for users, and also speed things up.
Update Sep 30, 2014:
Months have passed since I posted this, finally I've found a better approach to speed things up when working with big base64 strings. I now store base64 strings into the database (using longtext or longblog fields), then I pass its record ID through the jQuery File Download, finally on the download script file I query the database using this ID to pull the base64 string and pass it through the download function.
Download Script Example:
<?php
// Record ID
$downloadID = (int)$_POST['id'];
// Query Data (this example uses CodeIgniter)
$data = $CI->MyQueries->GetDownload( $downloadID );
// base64 tags are replaced by [removed], so we strip them out
$base64 = base64_decode( preg_replace('#\[removed\]#', '', $data[0]->image) );
// This example is for base64 images
$imgsize = getimagesize( $base64 );
// Set content headers
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="my-file.png"');
header('Content-type: '.$imgsize['mime']);
// Force download
echo $base64;
?>
I know this is way beyond what the OP asked, however I felt it would be good to update my answer with my findings. When I was searching for solutions to my problem, I read lots of "Download from AJAX POST data" threads which didn't give me the answer I was looking for, I hope this information helps someone looking to achieve something like this.
Here is my solution using a temporary hidden form.
//Create an hidden form
var form = $('<form>', {'method': 'POST', 'action': this.href}).hide();
//Add params
var params = { ...your params... };
$.each(params, function (k, v) {
form.append($('<input>', {'type': 'hidden', 'name': k, 'value': v}));
});
//Make it part of the document and submit
$('body').append(form);
form.submit();
//Clean up
form.remove();
Note that I massively use JQuery but you can do the same with native JS.
I want to point out some difficulties that arise when using the technique in the accepted answer, i.e. using a form post:
You can't set headers on the request. If your authentication schema involves headers, a Json-Web-Token passed in the Authorization header, you'll have to find other way to send it, for example as a query parameter.
You can't really tell when the request has finished. Well, you can use a cookie that gets set on response, as done by jquery.fileDownload, but it's FAR from perfect. It won't work for concurrent requests and it will break if a response never arrives.
If the server responds with a error, the user will be redirected to the error page.
You can only use the content types supported by a form. Which means you can't use JSON.
I ended up using the method of saving the file on S3 and sending a pre-signed URL to get the file.
As others have stated, you can create and submit a form to download via a POST request. However, you don't have to do this manually.
One really simple library for doing exactly this is jquery.redirect. It provides an API similar to the standard jQuery.post method:
$.redirect(url, [values, [method, [target]]])
This is a 3 years old question but I had the same problem today. I looked your edited solution but I think that it can sacrifice the performance because it has to make a double request. So if anyone needs another solution that doesn't imply to call the service twice then this is the way I did it:
<form id="export-csv-form" method="POST" action="/the/path/to/file">
<input type="hidden" name="anyValueToPassTheServer" value="">
</form>
This form is just used to call the service and avoid to use a window.location(). After that you just simply have to make a form submit from jquery in order to call the service and get the file. It's pretty simple but this way you can make a download using a POST. I now that this could be easier if the service you're calling is a GET, but that's not my case.
I used this FileSaver.js. In my case with csv files, i did this (in coffescript):
$.ajax
url: "url-to-server"
data: "data-to-send"
success: (csvData)->
blob = new Blob([csvData], { type: 'text/csv' })
saveAs(blob, "filename.csv")
I think for most complicated case, the data must be processed properly. Under the hood FileSaver.js implement the same approach of the answer of Jonathan Amend.
see: http://www.henryalgus.com/reading-binary-files-using-jquery-ajax/
it'll return a blob as a response, which can then be put into filesaver
Here is my solution, gathered from different sources:
Server side implementation :
String contentType = MediaType.APPLICATION_OCTET_STREAM_VALUE;
// Set headers
response.setHeader("content-disposition", "attachment; filename =" + fileName);
response.setContentType(contentType);
// Copy file to output stream
ServletOutputStream servletOutputStream = response.getOutputStream();
try (InputStream inputStream = new FileInputStream(file)) {
IOUtils.copy(inputStream, servletOutputStream);
} finally {
servletOutputStream.flush();
Utils.closeQuitely(servletOutputStream);
fileToDownload = null;
}
Client side implementation (using jquery):
$.ajax({
type: 'POST',
contentType: 'application/json',
url: <download file url>,
data: JSON.stringify(postObject),
error: function(XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) {
alert(errorThrown);
},
success: function(message, textStatus, response) {
var header = response.getResponseHeader('Content-Disposition');
var fileName = header.split("=")[1];
var blob = new Blob([message]);
var link = document.createElement('a');
link.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
link.download = fileName;
link.click();
}
});
Below is my solution for downloading multiple files depending on some list which consists of some ids and looking up in database, files will be determined and ready for download - if those exist.
I am calling C# MVC action for each file using Ajax.
And Yes, like others said, it is possible to do it in jQuery Ajax.
I did it with Ajax success and I am always sending response 200.
So, this is the key:
success: function (data, textStatus, xhr) {
And this is my code:
var i = 0;
var max = 0;
function DownloadMultipleFiles() {
if ($(".dataTables_scrollBody>tr.selected").length > 0) {
var list = [];
showPreloader();
$(".dataTables_scrollBody>tr.selected").each(function (e) {
var element = $(this);
var orderid = element.data("orderid");
var iscustom = element.data("iscustom");
var orderlineid = element.data("orderlineid");
var folderPath = "";
var fileName = "";
list.push({ orderId: orderid, isCustomOrderLine: iscustom, orderLineId: orderlineid, folderPath: folderPath, fileName: fileName });
});
i = 0;
max = list.length;
DownloadFile(list);
}
}
Then calling:
function DownloadFile(list) {
$.ajax({
url: '#Url.Action("OpenFile","OrderLines")',
type: "post",
data: list[i],
xhrFields: {
responseType: 'blob'
},
beforeSend: function (xhr) {
xhr.setRequestHeader("RequestVerificationToken",
$('input:hidden[name="__RequestVerificationToken"]').val());
},
success: function (data, textStatus, xhr) {
// check for a filename
var filename = "";
var disposition = xhr.getResponseHeader('Content-Disposition');
if (disposition && disposition.indexOf('attachment') !== -1) {
var filenameRegex = /filename[^;=\n]*=((['"]).*?\2|[^;\n]*)/;
var matches = filenameRegex.exec(disposition);
if (matches != null && matches[1]) filename = matches[1].replace(/['"]/g, '');
var a = document.createElement('a');
var url = window.URL.createObjectURL(data);
a.href = url;
a.download = filename;
document.body.append(a);
a.click();
a.remove();
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
}
else {
getErrorToastMessage("Production file for order line " + list[i].orderLineId + " does not exist");
}
i = i + 1;
if (i < max) {
DownloadFile(list);
}
},
error: function (XMLHttpRequest, textStatus, errorThrown) {
},
complete: function () {
if(i===max)
hidePreloader();
}
});
}
C# MVC:
[HttpPost]
[ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
public IActionResult OpenFile(OrderLineSimpleModel model)
{
byte[] file = null;
try
{
if (model != null)
{
//code for getting file from api - part is missing here as not important for this example
file = apiHandler.Get<byte[]>(downloadApiUrl, token);
var contentDispositionHeader = new System.Net.Mime.ContentDisposition
{
Inline = true,
FileName = fileName
};
// Response.Headers.Add("Content-Disposition", contentDispositionHeader.ToString() + "; attachment");
Response.Headers.Add("Content-Type", "application/pdf");
Response.Headers.Add("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=" + fileName);
Response.Headers.Add("Content-Transfer-Encoding", "binary");
Response.Headers.Add("Content-Length", file.Length.ToString());
}
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
this.logger.LogError(ex, "Error getting pdf", null);
return Ok();
}
return File(file, System.Net.Mime.MediaTypeNames.Application.Pdf);
}
As long as you return response 200, success in Ajax can work with it, you can check if file actually exist or not as the line below in this case would be false and you can inform user about that:
if (disposition && disposition.indexOf('attachment') !== -1) {
To get Jonathan Amends answer to work in Edge I made the following changes:
var blob = typeof File === 'function'
? new File([this.response], filename, { type: type })
: new Blob([this.response], { type: type });
to this
var f = typeof File+"";
var blob = f === 'function' && Modernizr.fileapi
? new File([this.response], filename, { type: type })
: new Blob([this.response], { type: type });
I would rather have posted this as a comment but I don't have enough reputation for that
there is another solution to download a web page in ajax. But I am referring to a page that must first be processed and then downloaded.
First you need to separate the page processing from the results download.
1) Only the page calculations are made in the ajax call.
$.post("CalculusPage.php", { calculusFunction: true, ID: 29, data1: "a", data2: "b" },
function(data, status)
{
if (status == "success")
{
/* 2) In the answer the page that uses the previous calculations is downloaded. For example, this can be a page that prints the results of a table calculated in the ajax call. */
window.location.href = DownloadPage.php+"?ID="+29;
}
}
);
// For example: in the CalculusPage.php
if ( !empty($_POST["calculusFunction"]) )
{
$ID = $_POST["ID"];
$query = "INSERT INTO ExamplePage (data1, data2) VALUES ('".$_POST["data1"]."', '".$_POST["data2"]."') WHERE id = ".$ID;
...
}
// For example: in the DownloadPage.php
$ID = $_GET["ID"];
$sede = "SELECT * FROM ExamplePage WHERE id = ".$ID;
...
$filename="Export_Data.xls";
header("Content-Type: application/vnd.ms-excel");
header("Content-Disposition: inline; filename=$filename");
...
I hope this solution can be useful for many, as it was for me.
If response is an Array Buffer, try this under onsuccess event in Ajax:
if (event.data instanceof ArrayBuffer) {
var binary = '';
var bytes = new Uint8Array(event.data);
for (var i = 0; i < bytes.byteLength; i++) {
binary += String.fromCharCode(bytes[i])
}
$("#some_id").append("<li><img src=\"data:image/png;base64," + window.btoa(binary) + "\"/></span></li>");
return;
}
where event.data is response received in success function of xhr event.
I needed a similar solution to #alain-cruz's one, but in nuxt/vue with multiple downloads. I know browsers block multiple file downloads, and I also have API which returns a set of csv formatted data.I was going to use JSZip at first but I needed IE support so here is my solution. If anyone can help me improve this that would be great, but it's working for me so far.
API returns:
data : {
body: {
fileOne: ""col1", "col2", "datarow1.1", "datarow1.2"...so on",
fileTwo: ""col1", "col2"..."
}
}
page.vue:
<template>
<b-link #click.prevent="handleFileExport">Export<b-link>
</template>
export default = {
data() {
return {
fileNames: ['fileOne', 'fileTwo'],
}
},
computed: {
...mapState({
fileOne: (state) => state.exportFile.fileOne,
fileTwo: (state) => state.exportFile.fileTwo,
}),
},
method: {
handleExport() {
//exportFileAction in store/exportFile needs to return promise
this.$store.dispatch('exportFile/exportFileAction', paramsToSend)
.then(async (response) => {
const downloadPrep = this.fileNames.map(async (fileName) => {
// using lodash to get computed data by the file name
const currentData = await _.get(this, `${fileName}`);
const currentFileName = fileName;
return { currentData, currentFileName };
});
const response = await Promise.all(downloadPrep);
return response;
})
.then(async (data) => {
data.forEach(({ currentData, currentFileName }) => {
this.forceFileDownload(currentData, currentFileName);
});
})
.catch(console.error);
},
forceFileDownload(data, fileName) {
const url = window.URL
.createObjectURL(new Blob([data], { type: 'text/csv;charset=utf-8;' }));
const link = document.createElement('a');
link.href = url;
link.setAttribute('download', `${fileName}.csv`);
document.body.appendChild(link);
link.click();
},
}
I used Naren Yellavula's solution and got it working with few changes to the script, after trying several other solutions using jquery. But, jquery will not download a zip file properly. I can't unzip the file after download.
In my use case, I have to upload a zip file, which is unzipped in the Servlet, files are processed and zipped again before the zip file is downloaded to the client. This is what you need to do on client side.
$('#fileUpBtn').click(function (e){
e.preventDefault();
var file = $('#fileUpload')[0].files[0];
var formdata = new FormData();
formdata.append('file', file);
// Use XMLHttpRequest instead of Jquery $ajax to download zip files
xhttp = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhttp.onreadystatechange = function() {
if (xhttp.readyState === 4 && xhttp.status === 200) {
var a = document.createElement('a');
a.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(xhttp.response);
a.download = "modified_" + file.name;
a.style.display = 'none';
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
document.body.removeChild(a);
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(a.href);
}
};
xhttp.open("POST", "<URL to Servlet>", true);
xhttp.responseType = 'blob';
xhttp.send(formdata);
});
<div class="form-group">
<label id="fileUpLabel" for="fileUpload"></label>
<input type="file" class="form-control" id="fileUpload" name="file" accept="" required/>
</div>
<button class="btn" type="submit" id="fileUpBtn"></button>

Unable to download the file from Node.js using the POST request

I found a few questions related to the same but the answer didn't work for me so posting the same here.
I have some XML content which has been created programmatically and displayed in Textarea. I need an option to export or download the same to the local system. So I am using the POST request to send these data to NODE.JS where I am creating my XML file and trying to download it. I know if I am using the GET it would work directly but with POST it's failing. Is there a way I can do this?
Here is the code I have:
Angularjs POST request:
I have a button when clicked I am passing all the XML data to my NODE.js function:
$scope.ExportXML = function(XMLContent){
var XMLContent = XMLContent;
$http({
url : "/ExportData",
method : "POST",
data : XMLContent
}).success(function(data, status, headers, config) {
console.log(data);
console.log("Data Exported");
window.location.assign(data);
$window.open(data);
}).error(function(error, status, headers, config) {
console.log('ERROR: could not download file');
console.log(error)
});
}
My Node.js function which would create the XML file with the data:
const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
const reqPath = path.join(__dirname, '../');
exports.exportfile = function(req,res)
{
var ContentData = req.body;
var FileName = "XMLDATA.xml";
fs.appendFile(FileName, ContentData, function (err)
{
const FilePath = reqPath+FileName;
res.download(FilePath);
})
}
As you can see from the success function of the ANGULARJS I tried a couple of things but none worked. I tried sending back the path of the file using the callback(FilePath); and then I am trying to download the file using the $window.open(data); but I am getting the following error Not allowed to load local resource:.
Can someone please help me with this?
After a bit of searching I was able to do it. Rather than sending the DATA to NODE.JS using the POST, I tried creating the file within my AngularjS function and downloaded it from there itself. if in case anyone is looking for the solution here it is:
//Export the contents of XML to text file
$scope.ExportXML = function(XMLContent){
var filename = 'HelloWorld.xml'
var blob = new Blob([XMLContent], {type: "text/xml"});
if (window.navigator && window.navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob)
{
window.navigator.msSaveOrOpenBlob(blob, filename);
}
else
{
var e = document.createEvent('MouseEvents'),
a = document.createElement('a');
a.download = filename;
a.href = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
a.dataset.downloadurl = ['text/json', a.download, a.href].join(':');
e.initEvent('click', true, false, window, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, false, false, false, false, 0, null);
a.dispatchEvent(e);
}
}

How to trigger a browser download from a browser FETCH?

I'm working on a project with Vue.js and Typescript for front-end and Java Spring as backend.
My java controller retrieves a given report from the db and then copies it into the HTML response.
I want the CSV to be downloaded by the browser therefore I added Content-disposition header in the response.
#GetMapping('/download')
public void downloadCSV(HttpServletRequest response){
Report r = reportService.findById(85);
response.addHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=myCSV.csv");
response.setContentType("text/csv");
try {
InputStream stream = new ByteArrayInputStream(r.getDocument());
IOUtils.copy(stream, response.getOutputStream());
response.flushBuffer();
} catch(Exception e) {...}
}
I have 2 buttons: one simple hyperlink tag with href linking to download(), and a b-button (from bootstrap-vue) that once cliccked triggers download2().
<a :href="download" role="button"> Download CSV </a>
<b-button #click="event => download2()">
Download CSV v2
</b-button>
get download(): string {
return 'http://localhost:8080/download';
}
async download2() {
const rHeaders = new Headers();
rHeaders.append('Accept', 'text/csv');
const configInit = RequestInit = {
method: 'GET',
headers: rHeaders
};
try {
const res = await fetch('http://localhost:8080/download', configInit);
return res.text();
} catch (e) {...}
}
Now, If I click on the first button "Download csv", the csv is correctly downloaded by the browser. The javascript console prints the following:
Resource interpreted as Document but transferred with MIME type text/csv
and there is nothing in the response body.
Instead, if I click the 2nd button "Download csv v2", the download does not start but I have the csv in the response body.
Here, the differences in the request headers between the two.
*Header* *Download csv* *Download csv v2*
Sec-Fetch-Dest document empty
Sec-Fetch-Mode navigate cors
Sec-Fetch-User ?1 -
Upgrade-Insecure-Requests 1 -
the other headers are the same. It is not possible to change these headers, even if I set them in the javascript method; they remain still the same.
What's the problem?
Thank you.
I found a solution by "mimicking" the behavior of a <a> element:
This way, it works properly:
async download2() {
const configInit: RequestInit = {
method: 'GET'
};
try {
await fetch('http://localhost:8080/download', configInit)
.then(response => response.blob())
.then(blob => {
const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
const a = document.createElement('a');
a.style.display = 'none';
a.href = url;
a.download = 'report.csv';
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
window.URL.revokeObjectURL(url);
})
} catch (e) {...}

React - Downloading a Zip File from API Response Body in Bytes String?

I have a working API call that returns in the response body a string prepared in Bytes format on the Python side that is a zip file. The String looks something like this, but longer:
PK��Q��F���������������/export_file.csv��uX\M�
This is a zip file containing one csv file. In tools such as postman, hitting the same POST endpoint with the same parameters in the body, I can successfully download a valid zip file, unzip the contents, and view the .csv file. In the browser debugger tools, I can see the API endpoint returning a successful response, with the same string above in the body.
Where I have failed at every attempt is on the react side, doing the work necessary to take this string and download the same zip file. Every suggestion I've read on SO and everywhere else has failed me. Here is what some of my failed attempts look like:
(Also note that a successful API call returns a 26kb payload from this example)
export function downloadZipFile(responseBody){
/* Blob Attempts */
// These download a 46kb file. Attempting to open gives "The compressed zip folder is invalid"
// var blob = new Blob([responseBody], {type: "content-type"});
// var blob = new Blob([responseBody], {type: "application/zip"});
// var blob = new Blob([responseBody], {type: "application/zip, application/octet-stream"});
// var blob = new Blob([responseBody], {type: "application/octet-stream"});
// var blob = new Blob([responseBody], {type: "octet/stream"});
var fileName = "export.zip";
saveAs(blob,fileName);
/* Data String Attempts */
// const dataStr = "data:application/zip;" + responseBody; // "Failed - Network Error"
// const dataStr = "data:application/zip, application/octet-stream;" + responseBody; // Downloads 1kb File "The compressed zip folder is invalid"
// const dataStr = "data:application/zip,application/octet-stream;" + responseBody; // Downloads 1kb File "The compressed zip folder is invalid"
// const dataStr = "data:application/octet-stream;" + responseBody; // "Failed - Network Error"
let downloadElement = document.createElement('a');
downloadElement.setAttribute("href", dataStr);
downloadElement.setAttribute("download", "export.zip");
document.body.appendChild(downloadElement);
downloadElement.click();
downloadElement.remove();
}
I've arrived late, but hope to help someone.
It is really important to set responseType as 'arraybuffer' in the api call, like this:
...
export const getZip = async (id) => {
const { data } = await axios.get(
"/sypa-applications/export",
{
id
},
{ responseType: "arraybuffer" }
);
return data;
}
...
Then you can download the ZIP from both ways:
1.- Using file-saver npm dependency:
let blob = new Blob([data], { type: "application/zip" });
saveAs(blob, "fileName.zip");
2.- Using DOM:
const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([data], { type: "application/zip" });
const link = document.createElement("a");
link.href = url;
link.setAttribute("download", "fileName.zip");
document.body.appendChild(link);
link.click();
link.parentNode.removeChild(link);
I couldn't download the ZIP until I set the responseType param to "arraybuffer" in the GET request.
Best regard,
Alberto.
Did you check this tool? https://gildas-lormeau.github.io/zip.js/
There is an example for unzipping a file using js in the browser. http://gildas-lormeau.github.io/zip.js/demos/demo2.html
It seems that this is what you want. First unzip the file and the use the .csv as wanted

blob to text : Can not read file content when converting blob to text for pdf and doc files

I am downloading a file and trying to read the file content as part of functionality in project. When I am reading .text file below code is working fine. But for .pdf it's not working.
service.ts
saveFile(response, filename) {
const blob = new Blob([response], { type: 'application/pdf' });
const fileReader = new FileReader();
fileReader.onload = (e) => {
console.log(fileReader.result);
}
fileReader.readAsText(blob);
var result = filename.match('.pdf');
if (result) {
var blobURL = URL.createObjectURL(blob);
window.open(blobURL);
} else {
saveAs(blob, filename);
}
}
I am able to save file with content however not able to read file text. File text looks like this
Normally you cant view content of pdf by default so you need to add some third party lib to read it's content
Check this package pdfreader
Sample:
var PdfReader = require("pdfreader").PdfReader;
new PdfReader().parseFileItems("sample.pdf", function(err, item){
if (item && item.text)
console.log(item.text);
});
or
var fs = require("fs");
fs.readFile("sample.pdf", (err, pdfBuffer) => {
// pdfBuffer contains the file content
new PdfReader().parseBuffer(pdfBuffer, function(err, item) {
if (err) callback(err);
else if (!item) callback();
else if (item.text) console.log(item.text);
});
});
After doing loads of option following is the code module I created to read pdf, doc and docx file. This module also provide file extension. In future I will make it fully functional library to read all types of documents, Just pass the file name it will return text.
https://github.com/bpandey3/fileparser/blob/master/utils/passfileReader.js
Dev dependencies
node-stream-zip for doc and docx file
pdfreader for reading pdf file system to read files

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