FileTransfer
The FileTransfer
object allows you to upload or download files to
and from a server.
Properties
- onprogress: Called with a
ProgressEvent
whenever a new chunk of data is transferred. (Function)
Methods
-
upload: sends a file to a server.
-
download: downloads a file from server.
-
abort: Aborts an in-progress transfer.
Details
The FileTransfer
object provides a way to upload files to a remote
server using an HTTP multi-part POST request. Both HTTP and HTTPS
protocols are supported. Optional parameters can be specified by
passing a [FileUploadOptions](../fileuploadoptions/fileuploadoptions.html)
object to the upload()
method. On
successful upload, a [FileUploadResult](../fileuploadresult/fileuploadresult.html)
object is passed to the
success callback. If an error occurs, a [FileTransferError](../filetransfererror/filetransfererror.html)
object is
passed to the error callback. It is also possible (only on iOS and
Android) to download a file from a remote server and save it on the
device.
Supported Platforms
- Amazon Fire OS
- Android
- BlackBerry 10
- iOS
- Windows Phone 7 and 8
- Windows 8
upload
Parameters:
-
filePath: Full path of the file on the device.
-
server: URL of the server to receive the file, as encoded by
encodeURI()
. -
successCallback: A callback that is passed a
[Metadata](../metadata/metadata.html)
object. (Function) -
errorCallback: A callback that executes if an error occurs retrieving the
[Metadata](../metadata/metadata.html)
. Invoked with a[FileTransferError](../filetransfererror/filetransfererror.html)
object. (Function) -
options: Optional parameters such as file name and mimetype.
-
trustAllHosts: Optional parameter, defaults to
false
. If set totrue
, it accepts all security certificates. This is useful since Android rejects self-signed security certificates. Not recommended for production use. Supported on Android and iOS. (boolean)
Quick Example
// !! Assumes variable fileURI contains a valid URI to a text file on the device
var win = function (r) {
console.log("Code = " + r.responseCode);
console.log("Response = " + r.response);
console.log("Sent = " + r.bytesSent);
}
var fail = function (error) {
alert("An error has occurred: Code = " + error.code);
console.log("upload error source " + error.source);
console.log("upload error target " + error.target);
}
var options = new FileUploadOptions();
options.fileKey = "file";
options.fileName = fileURI.substr(fileURI.lastIndexOf('/') + 1);
options.mimeType = "text/plain";
var params = {};
params.value1 = "test";
params.value2 = "param";
options.params = params;
var ft = new FileTransfer();
ft.upload(fileURI, encodeURI("http://some.server.com/upload.php"), win, fail, options);
Full Example
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<title>File Transfer Example</title>
<script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8" src="cordova.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8">
// Wait for device API libraries to load
//
document.addEventListener("deviceready", onDeviceReady, false);
// device APIs are available
//
function onDeviceReady() {
// Retrieve image file location from specified source
navigator.camera.getPicture(
uploadPhoto,
function(message) { alert('get picture failed'); },
{
quality : 50,
destinationType : navigator.camera.DestinationType.FILE_URI,
sourceType : navigator.camera.PictureSourceType.PHOTOLIBRARY
}
);
}
function uploadPhoto(imageURI) {
var options = new FileUploadOptions();
options.fileKey="file";
options.fileName=imageURI.substr(imageURI.lastIndexOf('/')+1);
options.mimeType="image/jpeg";
var params = {};
params.value1 = "test";
params.value2 = "param";
options.params = params;
var ft = new FileTransfer();
ft.upload(imageURI, encodeURI("http://some.server.com/upload.php"), win, fail, options);
}
function win(r) {
console.log("Code = " + r.responseCode);
console.log("Response = " + r.response);
console.log("Sent = " + r.bytesSent);
}
function fail(error) {
alert("An error has occurred: Code = " + error.code);
console.log("upload error source " + error.source);
console.log("upload error target " + error.target);
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Example</h1>
<p>Upload File</p>
</body>
</html>
Setting Upload Headers
Supported on Android and iOS
function win(r) {
console.log("Code = " + r.responseCode);
console.log("Response = " + r.response);
console.log("Sent = " + r.bytesSent);
}
function fail(error) {
alert("An error has occurred: Code = " + error.code);
console.log("upload error source " + error.source);
console.log("upload error target " + error.target);
}
var uri = encodeURI("http://some.server.com/upload.php");
var options = new FileUploadOptions();
options.fileKey="file";
options.fileName=fileURI.substr(fileURI.lastIndexOf('/')+1);
options.mimeType="text/plain";
var headers={'headerParam':'headerValue'};
options.headers = headers;
var ft = new FileTransfer();
ft.upload(fileURI, uri, win, fail, options);
Android Quirks
Set the chunkedMode
option to false
to prevent problems uploading
to a Nginx server.
download
Parameters:
-
source: URL of the server to download the file, as encoded by
encodeURI()
. -
target: Full path of the file on the device.
-
successCallback: A callback that is passed a
[FileEntry](../fileentry/fileentry.html)
object. (Function) -
errorCallback: A callback that executes if an error occurs when retrieving the
[Metadata](../metadata/metadata.html)
. Invoked with a[FileTransferError](../filetransfererror/filetransfererror.html)
object. (Function) -
trustAllHosts: Optional parameter, defaults to
false
. If set totrue
, it accepts all security certificates. This is useful because Android rejects self-signed security certificates. Not recommended for production use. Supported on Android and iOS. (boolean) -
options: Optional parameters, currently only supports headers (such as Authorization (Basic Authentication), etc).
Quick Example
// !! Assumes filePath is a valid path on the device
var fileTransfer = new FileTransfer();
var uri = encodeURI("http://some.server.com/download.php");
fileTransfer.download(
uri,
filePath,
function(entry) {
console.log("download complete: " + entry.fullPath);
},
function(error) {
console.log("download error source " + error.source);
console.log("download error target " + error.target);
console.log("upload error code" + error.code);
},
false,
{
headers: {
"Authorization": "Basic dGVzdHVzZXJuYW1lOnRlc3RwYXNzd29yZA=="
}
}
);
abort
Aborts an in-progress transfer. The onerror callback is passed a FileTransferError object which has an error code of FileTransferError.ABORT_ERR.
Supported Platforms
- Amazon Fire OS
- Android
- iOS
Quick Example
// !! Assumes variable fileURI contains a valid URI to a text file on the device
var win = function(r) {
console.log("Should not be called.");
}
var fail = function(error) {
// error.code == FileTransferError.ABORT_ERR
alert("An error has occurred: Code = " + error.code);
console.log("upload error source " + error.source);
console.log("upload error target " + error.target);
}
var options = new FileUploadOptions();
options.fileKey="file";
options.fileName="myphoto.jpg";
options.mimeType="image/jpeg";
var ft = new FileTransfer();
ft.upload(fileURI, encodeURI("http://some.server.com/upload.php"), win, fail, options);
ft.abort();
onprogress
Called with a ProgressEvent whenever a new chunk of data is transferred.
Supported Platforms
- Amazon Fire OS
- Android
- iOS
Example
fileTransfer.onprogress = function(progressEvent) {
if (progressEvent.lengthComputable) {
loadingStatus.setPercentage(progressEvent.loaded / progressEvent.total);
} else {
loadingStatus.increment();
}
};
fileTransfer.download(...); // or fileTransfer.upload(...);
Quirks
- On both Android an iOS, lengthComputable is
false
for downloads that use gzip encoding.