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181 lines
7.2 KiB
181 lines
7.2 KiB
.. _uploading-files: |
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Uploading Files |
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=============== |
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Ah yes, the good old problem of file uploads. The basic idea of file |
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uploads is actually quite simple. It basically works like this: |
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1. A ``<form>`` tag is marked with ``enctype=multipart/form-data`` |
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and an ``<input type=file>`` is placed in that form. |
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2. The application accesses the file from the :attr:`~flask.request.files` |
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dictionary on the request object. |
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3. use the :meth:`~werkzeug.datastructures.FileStorage.save` method of the file to save |
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the file permanently somewhere on the filesystem. |
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A Gentle Introduction |
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--------------------- |
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Let's start with a very basic application that uploads a file to a |
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specific upload folder and displays a file to the user. Let's look at the |
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bootstrapping code for our application:: |
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import os |
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from flask import Flask, request, redirect, url_for |
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from werkzeug import secure_filename |
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UPLOAD_FOLDER = '/path/to/the/uploads' |
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ALLOWED_EXTENSIONS = set(['txt', 'pdf', 'png', 'jpg', 'jpeg', 'gif']) |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'] = UPLOAD_FOLDER |
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So first we need a couple of imports. Most should be straightforward, the |
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:func:`werkzeug.secure_filename` is explained a little bit later. The |
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`UPLOAD_FOLDER` is where we will store the uploaded files and the |
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`ALLOWED_EXTENSIONS` is the set of allowed file extensions. Then we add a |
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URL rule by hand to the application. Now usually we're not doing that, so |
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why here? The reasons is that we want the webserver (or our development |
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server) to serve these files for us and so we only need a rule to generate |
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the URL to these files. |
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Why do we limit the extensions that are allowed? You probably don't want |
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your users to be able to upload everything there if the server is directly |
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sending out the data to the client. That way you can make sure that users |
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are not able to upload HTML files that would cause XSS problems (see |
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:ref:`xss`). Also make sure to disallow `.php` files if the server |
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executes them, but who has PHP installed on his server, right? :) |
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Next the functions that check if an extension is valid and that uploads |
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the file and redirects the user to the URL for the uploaded file:: |
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def allowed_file(filename): |
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return '.' in filename and \ |
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filename.rsplit('.', 1)[1] in ALLOWED_EXTENSIONS |
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@app.route('/', methods=['GET', 'POST']) |
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def upload_file(): |
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if request.method == 'POST': |
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file = request.files['file'] |
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if file and allowed_file(file.filename): |
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filename = secure_filename(file.filename) |
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file.save(os.path.join(app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'], filename)) |
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return redirect(url_for('uploaded_file', |
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filename=filename)) |
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return ''' |
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<!doctype html> |
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<title>Upload new File</title> |
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<h1>Upload new File</h1> |
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<form action="" method=post enctype=multipart/form-data> |
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<p><input type=file name=file> |
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<input type=submit value=Upload> |
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</form> |
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''' |
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So what does that :func:`~werkzeug.utils.secure_filename` function actually do? |
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Now the problem is that there is that principle called "never trust user |
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input". This is also true for the filename of an uploaded file. All |
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submitted form data can be forged, and filenames can be dangerous. For |
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the moment just remember: always use that function to secure a filename |
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before storing it directly on the filesystem. |
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.. admonition:: Information for the Pros |
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So you're interested in what that :func:`~werkzeug.utils.secure_filename` |
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function does and what the problem is if you're not using it? So just |
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imagine someone would send the following information as `filename` to |
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your application:: |
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filename = "../../../../home/username/.bashrc" |
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Assuming the number of ``../`` is correct and you would join this with |
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the `UPLOAD_FOLDER` the user might have the ability to modify a file on |
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the server's filesystem he or she should not modify. This does require some |
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knowledge about how the application looks like, but trust me, hackers |
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are patient :) |
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Now let's look how that function works: |
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>>> secure_filename('../../../../home/username/.bashrc') |
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'home_username_.bashrc' |
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Now one last thing is missing: the serving of the uploaded files. As of |
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Flask 0.5 we can use a function that does that for us:: |
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from flask import send_from_directory |
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@app.route('/uploads/<filename>') |
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def uploaded_file(filename): |
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return send_from_directory(app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'], |
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filename) |
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Alternatively you can register `uploaded_file` as `build_only` rule and |
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use the :class:`~werkzeug.wsgi.SharedDataMiddleware`. This also works with |
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older versions of Flask:: |
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from werkzeug import SharedDataMiddleware |
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app.add_url_rule('/uploads/<filename>', 'uploaded_file', |
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build_only=True) |
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app.wsgi_app = SharedDataMiddleware(app.wsgi_app, { |
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'/uploads': app.config['UPLOAD_FOLDER'] |
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}) |
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If you now run the application everything should work as expected. |
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Improving Uploads |
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----------------- |
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.. versionadded:: 0.6 |
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So how exactly does Flask handle uploads? Well it will store them in the |
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webserver's memory if the files are reasonable small otherwise in a |
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temporary location (as returned by :func:`tempfile.gettempdir`). But how |
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do you specify the maximum file size after which an upload is aborted? By |
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default Flask will happily accept file uploads to an unlimited amount of |
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memory, but you can limit that by setting the ``MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH`` |
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config key:: |
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from flask import Flask, Request |
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app = Flask(__name__) |
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app.config['MAX_CONTENT_LENGTH'] = 16 * 1024 * 1024 |
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The code above will limited the maximum allowed payload to 16 megabytes. |
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If a larger file is transmitted, Flask will raise an |
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:exc:`~werkzeug.exceptions.RequestEntityTooLarge` exception. |
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This feature was added in Flask 0.6 but can be achieved in older versions |
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as well by subclassing the request object. For more information on that |
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consult the Werkzeug documentation on file handling. |
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Upload Progress Bars |
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-------------------- |
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A while ago many developers had the idea to read the incoming file in |
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small chunks and store the upload progress in the database to be able to |
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poll the progress with JavaScript from the client. Long story short: the |
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client asks the server every 5 seconds how much it has transmitted |
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already. Do you realize the irony? The client is asking for something it |
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should already know. |
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Now there are better solutions to that work faster and more reliable. The |
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web changed a lot lately and you can use HTML5, Java, Silverlight or Flash |
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to get a nicer uploading experience on the client side. Look at the |
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following libraries for some nice examples how to do that: |
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- `Plupload <http://www.plupload.com/>`_ - HTML5, Java, Flash |
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- `SWFUpload <http://www.swfupload.org/>`_ - Flash |
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- `JumpLoader <http://jumploader.com/>`_ - Java |
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An Easier Solution |
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------------------ |
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Because the common pattern for file uploads exists almost unchanged in all |
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applications dealing with uploads, there is a Flask extension called |
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`Flask-Uploads`_ that implements a full fledged upload mechanism with |
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white and blacklisting of extensions and more. |
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.. _Flask-Uploads: http://packages.python.org/Flask-Uploads/
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