I am leaning how to upload file in Django, and here I encounter a should-be-trivial problem, with the error:
The submitted data was not a file. Check the encoding type on the form.
Below is the detail.
Note: I also looked at Django Rest Framework ImageField, and I tried
serializer = ImageSerializer(data=request.data, files=request.FILES)
but I get
TypeError:
__init__()
got an unexpected keyword argument 'files'
I have a Image
model which I would like to interact with via Django REST framework:
class Image(models.Model):
image = models.ImageField(upload_to='item_images')
owner = models.ForeignKey(
User, related_name='uploaded_item_images',
blank=False,
)
time_created = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)
class ImageSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
image = serializers.ImageField(
max_length=None, use_url=True,
)
class Meta:
model = Image
fields = ("id", 'image', 'owner', 'time_created', )
'DEFAULT_PARSER_CLASSES': (
'rest_framework.parsers.JSONParser',
'rest_framework.parsers.FormParser',
'rest_framework.parsers.MultiPartParser',
),
The front end (using AngularJS and angular-restmod
or $resource
) send JSON
data with owner
and image
of the form:
{"owner": 5, "image": "data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4QqdRXhpZgAATU0A..."}
In the backend, request.data
shows
{u'owner': 5, u'image': u'data:image/jpeg;base64,/9j/4QqdRXhpZgAATU0AKgAAA..."}
But then ImageSerializer(data=request.data).errors
shows the error
ReturnDict([('image', [u'The submitted data was not a file. Check the encoding type on the form.'])])
I wonder what I should do to fix the error?
EDIT: JS part
The related front end codes consists of two parts: a angular-file-dnd
directive
(available here) to drop the file onto the page and angular-restmod
, which provides CRUD operations:
<!-- The template: according to angular-file-dnd, -->
<!-- it will store the dropped image into variable $scope.image -->
<div file-dropzone="[image/png, image/jpeg, image/gif]" file="image" class='method' data-max-file-size="3" file-name="imageFileName">
<div layout='row' layout-align='center'>
<i class="fa fa-upload" style='font-size:50px;'></i>
</div>
<div class='text-large'>Drap & drop your photo here</div>
</div>
# A simple `Image` `model` to perform `POST`
$scope.image_resource = Image.$build();
$scope.upload = function() {
console.log("uploading");
$scope.image_resource.image = $scope.image;
$scope.image_resource.owner = Auth.get_profile().user_id;
return $scope.image_resource.$save();
};
An update concerning the problem: right now I switched to using ng-file-upload
, which sends image data in proper format.
The problem that you are hitting is that Django REST framework expects files to be uploaded as multipart form data, through the standard file upload methods. This is typically a file
field, but the JavaScript Blob
object also works for AJAX.
You are looking to upload the files using a base64 encoded string, instead of the raw file, which is not supported by default. There are implementations of a Base64ImageField
out there, but the most promising one came by a pull request.
Since these were mostly designed for Django REST framework 2.x, I've improved upon the one from the pull request and created one that should be compatible with DRF 3.
from rest_framework import serializers
class Base64ImageField(serializers.ImageField):
"""
A Django REST framework field for handling image-uploads through raw post data.
It uses base64 for encoding and decoding the contents of the file.
Heavily based on
https://github.com/tomchristie/django-rest-framework/pull/1268
Updated for Django REST framework 3.
"""
def to_internal_value(self, data):
from django.core.files.base import ContentFile
import base64
import six
import uuid
# Check if this is a base64 string
if isinstance(data, six.string_types):
# Check if the base64 string is in the "data:" format
if 'data:' in data and ';base64,' in data:
# Break out the header from the base64 content
header, data = data.split(';base64,')
# Try to decode the file. Return validation error if it fails.
try:
decoded_file = base64.b64decode(data)
except TypeError:
self.fail('invalid_image')
# Generate file name:
file_name = str(uuid.uuid4())[:12] # 12 characters are more than enough.
# Get the file name extension:
file_extension = self.get_file_extension(file_name, decoded_file)
complete_file_name = "%s.%s" % (file_name, file_extension, )
data = ContentFile(decoded_file, name=complete_file_name)
return super(Base64ImageField, self).to_internal_value(data)
def get_file_extension(self, file_name, decoded_file):
import imghdr
extension = imghdr.what(file_name, decoded_file)
extension = "jpg" if extension == "jpeg" else extension
return extension
This should be used in replacement of the standard ImageField
provided by Django REST framework. So your serializer would become
class ImageSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
image = Base64ImageField(
max_length=None, use_url=True,
)
class Meta:
model = Image
fields = ("id", 'image', 'owner', 'time_created', )
This should allow you to either specify a base64-encoded string, or the standard Blob
object that Django REST framework typically expects.
I ran in the same problem few days ago. Here is my django rest framework view to handle file uploading
class PhotoUploadView(APIView):
parser_classes = (FileUploadParser,)
def post(self, request):
user = self.request.user
if not user:
return Response(status=status.HTTP_403_FORBIDDEN)
profile = None
data = None
photo = None
file_form = FileUploadForm(request.POST,request.FILES)
if file_form.is_valid():
photo = request.FILES['file']
else:
return Response(ajax_response(file_form),status=status.HTTP_406_NOT_ACCEPTABLE)
try:
profile = Organizer.objects.get(user=user)
profile.photo = photo
profile.save()
data = OrganizersSerializer(profile).data
except Organizer.DoesNotExist:
profile = Student.objects.get(user=user)
profile.photo = photo
profile.save()
data = StudentsSerializer(profile).data
return Response(data)
In front-end, I used angular-file-upload lib.
Here is my file input
<div ng-file-drop="" ng-file-select="" ng-model="organizer.photo" class="drop-box" drag-over-class="{accept:'dragover', reject:'dragover-err', delay:100}" ng-multiple="false" allow-dir="true" accept="image/*">
Drop Images or PDFs<div>here</div>
</div>
And here is my upload service
(function () {
'use strict';
angular
.module('trulii.utils.services')
.factory('UploadFile', UploadFile);
UploadFile.$inject = ['$cookies', '$http','$upload','$window','Authentication'];
/**
* @namespace Authentication
* @returns {Factory}
*/
function UploadFile($cookies, $http,$upload,$window,Authentication) {
/**
* @name UploadFile
* @desc The Factory to be returned
*/
var UploadFile = {
upload_file: upload_file,
};
return UploadFile;
function upload_file(file) {
return $upload.upload({
url: '/api/users/upload/photo/', // upload.php script, node.js route, or servlet url
//method: 'POST' or 'PUT',
//headers: {'Authorization': 'xxx'}, // only for html5
//withCredentials: true,
file: file, // single file or a list of files. list is only for html5
//fileName: 'doc.jpg' or ['1.jpg', '2.jpg', ...] // to modify the name of the file(s)
//fileFormDataName: myFile, // file formData name ('Content-Disposition'), server side request form name
// could be a list of names for multiple files (html5). Default is 'file'
//formDataAppender: function(formData, key, val){} // customize how data is added to the formData.
// See #40#issuecomment-28612000 for sample code
})
}
}
})();
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