You might come across many websites where a file needs to be uploaded, like uploading a profile picture while creating a profile.
If the user has a slow network or uploads a huge file, then they might need to wait for a longer period of time after clicking on the upload button.
In such cases, it is good to show feedback to the user such as a progress bar,
rather than having the user stare at the screen and wondering what is happening.
In this tutorial, we will see how can we achieve file upload in React and Express/Node backend with help of the multer node library.
Creating the React Project
First, create a folder named react-upload-file-progress-bar
and create 2 directories client
and server
inside it.
Navigate to the client
directory and run the following command to create the client project:
npx create-react-app .
Creating the upload form
We will be making use of react-bootstrap to style the page and display the progress bar.
So let's install it inside the client project.
yarn add bootstrap react-bootstrap
Import the bootstrap css in index.js
:
import React from "react"
import ReactDOM from "react-dom"
import App from "./App"
import "bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css"
ReactDOM.render(
<React.StrictMode>
<App />
</React.StrictMode>,
document.getElementById("root")
)
Now add the following code to App.js
import { Container, Row, Col, Form, Button } from "react-bootstrap"
function App() {
return (
<Container>
<Row>
<Col lg={{ span: 4, offset: 3 }}>
<Form
action="http://localhost:8081/upload_file"
method="post"
enctype="multipart/form-data"
>
<Form.Group>
<Form.File
id="exampleFormControlFile1"
label="Select a File"
name="file"
/>
</Form.Group>
<Form.Group>
<Button variant="info" type="submit">
Upload
</Button>
</Form.Group>
</Form>
</Col>
</Row>
</Container>
)
}
export default App
In the above code, we have created a form with file input and an upload button.
We have styled the form using bootstrap components.
Now if you start the application and open http://localhost:3000 in your browser, you would see a page as shown below:
Binding the form with backend API
We will be making use of Axios to make API calls (upload file in our case). So let's go ahead and install it:
yarn add axios
Inside the src
directory, create a subfolder named utils
and create a file named axios.js
with the following contents:
import axios from "axios"
const axiosInstance = axios.create({
baseURL: "http://localhost:8081/",
})
export default axiosInstance
This creates an instance of Axios and this instance can be reused wherever required and
it helps in avoiding the need to mention the base URL everywhere.
localhost:8081 is the endpoint where we will be building the Node/Express server later in this tutorial.
Now let's write a handler to upload the file when the form is submitted:
const [selectedFiles, setSelectedFiles] = useState()
const [progress, setProgress] = useState()
const submitHandler = e => {
e.preventDefault() //prevent the form from submitting
let formData = new FormData()
formData.append("file", selectedFiles[0])
axiosInstance.post("/upload_file", formData, {
headers: {
"Content-Type": "multipart/form-data",
},
onUploadProgress: data => {
//Set the progress value to show the progress bar
setProgress(Math.round((100 * data.loaded) / data.total))
},
})
}
Here we are making use of 2 local states, one to hold the uploaded file details and another to hold the upload progress percentage.
Also, make sure that you are adding the content-type header as multipart/form-data
, so that it works similar to normal form submit
and multer will be able to parse the file in the back end.
Axios also accepts optional onUploadProgress
property, which is a callback with details about how much data is uploaded.
Now let's bind the submit handler and the input field:
import { useState } from "react"
import { Container, Row, Col, Form, Button, ProgressBar } from "react-bootstrap"
import axiosInstance from "./utils/axios"
function App() {
const [selectedFiles, setSelectedFiles] = useState([])
const [progress, setProgress] = useState()
const submitHandler = e => {
e.preventDefault() //prevent the form from submitting
let formData = new FormData()
formData.append("file", selectedFiles[0])
axiosInstance.post("/upload_file", formData, {
headers: {
"Content-Type": "multipart/form-data",
},
onUploadProgress: data => {
//Set the progress value to show the progress bar
setProgress(Math.round((100 * data.loaded) / data.total))
},
})
}
return (
<Container>
<Row>
<Col lg={{ span: 4, offset: 3 }}>
<Form
action="http://localhost:8081/upload_file"
method="post"
encType="multipart/form-data"
onSubmit={submitHandler}
>
<Form.Group>
<Form.File
id="exampleFormControlFile1"
label="Select a File"
name="file"
onChange={e => {
setSelectedFiles(e.target.files)
}}
/>
</Form.Group>
<Form.Group>
<Button variant="info" type="submit">
Upload
</Button>
</Form.Group>
{progress && <ProgressBar now={progress} label={`${progress}%`} />}
</Form>
</Col>
</Row>
</Container>
)
}
export default App
Also, we are showing the progress bar whenever it has some value using the ProgressBar component from react-bootstrap.
Creating the backend Node Project
Now we have the client-side ready, let's build the server-side. Inside the server
folder run the following command to create a node project.
npm init -y
Update the package.json that is created with the following start script:
{
"name": "server",
"version": "1.0.0",
"description": "",
"main": "index.js",
"scripts": {
"test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1",
"start": "node index.js"
},
"keywords": [],
"author": "",
"license": "ISC"
}
Now we need to have the following modules added to our project:
- express - Used to create a web framework with node.js
-
multer - A node.js middleware for handling
multipart/form-data
, which is primarily used for uploading files - cors - Enabling CORS policies for the client URL.
Run the following command to install the above packages in the server
project:
yarn add express multer cors
Now create a file named upload.js
inside the server
project with the following code:
const multer = require("multer")
const storage = multer.diskStorage({
//Specify the destination directory where the file needs to be saved
destination: function (req, file, cb) {
cb(null, "./uploads")
},
//Specify the name of the file. The date is prefixed to avoid overwriting of files.
filename: function (req, file, cb) {
cb(null, Date.now() + "_" + file.originalname)
},
})
const upload = multer({
storage: storage,
})
module.exports = upload
Here we are creating the multer instance, by specifying the destination and the file name in which the uploaded file needs to be saved.
Now create a file named index.js
with the following code:
const express = require("express")
const upload = require("./upload")
const multer = require("multer")
const cors = require("cors")
const app = express()
//Add the client URL to the CORS policy
const whitelist = ["http://localhost:3000"]
const corsOptions = {
origin: function (origin, callback) {
if (!origin || whitelist.indexOf(origin) !== -1) {
callback(null, true)
} else {
callback(new Error("Not allowed by CORS"))
}
},
credentials: true,
}
app.use(cors(corsOptions))
app.post("/upload_file", upload.single("file"), function (req, res) {
if (!req.file) {
//If the file is not uploaded, then throw custom error with message: FILE_MISSING
throw Error("FILE_MISSING")
} else {
//If the file is uploaded, then send a success response.
res.send({ status: "success" })
}
})
//Express Error Handling
app.use(function (err, req, res, next) {
// Check if the error is thrown from multer
if (err instanceof multer.MulterError) {
res.statusCode = 400
res.send({ code: err.code })
} else if (err) {
// If it is not multer error then check if it is our custom error for FILE_MISSING
if (err.message === "FILE_MISSING") {
res.statusCode = 400
res.send({ code: "FILE_MISSING" })
} else {
//For any other errors set code as GENERIC_ERROR
res.statusCode = 500
res.send({ code: "GENERIC_ERROR" })
}
}
})
//Start the server in port 8081
const server = app.listen(8081, function () {
const port = server.address().port
console.log("App started at http://localhost:%s", port)
})
In the above code,
- We have created a POST route at
/upload_file
and call upload function exported fromupload.js
. The namefile
passed inside theupload.single()
function should match with that ofFormData
in the axios call written before. - We have added the CORS policy for out client URL. This code snippet can be reused in any express project which requires to handle CORS.
- Multer will add the details of the file uploaded to
req.file
. So ifreq.file
does not have any data, that means the file is not uploaded. Multer by default does not throw any error if the file is missing. So we are throwing an express error with a messageFILE_MISSING
- We have an error handler for express which looks for both Multer errors and express errors and we pass the appropriate error code in the response.
Before running the application, let's create the directory uploads
where the uploaded files will be saved.
Now if you run the application, using the command npm start
in 2 separate terminals,
one inside the client
and another inside the server
directory, you will see the progress bar in action:
I have used a huge file (200MB) to upload, since uploading to localhost is pretty fast and we will not be able to see the progress bar correctly.
You can make use of the network throttling feature of the browser as well.
If you check the uploads directory now, you should be able to see the file there:
Error handling
Now let's show appropriate error messages when the upload has failed.
When the file is not uploaded
If the user has failed to select a file before clicking upload, we need to inform the user.
For that, let's update App.js
with a catch chain for the axios call:
import { useState } from "react"
import {
Container,
Row,
Col,
Form,
Button,
ProgressBar,
Alert,
} from "react-bootstrap"
import axiosInstance from "./utils/axios"
function App() {
const [selectedFiles, setSelectedFiles] = useState([])
const [progress, setProgress] = useState()
const [error, setError] = useState()
const submitHandler = e => {
e.preventDefault() //prevent the form from submitting
let formData = new FormData()
formData.append("file", selectedFiles[0])
//Clear the error message
setError("")
axiosInstance
.post("/upload_file", formData, {
headers: {
"Content-Type": "multipart/form-data",
},
onUploadProgress: data => {
//Set the progress value to show the progress bar
setProgress(Math.round((100 * data.loaded) / data.total))
},
})
.catch(error => {
const { code } = error?.response?.data
switch (code) {
case "FILE_MISSING":
setError("Please select a file before uploading!")
break
default:
setError("Sorry! Something went wrong. Please try again later")
break
}
})
}
return (
<Container>
<Row>
<Col lg={{ span: 4, offset: 3 }}>
<Form
action="http://localhost:8081/upload_file"
method="post"
encType="multipart/form-data"
onSubmit={submitHandler}
>
<Form.Group>
<Form.File
id="exampleFormControlFile1"
label="Select a File"
name="file"
onChange={e => {
setSelectedFiles(e.target.files)
}}
/>
</Form.Group>
<Form.Group>
<Button variant="info" type="submit">
Upload
</Button>
</Form.Group>
{error && <Alert variant="danger">{error}</Alert>}
{!error && progress && (
<ProgressBar now={progress} label={`${progress}%`} />
)}
</Form>
</Col>
</Row>
</Container>
)
}
export default App
In the above code, whenever an error occurs we are setting the error message to the error
state and displaying using the
Alert component
Preventing huge file uploads
When we need to restrict the size of the file uploaded, we can add that configuration in upload.js
in the server
project:
const multer = require("multer")
const storage = multer.diskStorage({
//Specify the destination directory where the file needs to be saved
destination: function (req, file, cb) {
cb(null, "./uploads")
},
//Specify the name of the file. The date is prefixed to avoid overwriting of files.
filename: function (req, file, cb) {
cb(null, Date.now() + "_" + file.originalname)
},
})
const upload = multer({
storage: storage,
limits: {
fileSize: 1024 * 1024,
},
})
module.exports = upload
Now let's update our switch case in App.js
in client side:
switch (code) {
case "FILE_MISSING":
setError("Please select a file before uploading!")
break
case "LIMIT_FILE_SIZE":
setError("File size is too large. Please upload files below 1MB!")
break
default:
setError("Sorry! Something went wrong. Please try again later")
break
}
Now if you try to upload a file larger than 1 MB, you should see the error message:
Restricting file types
When we need to allow only certain type of files, we can add a fileFilter
to the multer configuration as shown below:
const upload = multer({
storage: storage,
limits: {
fileSize: 1024 * 1024,
},
fileFilter: (req, file, cb) => {
if (
file.mimetype == "image/png" ||
file.mimetype == "image/jpg" ||
file.mimetype == "image/jpeg"
) {
cb(null, true)
} else {
cb(null, false)
return cb(new Error("INVALID_TYPE"))
}
},
})
Also, let's tweak the error handler in index.js
to accommodate the new error code:
// ...
//Express Error Handling
app.use(function (err, req, res, next) {
// Check if the error is thrown from multer
if (err instanceof multer.MulterError) {
res.statusCode = 400
res.send({ code: err.code })
} else if (err) {
// If it is not multer error then check if it is our custom error for FILE_MISSING & INVALID_TYPE
if (err.message === "FILE_MISSING" || err.message === "INVALID_TYPE") {
res.statusCode = 400
res.send({ code: err.message })
} else {
//For any other errors set code as GENERIC_ERROR
res.statusCode = 500
res.send({ code: "GENERIC_ERROR" })
}
}
})
// ...
Finally, add a new case to the switch condition in App.js
:
switch (code) {
case "FILE_MISSING":
setError("Please select a file before uploading!")
break
case "LIMIT_FILE_SIZE":
setError("File size is too large. Please upload files below 1MB!")
break
case "INVALID_TYPE":
setError(
"This file type is not supported! Only .png, .jpg and .jpeg files are allowed"
)
break
default:
setError("Sorry! Something went wrong. Please try again later")
break
}
Now upload a file that is not an image and see if it shows the error:
Source code
You can view the complete source code here.
Top comments (1)
Very informative article