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hi help me in simple question:

how to released simple download:

i my public/data i have some.txt or some.pdf file ( with some text )

and i want to user click in some button and start download this file.

i do something like that

<%= link_to "Terms" ,:action => :download, :file_name => 'some.txt' %>

def download
    send_file "#{RAILS_ROOT}/public/data/#{params[:file_name]}", :type=>"application/zip"
end 

But what to do next?

PS if you have some tutorial or example on this subject (like downloading file), I would be very grateful

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4
  • What happens when you click the link? Are you getting any error? Sep 18, 2012 at 21:47
  • i got No route matches {:action=>"download", :file_name=>"some.txt", :controller=>"posts"} /// i am newbie in rails and routes put in routes.rb Sep 19, 2012 at 6:50
  • Can you post the contents of your routes.rb file? Sep 19, 2012 at 12:43
  • i saw that i don't "announce" action download - how i can fix that ? ( i update post ) Sep 19, 2012 at 13:41

2 Answers 2

1

You are definitely missing a route in your routes.rb:

resources :posts do
  get :download, :on => :collection

  resource :comments
end

and then you can have a link like:

<%= link_to "Terms" ,:action => :download, :file_name => 'some.txt' %>

that will probably generate something like:

<a href="/posts/download?file_name=some.txt">Terms</a>

I think it's still not the best solution, but solves your problem.

I recommend a quick look at this part of the Rails Guides to clarify this: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/routing.html#adding-more-restful-actions

A complete read of this guides is always good and highly recommended too.

0

What exactly do you mean "what next"? Apart from the fact that the application/zip mime type doesn't match your file's (which is .txt, so presumable text/plain) what you wrote is essentially correct.

Two things to keep in mind, since your file is in the public directory you don't strictly need to use send_file through the controller, you could just write this instead:

<%= link_to "Terms", '/data/some.txt' %>

And second if you're going to use send_file to server larger files you might want to look in to xsendfile instead which improves performance. This has to be supported by your webserver though (using mod_sendfile for apache for example.)

But all that said your code should work as is.

4
  • i had routing error, I just started learning rails, and many do not understand. And in you example ( '/data/some.txt.') -> i get "No route matches [GET] "/data/some.txt" " Sep 19, 2012 at 6:54
  • Strange, whatever is in your public directory should be available directly without Rails intervening. Reading the error you wrote in your comment above also seems strange. The download action is defined in the PostsController right? It sounds like something weird is going on with your routes. Could you add your routes.rb file (at least the posts route) to your question so we can check it? Sep 19, 2012 at 8:33
  • o i fix this problem - and all working, but when i cick link, is the opening page with some.txt content - but how can i realize that: click on link - and opening 'prompt' window which asks 'save the file or not and choose directory where you want save file ' - standart ask before saving Sep 19, 2012 at 9:01
  • If you're still using send_file, you can set the content_disposition which indicates how you want the client to handle the file. For example: send_file "#{RAILS_ROOT}/public/data/#{params[:file_name]}", :content_disposition => 'attachment', :type => "application/zip" Sep 19, 2012 at 9:53

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