Resurrecting this q because I found a workaround for this, which I've needed to do myself...
The maxNumberOfFiles value, as DazVolt points out, applies to all the files uploaded in a session, not just a particular upload, because of this function in jquery.fileupload-ui.js, which basically counts the number of processed (i.e. already uploaded) table rows in the UI, which is then compared against maxNumberOfFiles later on:
getNumberOfFiles: function () {
return this.filesContainer.children()
.not('.processing').length;
},
Happily though, this definition of getNumberOfFiles can be changed...
To make it work per upload, i.e. restrict it to one file per upload but have as many uploads as you like I did this:
In the download template I added a class 'previouslyUploaded' to the template for the table row:
{% for (var i=0, file; file=o.files[i]; i++) { %}
<tr class="template-download fade previouslyUploaded">
Before I define the fileupload object, I make a new function to be called by getNumberOfFiles which counts the table rows but disregards those already uploaded i.e. those represented by entries in the download template:
var perUploadRestriction = function () {
// previouslyUploaded is a class added in template-download
// with this query here it means previously uploaded files don't count towards the max_file_upload limit
// only the files in the current upload in preparation
return this.filesContainer.children().not('.processing').not('.previouslyUploaded').length;
};
And then I use this function in the fileupload object definition as so:
$(this).fileupload({
dropZone: $(this),
processQueue: [{
action: 'validate',
//acceptFileTypes: *a regex object for your file types*,
maxFileSize: 5000000,
maxNumberOfFiles: 1,
}],
getNumberOfFiles: perUploadRestriction,
});
And now, if I drag'n'drop more than one file to the dropzone I get an error message, but after a successful upload I can still make more uploads with the same restriction.
It's a bit of a hack, but works for my purposes