151

I have a form with file upload capabilities and I would like to be able to have some nice client side error reporting if the file the user is trying to upload is too big, is there a way to check against file size with jQuery, either purely on the client or somehow posting the file back to the server to check?

10 Answers 10

303

You actually don't have access to filesystem (for example reading and writing local files), however, due to HTML5 File Api specification, there are some file properties that you do have access to, and the file size is one of them.

For the HTML below

<input type="file" id="myFile" />

try the following:

//binds to onchange event of your input field
$('#myFile').bind('change', function() {

  //this.files[0].size gets the size of your file.
  alert(this.files[0].size);

});

As it is a part of the HTML5 specification, it will only work for modern browsers (v10 required for IE) and I added here more details and links about other file information you should know: http://felipe.sabino.me/javascript/2012/01/30/javascipt-checking-the-file-size/


Old browsers support

Be aware that old browsers will return a null value for the previous this.files call, so accessing this.files[0] will raise an exception and you should check for File API support before using it

10
  • 8
    Everyone says this can't be done - yet here it is. This works. I tested it.
    – Peter
    Jan 11, 2011 at 16:24
  • 35
    @Jeroen I agree that not working for IE makes it not the ideal solution for a lot of people, but isn't giving a down-vote and saying the answer is useless a bit too much? I used this solution in a great variety of enterprise web solutions that had in the scope the need to work only in chrome and/or firefox, and some people looking for this solution might be in the same spot, so this solution will be good enough. Aug 3, 2011 at 22:08
  • 4
    I've just come across this answer on Google and am going to use it to stop users posting files which are over a given size; as I also check file sizes on the server side I'm happy to have a client-side solution which doesn't work in IE8. Aug 16, 2011 at 14:54
  • 2
    @GaolaiPeng This error is probably because the jQuery javascript file was not added (or it was not loaded properly). Do you have it added in the head of your page? Jan 19, 2012 at 22:06
  • 1
    @volumeone That's why I said you should "check for File API support before using it" in my answer and then you could change the UI accordingly. Oct 15, 2015 at 17:50
48

If you want to use jQuery's validate you can by creating this method:

$.validator.addMethod('filesize', function(value, element, param) {
    // param = size (en bytes) 
    // element = element to validate (<input>)
    // value = value of the element (file name)
    return this.optional(element) || (element.files[0].size <= param) 
});

You would use it:

$('#formid').validate({
    rules: { inputimage: { required: true, accept: "png|jpe?g|gif", filesize: 1048576  }},
    messages: { inputimage: "File must be JPG, GIF or PNG, less than 1MB" }
});
3
  • 1
    @Dan yes, the file size property is a part of the HTML5 specification, so it will only work for modern browsers (for IE it would be version 10+) Jan 17, 2014 at 17:12
  • 7
    You've incorrectly used the accept rule, where you should have used the extension rule. ~ The accept rule is only for MIME types. The extension rule is for file extensions. You also need to include the additional-methods.js file for these rules.
    – Sparky
    Jun 4, 2015 at 17:54
  • Complementing @Sparky's assertive comment: $('#formid').validate({ rules: { inputimage: { required: true, extension: "png|jpe?g|gif", filesize: 1048576 }}, messages: { inputimage: "File must be JPG, GIF or PNG, less than 1MB" } });
    – victorf
    Aug 7, 2015 at 13:46
33

This code:

$("#yourFileInput")[0].files[0].size;

Returns the file size for an form input.

On FF 3.6 and later this code should be:

$("#yourFileInput")[0].files[0].fileSize;
3
  • 2
    Your fist code works in chrome but second doesn't work for FireFox latest.
    – Débora
    Apr 23, 2012 at 15:20
  • That second code is what I had to use for all modern (2014+ browsers). Jan 28, 2016 at 21:52
  • 1
    The first code works IE 10, 11, Edge, Chrome, Safari(Windows version), Brave and Firefox. Jun 13, 2019 at 10:48
19

Use below to check file's size and clear if it's greater,

    $("input[type='file']").on("change", function () {
     if(this.files[0].size > 2000000) {
       alert("Please upload file less than 2MB. Thanks!!");
       $(this).val('');
     }
    });
1
  • 1
    Should use $(this).val(null); Otherwise the form does not seem to submit correctly anymore without selecting a proper attachment. Apr 22, 2019 at 20:30
14

I am posting my solution too, used for an ASP.NET FileUpload control. Perhaps someone will find it useful.

    $(function () {        
    $('<%= fileUploadCV.ClientID %>').change(function () {

        //because this is single file upload I use only first index
        var f = this.files[0]

        //here I CHECK if the FILE SIZE is bigger than 8 MB (numbers below are in bytes)
        if (f.size > 8388608 || f.fileSize > 8388608)
        {
           //show an alert to the user
           alert("Allowed file size exceeded. (Max. 8 MB)")

           //reset file upload control
           this.value = null;
        }
    })
});
1
  • 1
    You need to null-check the value of f = this.files[0] or this will fail on older browsers. e.g. if (f && (f.size > 8388608 || f.fileSize > 8388608)) Oct 3, 2016 at 10:18
3
<form id="uploadForm" class="disp-inline" role="form" action="" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
    <input type="file" name="file" id="file">
</form>
<button onclick="checkSize();"></button>
<script>
    function checkSize(){
        var size = $('#uploadForm')["0"].firstChild.files["0"].size;
        console.log(size);
    }
</script>

I found this to be the easiest if you don't plan on submitted the form through standard ajax / html5 methods, but of course it works with anything.

NOTES:

var size = $('#uploadForm')["0"]["0"].files["0"].size;

This used to work, but it doesn't in chrome anymore, i just tested the code above and it worked in both ff and chrome (lastest). The second ["0"] is now firstChild.

3

Plese try this:

var sizeInKB = input.files[0].size/1024; //Normally files are in bytes but for KB divide by 1024 and so on
var sizeLimit= 30;

if (sizeInKB >= sizeLimit) {
    alert("Max file size 30KB");
    return false;
}
2

You can do this type of checking with Flash or Silverlight but not Javascript. The javascript sandbox does not allow access to the file system. The size check would need to be done server side after it has been uploaded.

If you want to go the Silverlight/Flash route, you could check that if they are not installed to default to a regular file upload handler that uses the normal controls. This way, if the do have Silverlight/Flash installed their experience will be a bit more rich.

0

HTML code:

<input type="file" id="upload" class="filestyle" onchange="SizeCheck();"/>

JavaScript Function:

function SizeCheck() {
            var fileInput = document.getElementById('upload').files;
            var fsize = fileInput[0].size;
            var file = Math.round((fsize / 1024));
            if (file >= 10240) {     //10MB
               //Add Alert Here If 
                $('#upload_error').html("* File Size < 10MB");
            }
            else {
                $('#invoice_error').html("");
            }
        }
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  • 1
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Jul 26, 2022 at 9:02
0
<script>
  if (Math.round((document.getElementById('Your_input_id').files[0].size / 1024)>= 1024) { //2MB
    $("#your_error_id").html("File Size < 1MB");
    $("#your_error_id").css("color", "#dd4b39");
    $("#Your_input_id").val('');
    return false;
  }
</script>
1
  • 1
    Your answer could be improved by adding more information on what the code does and how it helps the OP.
    – Tyler2P
    Jan 17, 2023 at 19:28

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