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I need a way to upload large files (600 mb to 4 gb) in an asp.net mvc website. Currently I am using swfupload; it works well enough, but it is a huge hit on the webserver because it sends it in one big upload, plus I have to set it in the web.config to allow that huge of a file, which is a huge security risk. In the past when I was doing web forms development I used Neatupload which breaks up the file into chunks and uploads them individually. I am looking for a way to upload large files in mvc that uploads via chunking it up. Any ideas on how I could do this?

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5 Answers

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Silverlight File Upload

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I ended up using Darren Johnstone's ASP.NET File Upload Module to handle the uploading on the server side. Though I modified it slightly so that it could take a guid on the querystring that it would save the temp file to that guid name.

It was nice because it saved the file as it arrived at the server, and stripped the file out of the posted data which it then sends to the action on the controller that was specified.

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How did you get it to work in ASP.NET MVC without the runat=server controls? Are there punch-in points in the remaining classes? Would you mind sharing a code sample? – Robert Harvey Sep 15 at 16:26
The upload module contains 2 pieces, the first is a httphandler that when a file is posted (using mime encoding) it strips the file out saving directly as it goes and then letting whatever page/controller was called then be called, just with the files[] array empty. The second part is the controls used for standard asp.net forms. I didn't use those controls at all. Instead I used the swfupload that I linked in the original question, that uses js and flash to upload a file. I then had a action call "UploadAsync" on a controller that the swfupload was configured to post to. – Solmead Sep 18 at 16:13
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May be this helps you : Multiple File Upload with Progress

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Can you do something similar to what is described in this link? I don't see why that wouldn't work in ASP.NET MVC.

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Example in my view:

<input id="FileGUID" name="FileGUID" type="hidden" value="f632c00b-9b66-4716-8075-79df63b780fb" />
	<input type="file" id="FileUpload1" name="fileUpload1" />

	<script type="text/javascript">
	    var UploadUrl = '/Video/AsyncUpload?FileGUID=f632c00b-9b66-4716-8075-79df63b780fb';
		$(function() {
			$("#FileUpload1").makeAsyncUploader({
			    upload_url: UploadUrl,
				flash_url: '/Content/Flash/swfupload.swf',
				button_image_url: '/Content/Images/blank-button.png',
				button_text: '<font face="Helvetica, Arial" size="13pt" color="#ffffff">Upload File</font>',
				disableDuringUpload: 'input[type="submit"]',
				file_size_limit: '8024 MB',
				button_text_top_padding: 2
			});
		});
	</script>

Then in the actual save action for this page I look for a file where the asyncupload action would have saved the file based on the FileGUID

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