31

I know Express has the res.contentType() method, but how do I automatically set content type based on path/file (including static content)?

6 Answers 6

42

Also, if you want to extend the mime-types that express(connect) knows about, you can do

express.static.mime.define({'text/plain': ['md']});

or

connect.static.mime.define({'text/plain': ['md']});

PS: the mime module is now located at https://github.com/broofa/node-mime

1
  • FYI: If you need to tinker with the charset, look in the "send" lib that express static requires (node_modules/send)
    – bob
    Jul 10, 2020 at 1:00
23

The Express documentation shows that it can do this if you pass in the file name.

var filePath = 'path/to/image.png';
res.contentType(path.basename(filePath));
// Content-Type is now "image/png"

[Edit]

Here's an example which serves files from a relative directory called static and automatically sets the content type based on the file served:

var express = require('express');
var fs      = require('fs');

var app = express.createServer();

app.get('/files/:file', function(req, res) {
  // Note: should use a stream here, instead of fs.readFile
  fs.readFile('./static/' + req.params.file, function(err, data) {
    if(err) {
      res.send("Oops! Couldn't find that file.");
    } else {
      // set the content type based on the file
      res.contentType(req.params.file);
      res.send(data);
    }   
    res.end();
  }); 
});

app.listen(3000);
6
  • Thanks, but that's what I want to avoid...just want it to be automatic based on path or filename.
    – mahemoff
    Aug 19, 2011 at 3:40
  • 1
    I'm not sure I understand. Can you post an small example? Aug 19, 2011 at 4:12
  • I've updated my answer with an example. Am I still misunderstanding what you're looking for? Aug 19, 2011 at 4:25
  • 5
    I didn't explain it as well as I could, but I meant static content served using express.static(). I can't see where/how to configure such content - it just gets served automatically. Even for those where an explicit route is in place (like in your edit), I thought there might be some kind of middleware which might automatically inject the content type, instead of having to explicitly include it in every route.
    – mahemoff
    Aug 19, 2011 at 11:56
  • 1
    The example with a complete path did not work for me. res.contentType("path/to/image.png") came out with an incorrect content-type, but res.contentType("image.png") worked great.
    – danvk
    Oct 29, 2020 at 18:04
17

Connect will automatically set the content type, unless you explicitly set it yourself. Here's the snippet that does it. It uses mime.lookup and mime.charsets.lookup

// mime type
type = mime.lookup(path);

//<SNIP>....

// header fields
if (!res.getHeader('content-type')) {
  var charset = mime.charsets.lookup(type);
  res.setHeader('Content-Type', type + (charset ? '; charset=' + charset : ''));
}

If this isn't working for you, post your code as your custom code is likely interfering with the default behavior somehow.

1
  • 3
    mime.lookup() is now renamed to mime.getType().
    – Pei
    Sep 13, 2017 at 19:26
5

Express uses Connect, Connect uses Mime, and Mime includes the files mime.types (with default mime types from Apache) and node.types (with some further types contributed by node community). You could just customize one of these files within your copy of mime in node_modules to add your required content type, or Mime also has an API that lets you specify additional content-types or .types files to load from your code.

https://github.com/broofa/node-mime

1
  • 1
    Adding mime definitions through require("mime").define(...) does not work. Might it be because express bundles it's own mime module? How do I access the bundled mime module?
    – panzi
    Jun 7, 2012 at 1:55
0

Download this database (or Another link ) : mime.types: , then

 var db_mimes=[],mime_ext=''
$.get('mime.types',{},function(d){
   var lines=d.split('\n').filter(function(e){ /* filter which starts with #*/})

    lines.forEach(function(line){
       mime_ext=line.split(' ')
        mime_ext[1].split(' ').forEach(function(ext){
             db_mimes.push({e:ext,m:mime_ext[0]})
         });
       //create object for each line . i.e: {mime:'',extension}
    });


});

Then if you have fo example var fname="myfile.png"

var extension=fname.substr((~-this.lastIndexOf(".") >>> 0) + 2) // get extension from name
var minme=db_mimes.filter(function(el){return el.e === extension})[0]

2
0

Run the following cmd :

npm install xmimetype ; 

Then , in your code :

  var xm=require("xmimetype");

  xm.mimetypeOf("java"); 
  xm.mimetypeOf("./lib/Person.java"); 
  // -> text/x-java-source

  xm.mimetypeOf("docx"); 
  xm.mimetypeOf("./lib/overview.docx"); 
  // -> application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document

For more info , check GIT repository .


The opposite is available :

  xm.extensionsOf("image/jpeg");
 // -> [ 'jpeg', 'jpg', 'jpe' ]

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