When I upload a file the normal way without Ajax, the page reloads, and the POST request payload looks like this when I look at it in the network tab of the Chrome element inspector:
------WebKitFormBoundaryXseUYiNOVZKdYrTk
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="fdata[]"; filename="baby_bot.jpg"
Content-Type: image/jpeg
------WebKitFormBoundaryXseUYiNOVZKdYrTk
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="fdata[]"; filename="dyno_bones.png"
Content-Type: image/png
------WebKitFormBoundaryXseUYiNOVZKdYrTk--
But when I try to create the POST request manually and send the file with ajax by using the FileReader object to read the content of a file in binary format and sending the binary data via the manually created POST request, the payload looks like this in the inspector:
------CustomFormBoundaryXseUYiNOVZKdYrTk
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="fdata[]"; filename="baby_bot.jpg"
Content-Type: image/jpeg
a2q#¡B±Áð$RÑá3ñ%br4C&Scs¢ÂâÿÄ
------CustomFormBoundaryXseUYiNOVZKdYrTk
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="fdata[]"; filename="dyno_bones.png"
Content-Type: image/png
a2q#¡B±Áð$RÑá3ñ%br4C&Scs¢ÂâÿÄ
------CustomFormBoundaryXseUYiNOVZKdYrTk--
Notice that you can see the binary data (represented by those random accented characters) when in the body of the POST request. How can I make my manually created POST request be perfectly identical to that of the browser so that the I get identical results from my PHP handler script? The idea here is that I can emulate the POST requests that the browser sends and not have to modify anything in the PHP backend.