131

I want to send a new FormData() as the body of a POST request using the fetch api

The operation looks something like this:

var formData = new FormData()
formData.append('myfile', file, 'someFileName.csv')

fetch('https://api.myapp.com', 
  {
    method: 'POST',
    headers: {
      "Content-Type": "multipart/form-data"
    },
    body: formData
  }
)

The problem here is that the boundary, something like

boundary=----WebKitFormBoundaryyEmKNDsBKjB7QEqu

never makes it into the Content-Type: header

It should look like this:

Content-Type:multipart/form-data; boundary=----WebKitFormBoundaryyEmKNDsBKjB7QEqu

When you try the "same" operation with a new XMLHttpRequest(), like so:

var request = new XMLHttpRequest()
request.open("POST", "https://api.mything.com")
request.withCredentials = true
request.send(formData)

the headers are correctly set

Content-Type:multipart/form-data; boundary=----WebKitFormBoundaryyEmKNDsBKjB7QEqu

So my questions are:

  1. how do I make fetch behave exactly like XMLHttpRequest in this situation?
  2. if this is not possible, why?

Thanks everybody! This community is more or less the reason I have professional success.

0

8 Answers 8

236

The solution to the problem is to explicitly set Content-Type to undefined so that your browser or whatever client you're using can set it and add that boundary value in there for you. Disappointing but true.

15
  • 38
    using fetch, I removed the Content-Type header and it worked.
    – sww314
    Feb 28, 2017 at 16:02
  • 31
    Unbelievable!! I spent hours until I found this!! delete result.headers['Content-Type']; worked for me, thanks!!
    – Crysfel
    Apr 12, 2017 at 1:26
  • 11
    doesn't work for me. Setting to undefined defaults to text/plain.
    – sebnukem
    Jul 5, 2017 at 1:51
  • 7
    Neither setting the content-type to undefined, nor deleting the content-type before making the POST with fetch did it for me...
    – Ahab
    Jan 16, 2018 at 13:11
  • 2
    Setting the Content-Type header to undefined seemed to come across for me as "Content-Type": undefined in the request itself. not defining it worked. Dec 23, 2020 at 19:57
24

I had the same issue, and was able to fix it by excluding the Content-Type property, allowing the browser to detect and set the boundary and content type automatically.

Your code becomes:

var formData = new FormData()
formData.append('myfile', file, 'someFileName.csv')

fetch('https://api.myapp.com',
  {
    method: 'POST',
    body: formData
  }
)
0
19

I removed "Content-Type" and added 'Accept' to http headers and it worked for me. Here are the headers I used,

'headers': new HttpHeaders({
        // 'Content-Type': undefined,
        'Accept': '*/*',
        'Authorization': 
        "Bearer "+(JSON.parse(sessionStorage.getItem('token')).token),
        'Access-Control-Allow-Origin': this.apiURL,
        'Access-Control-Allow-Methods': 'GET, POST, OPTIONS, PUT, PATCH, DELETE',
        'Access-Control-Allow-Headers': 'origin,X-Requested-With,content-type,accept',
        'Access-Control-Allow-Credentials': 'true' 

      })
2
  • 4
    No other solutions worked for me. After adding Accept: / header, everything worked like a charm. Jan 23, 2020 at 14:18
  • This was exactly it - for Angular 15, leaving out the Content-Type just got it set somewhere else in Angular as a default undefined, however, explicitly only providing the Accept header excluded the Content-Type header, and now I'm home free! Great solution!
    – Arcsector
    Nov 23, 2023 at 7:30
15
fetch(url,options)
  1. If you set a string as options.body, you have to set the Content-Type in request header ,or it will be text/plain by default.
  2. If options.body is specific object like let a = new FormData() or let b = new URLSearchParams(), you don't have to set the Content-Type by hand.It will be added automaticlly.

    • for a ,it will be something like

    multipart/form-data; boundary=----WebKitFormBoundary7MA4YWxkTrZu0gW

    as you see, the boundary is automaticlly added.

    • for b, it is application/x-www-form-urlencoded;
2
  • Very well that you told us that boundary is added automatically. We have all known that before.
    – Green
    Sep 8, 2017 at 5:29
  • your explanation makes much more sense, thank you! I managed to get my code working! Jun 26, 2019 at 14:27
13

According to FormData documentation, you shoudn't manually set the Content-Type header so browser itself will set it correctly:

Warning: When using FormData to submit POST requests using XMLHttpRequest or the Fetch_API with the multipart/form-data Content-Type (e.g. when uploading Files and Blobs to the server), do not explicitly set the Content-Type header on the request. Doing so will prevent the browser from being able to set the Content-Type header with the boundary expression it will use to delimit form fields in the request body.

So if your code (or library/middleware/etc) manually set the Content-Type, you have two ways to fix it:

  1. rewrite your code (or whatever you use) to don't set Content-Type by default
  2. set Content-Type to undefined or remove it from headers to let your browser do it's work
6

Add headers:{content-type: undefined} browser will generate a boundary for you that is for uploading a file part-and-part with streaming if you are adding 'multiple/form-data' it means you should create streaming and upload your file part-and-part

So it is okay to add request.headers = {content-type: undefined}

4

I'm using the aurelia-api (an wrapper to aurelia-fetch-client). In this case the Content-Type default is 'application/json'. So I set the Content-Type to undefined and it worked like a charm.

0
0

I just use axios and it fixed without any special parameters. the node fetch really sucks

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