0

I am posting an image file to the server and everything is fine. However, in cases when the user posts something bigger I get this warning. What could I do to avoid this warning?

I don't want solutions that would hide the warning nor increase the post size. I want something that would block the request from uploading the file to the server entirely and catch that warning.

9
  • The only thing that could stop the request from happening in the first place is the browser. Since HTML does not provide a way to instruct the browser to impose a limit, you are out of luck.
    – Jon
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:11
  • 1
    You could just check for the file size in jQuery and block the form from submitting.
    – Achrome
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:11
  • 2
    @ash - that might be possible.. but this question is tagged with PHP and not jQuery..
    – Lix
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:13
  • 1
    I know that, but he wanted to know about a solution which blocks the upload entirely without the server throwing warnings. The only option in that case is to block it from the client side instead of the server side.
    – Achrome
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:14
  • jQuery could be a solution, right. One question: is the file uploaded to the server or is it discarded if it exceeds the size specified by php.ini?
    – Andrew
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:15

2 Answers 2

2

This is what worked for me. It seems that when PHP sees a file that is too large, deletes all the POST data. So this code fragment worked for me:

if ($_SERVER['REQUEST_METHOD'] == 'POST' && count($_POST) < 1 ) {
    $_SESSION['error'] = 'File upload size exceeded';
    header('Location: index.php');
    return;
}

Of course your page should be designed not to submit empty POST pages with no input parameters.

0

One thing what you can do is give a maximum size on the HTML form.

<input type="hidden" name="MAX_FILE_SIZE" value="4194304" /> 

It's not bulletproof, but it has some impact. Why this is not so good is explained in this comment - it is only checked by PHP, so uploading will start and continue up until this limit is reached.

My recommendation is that you could use that together with a javascript solution, as described here. It only works if javascript is enabled, of course.

4
  • 1
    that setting cannot do ANYTHING to override php.ini/httpd.conf settings. it's basically useless fluff to make people feel better. Otherwise anyone could trivially bypass server-side limits by fiddling with the html in their browser.
    – Marc B
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:46
  • @MarcB um, it's not overriding anything, it's an additional limit?
    – eis
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:48
  • at best it's a hint to the browser to not allow anything over that size. but in real-world terms, it's next to useless.
    – Marc B
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:49
  • @MarcB if you're unfamiliar with it, please read up on it before making such claims. It is not a hint to the browser, it's one of PHPs features.
    – eis
    Jun 23, 2013 at 20:50

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.