149

I am using Django Rest Framework and AngularJs to upload a file. My view file looks like this:

class ProductList(APIView):
    authentication_classes = (authentication.TokenAuthentication,)
    def get(self,request):
        if request.user.is_authenticated(): 
            userCompanyId = request.user.get_profile().companyId
            products = Product.objects.filter(company = userCompanyId)
            serializer = ProductSerializer(products,many=True)
            return Response(serializer.data)

    def post(self,request):
        serializer = ProductSerializer(data=request.DATA, files=request.FILES)
        if serializer.is_valid():
            serializer.save()
            return Response(data=request.DATA)

As the last line of post method should return all the data, I have several questions:

  • how to check if there is anything in request.FILES?
  • how to serialize file field?
  • how should I use parser?
1
  • 51
    JUST A NOTE TO THE MODS: Django has upgraded greatly since 2013. So if someone else post the same question now. PLEASE do not shoot them down ^_^.
    – Jessi
    Oct 15, 2018 at 15:42

24 Answers 24

90

Use the FileUploadParser, it's all in the request. Use a put method instead, you'll find an example in the docs :)

class FileUploadView(views.APIView):
    parser_classes = (FileUploadParser,)

    def put(self, request, filename, format=None):
        file_obj = request.FILES['file']
        # do some stuff with uploaded file
        return Response(status=204)
6
  • 18
    @pleasedontbelong why PUT method has been used here instead of POST? Oct 26, 2016 at 4:41
  • 8
    hi @pleasedontbelong, if it's creating a new record, would it be POST instead? and will it still work with FileUploadParser? Nov 30, 2016 at 2:56
  • 1
    @pleasedontbelong RTan asks a pretty good question. Reading RFC-2616 provides a subtlety I wasn't aware of until now. "The fundamental difference between the POST and PUT requests is reflected in the different meaning of the Request-URI. The URI in a POST request identifies the resource that will handle the enclosed entity. That resource might be a data-accepting process, a gateway to some other protocol, or a separate entity that accepts annotations. In contrast, the URI in a PUT request identifies the entity enclosed with the request"
    – dudeman
    Mar 15, 2018 at 17:15
  • 4
    Why FileUploadParser? "The FileUploadParser is for usage with native clients that can upload the file as a raw data request. For web-based uploads, or for native clients with multipart upload support, you should use the MultiPartParser parser instead." Doesn't seem like a good option generally. What's more, I don't see file uploads needing any particular treatment.
    – x-yuri
    Jan 6, 2019 at 6:20
  • 4
    To second @x-yuri, DRF complains about the Content-Disposition header being empty when I use the FileUploadParser. MultiPartParser is much simpler, since it just assumes the filename to be the given filename in the Form fields. Jul 29, 2019 at 9:21
90

Editor's note:

  • This answer uses pre_save, which no longer exists in Django REST framework 3.0.
  • In a sufficiently new version of Django REST framework, MultiPartParser should be available by default, which allows uploading file with no special handling.

I'm using the same stack and was also looking for an example of file upload, but my case is simpler since I use the ModelViewSet instead of APIView. The key turned out to be the pre_save hook. I ended up using it together with the angular-file-upload module like so:

# Django
class ExperimentViewSet(ModelViewSet):
    queryset = Experiment.objects.all()
    serializer_class = ExperimentSerializer

    def pre_save(self, obj):
        obj.samplesheet = self.request.FILES.get('file')

class Experiment(Model):
    notes = TextField(blank=True)
    samplesheet = FileField(blank=True, default='')
    user = ForeignKey(User, related_name='experiments')

class ExperimentSerializer(ModelSerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = Experiment
        fields = ('id', 'notes', 'samplesheet', 'user')
// AngularJS
controller('UploadExperimentCtrl', function($scope, $upload) {
    $scope.submit = function(files, exp) {
        $upload.upload({
            url: '/api/experiments/' + exp.id + '/',
            method: 'PUT',
            data: {user: exp.user.id},
            file: files[0]
        });
    };
});
4
48

Finally I am able to upload image using Django. Here is my working code

views.py

class FileUploadView(APIView):
    parser_classes = (FileUploadParser, )

    def post(self, request, format='jpg'):
        up_file = request.FILES['file']
        destination = open('/Users/Username/' + up_file.name, 'wb+')
        for chunk in up_file.chunks():
            destination.write(chunk)
        destination.close()  # File should be closed only after all chuns are added

        # ...
        # do some stuff with uploaded file
        # ...
        return Response(up_file.name, status.HTTP_201_CREATED)

urls.py

urlpatterns = patterns('', 
url(r'^imageUpload', views.FileUploadView.as_view())

curl request to upload

curl -X POST -S -H -u "admin:password" -F "[email protected];type=image/jpg" 127.0.0.1:8000/resourceurl/imageUpload
4
  • 14
    why destination.close() is placed at inside of for loop?
    – makerj
    Jan 23, 2016 at 12:27
  • 14
    Seems it would be better to use with open('/Users/Username/' + up_file.name, 'wb+') as destination: and remove the close entirely Oct 20, 2016 at 16:08
  • It's simpler to use ModelViewSet. Also, they most likely implemented it better.
    – x-yuri
    Jan 6, 2019 at 7:00
  • 4
    I've been relying on this answerr for the whole day... until I found that when you want to upload multiple files, it's not FileUploadParser that is needed, but MultiPartParser! Aug 13, 2020 at 16:23
31

From my experience, you don't need to do anything particular about file fields, you just tell it to make use of the file field:

from rest_framework import routers, serializers, viewsets

class Photo(django.db.models.Model):
    file = django.db.models.ImageField()

    def __str__(self):
        return self.file.name

class PhotoSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = models.Photo
        fields = ('id', 'file')   # <-- HERE

class PhotoViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    queryset = models.Photo.objects.all()
    serializer_class = PhotoSerializer

router = routers.DefaultRouter()
router.register(r'photos', PhotoViewSet)

api_urlpatterns = ([
    url('', include(router.urls)),
], 'api')
urlpatterns += [
    url(r'^api/', include(api_urlpatterns)),
]

and you're ready to upload files:

curl -sS http://example.com/api/photos/ -F 'file=@/path/to/file'

Add -F field=value for each extra field your model has. And don't forget to add authentication.

2
  • 4
    This. I'm not sure what the fuss is all about in all the higher-voted answers, maybe fiddling with parsers and all was necessary with earlier versions of DRF, but as of 2021 the generic classes just work for the basic use case, which is what the questions seems to be mainly about.
    – DJ Ramones
    Feb 26, 2021 at 11:26
  • how to work with the incoming file , then? Jan 2, 2023 at 11:29
23

For someone who needs to upload a file and send some data, there is no straight fwd way you can get it to work. There is an open issue in JSON API specs for this. One possibility I have seen is to use multipart/related as shown here, but I think it's very hard to implement in DRF.

Finally what I implemented was to send the request as FormData. You would send each file as file and all other data as text. Now for sending the data as text you have two choices. case 1) you can send each data as a key-value pair or case 2) you can have a single key called data and send the whole JSON as a string in value.

The first method would work out of the box if you have simple fields but it will be an issue if you have nested serializes. The multipart parser won't be able to parse the nested fields.

Below I am providing the implementation for both the cases

models.py

class Posts(models.Model):
    id = models.UUIDField(default=uuid.uuid4, primary_key=True, editable=False)
    caption = models.TextField(max_length=1000)
    media = models.ImageField(blank=True, default="", upload_to="posts/")
    tags = models.ManyToManyField('Tags', related_name='posts')

serializers.py -> no special changes needed, not showing my serializer here as it's too lengthy because of the writable ManyToMany Field implementation.

views.py

class PostsViewset(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    serializer_class = PostsSerializer
    #parser_classes = (MultipartJsonParser, parsers.JSONParser) use this if you have simple key value pair as data with no nested serializers
    #parser_classes = (parsers.MultipartParser, parsers.JSONParser) use this if you want to parse json in the key value pair data sent
    queryset = Posts.objects.all()
    lookup_field = 'id'

Now, if you are following the first method and are only sending non-Json data as key-value pairs, you don't need a custom parser class. DRF'd MultipartParser will do the job. But for the second case or if you have nested serializers (like I have shown) you will need a custom parser as shown below.

utils.py

from django.http import QueryDict
import json
from rest_framework import parsers

class MultipartJsonParser(parsers.MultiPartParser):

    def parse(self, stream, media_type=None, parser_context=None):
        result = super().parse(
            stream,
            media_type=media_type,
            parser_context=parser_context
        )
        data = {}

        # for case1 with nested serializers
        # parse each field with json
        for key, value in result.data.items():
            if type(value) != str:
                data[key] = value
                continue
            if '{' in value or "[" in value:
                try:
                    data[key] = json.loads(value)
                except ValueError:
                    data[key] = value
            else:
                data[key] = value

        # for case 2
        # find the data field and parse it
        data = json.loads(result.data["data"])

        qdict = QueryDict('', mutable=True)
        qdict.update(data)
        return parsers.DataAndFiles(qdict, result.files)

This serializer would basically parse any JSON content in the values.

The request example in postman for both cases:

Case 1

Case 2

5
  • I'd rather avoid case 2. Creating one database record per request should be fine most of the time.
    – x-yuri
    Jan 6, 2019 at 7:07
  • very helpful thank you a lot. But i don't understand, why you are converting dict data to QueryDict in parser? In my case in Django, normal dictionary data work perfectly without converting. Apr 12, 2020 at 20:15
  • I tried a different scenario using the answer you mentioned and it works successfully. you can look at my answer. Apr 12, 2020 at 23:24
  • if this works stackoverflow.com/questions/64547729/… should work too., but it does not.
    – sadat
    Oct 27, 2020 at 5:51
  • I am copying your parser but my run_validation method removes all the tags data. Please answer if you have time. stackoverflow.com/questions/74238785/… Oct 28, 2022 at 17:20
14

If anyone interested in the easiest example with ModelViewset for Django Rest Framework.

The Model is,

class MyModel(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(db_column='name', max_length=200, blank=False, null=False, unique=True)
    imageUrl = models.FileField(db_column='image_url', blank=True, null=True, upload_to='images/')

    class Meta:
        managed = True
        db_table = 'MyModel'

The Serializer,

class MyModelSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = MyModel
        fields = "__all__"

And the View is,

class MyModelView(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    queryset = MyModel.objects.all()
    serializer_class = MyModelSerializer

Test in Postman,

enter image description here

2
  • And how could we send the request using ajax. What is imageUrl actually? Sep 4, 2020 at 14:01
  • the imageUrl is the file in the request.
    – sadat
    Sep 4, 2020 at 15:09
11

models.py

from django.db import models

import uuid

class File(models.Model):
    id = models.UUIDField(primary_key=True, default=uuid.uuid4, editable=False)
    file = models.FileField(blank=False, null=False)
    
    def __str__(self):
        return self.file.name

serializers.py

from rest_framework import serializers
from .models import File

class FileSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = File
        fields = "__all__"

views.py

from django.shortcuts import render
from rest_framework.parsers import FileUploadParser
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework.views import APIView
from rest_framework import status

from .serializers import FileSerializer


class FileUploadView(APIView):
    permission_classes = []
    parser_class = (FileUploadParser,)

    def post(self, request, *args, **kwargs):

      file_serializer = FileSerializer(data=request.data)

      if file_serializer.is_valid():
          file_serializer.save()
          return Response(file_serializer.data, status=status.HTTP_201_CREATED)
      else:
          return Response(file_serializer.errors, status=status.HTTP_400_BAD_REQUEST)

urls.py

from apps.files import views as FileViews

urlpatterns = [
    path('api/files', FileViews.FileUploadView.as_view()),
]

settings.py

# file uload parameters
MEDIA_URL =  '/media/'
MEDIA_ROOT = os.path.join(BASE_DIR, 'media')

Send a post request to api/files with a your file attached to a form-data field file. The file will be uploaded to /media folder and a db record will be added with id and file name.

7

I solved this problem with ModelViewSet and ModelSerializer. Hope this will help community.

I also preffer to have validation and Object->JSON (and vice-versa) login in serializer itself rather than in views.

Lets understand it by example.

Say, I want to create FileUploader API. Where it will be storing fields like id, file_path, file_name, size, owner etc in database. See sample model below:

class FileUploader(models.Model):
    file = models.FileField()
    name = models.CharField(max_length=100) #name is filename without extension
    version = models.IntegerField(default=0)
    upload_date = models.DateTimeField(auto_now=True, db_index=True)
    owner = models.ForeignKey('auth.User', related_name='uploaded_files')
    size = models.IntegerField(default=0)

Now, For APIs this is what I want:

  1. GET:

When I fire the GET endpoint, I want all above fields for every uploaded file.

  1. POST:

But for user to create/upload file, why she has to worry about passing all these fields. She can just upload the file and then, I suppose, serializer can get rest of the fields from uploaded FILE.

Searilizer: Question: I created below serializer to serve my purpose. But not sure if its the right way to implement it.

class FileUploaderSerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
    # overwrite = serializers.BooleanField()
    class Meta:
        model = FileUploader
        fields = ('file','name','version','upload_date', 'size')
        read_only_fields = ('name','version','owner','upload_date', 'size')

   def validate(self, validated_data):
        validated_data['owner'] = self.context['request'].user
        validated_data['name'] = os.path.splitext(validated_data['file'].name)[0]
        validated_data['size'] = validated_data['file'].size
        #other validation logic
        return validated_data

    def create(self, validated_data):
        return FileUploader.objects.create(**validated_data)

Viewset for reference:

class FileUploaderViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    serializer_class = FileUploaderSerializer
    parser_classes = (MultiPartParser, FormParser,)

    # overriding default query set
    queryset = LayerFile.objects.all()

    def get_queryset(self, *args, **kwargs):
        qs = super(FileUploaderViewSet, self).get_queryset(*args, **kwargs)
        qs = qs.filter(owner=self.request.user)
        return qs
1
  • 1
    What validation logic does FileUploaderSerializer.validate method contain?
    – x-yuri
    Jan 6, 2019 at 6:48
5

I'd like to write another option that I feel is cleaner and easier to maintain. We'll be using the defaultRouter to add CRUD urls for our viewset and we'll add one more fixed url specifying the uploader view within the same viewset.

**** views.py 

from rest_framework import viewsets, serializers
from rest_framework.decorators import action, parser_classes
from rest_framework.parsers import JSONParser, MultiPartParser
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework_csv.parsers import CSVParser
from posts.models import Post
from posts.serializers import PostSerializer     


class PostsViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):

    queryset = Post.objects.all()
    serializer_class = PostSerializer 
    parser_classes = (JSONParser, MultiPartParser, CSVParser)


    @action(detail=False, methods=['put'], name='Uploader View', parser_classes=[CSVParser],)
    def uploader(self, request, filename, format=None):
        # Parsed data will be returned within the request object by accessing 'data' attr  
        _data = request.data

        return Response(status=204)

Project's main urls.py

**** urls.py 

from rest_framework import routers
from posts.views import PostsViewSet


router = routers.DefaultRouter()
router.register(r'posts', PostsViewSet)

urlpatterns = [
    url(r'^posts/uploader/(?P<filename>[^/]+)$', PostsViewSet.as_view({'put': 'uploader'}), name='posts_uploader')
    url(r'^', include(router.urls), name='root-api'),
    url('admin/', admin.site.urls),
]

.- README.

The magic happens when we add @action decorator to our class method 'uploader'. By specifying "methods=['put']" argument, we are only allowing PUT requests; perfect for file uploading.

I also added the argument "parser_classes" to show you can select the parser that will parse your content. I added CSVParser from the rest_framework_csv package, to demonstrate how we can accept only certain type of files if this functionality is required, in my case I'm only accepting "Content-Type: text/csv". Note: If you're adding custom Parsers, you'll need to specify them in parsers_classes in the ViewSet due the request will compare the allowed media_type with main (class) parsers before accessing the uploader method parsers.

Now we need to tell Django how to go to this method and where can be implemented in our urls. That's when we add the fixed url (Simple purposes). This Url will take a "filename" argument that will be passed in the method later on. We need to pass this method "uploader", specifying the http protocol ('PUT') in a list to the PostsViewSet.as_view method.

When we land in the following url

 http://example.com/posts/uploader/ 

it will expect a PUT request with headers specifying "Content-Type" and Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="something.csv".

curl -v -u user:pass http://example.com/posts/uploader/ --upload-file ./something.csv --header "Content-type:text/csv"
2
  • So you suggest uploading a file, then attaching it to some db record. What if attaching never happens for some reason? Why not do it in one request? parser_classes is not there to limit which files can be uploaded. It let's you decide which formats can be used to make requests. On second thought, the way you handle the upload... it seems like you're putting data from CSV into database. Not what OP asked.
    – x-yuri
    Jan 6, 2019 at 6:41
  • @x-yuri by saying "a CSV is a file" and the question is; How to check if there's data in the request? By using this method, you'll find the data in request.data. _data = request.data due PUT is being used. Like you said, parser_classes are there to decide which formats CAN be used to make request for hence by using any other format that you DON'T want, will then be excluded adding an extra layer of security. What yo do with your data is up to you. Using "Try Except" you can check if "attaching never happens" tho there's no need for it, that's not what the code does. These is made in 1 request Jan 7, 2019 at 17:28
4

Some of the solutions are deprecated (request.data should be used for Django 3.0+). Some of them do not validate the input. Also, I would appreciate a solution with swagger annotation. So I recommend using the following code:

from drf_yasg.utils import swagger_auto_schema
from rest_framework import serializers
from rest_framework.parsers import MultiPartParser
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework.views import APIView


class FileUploadAPI(APIView):
    parser_classes = (MultiPartParser, )

    class InputSerializer(serializers.Serializer):
        image = serializers.ImageField()

    @swagger_auto_schema(
        request_body=InputSerializer
    )
    def put(self, request):
        input_serializer = self.InputSerializer(data=request.data)
        input_serializer.is_valid(raise_exception=True)

        # process file
        file = input_serializer.validated_data['image']

        return Response(status=204)

3

Best Straightforward Way to handle single upload file or multiple files in a single request is this

@api_view(['POST'])
def file_list(request):  # use APIview or function based view or any view u want
    # for single file
    file = request.FILES["file"]
    print(file)
    # Do what ever you want with it

    # for multiple file
    files = request.FILES.getlist('file')
    for file in files:
        print(file)
        # Do what ever you want with it
2

I have used this view to upload file to aws. Here upload_file is a helper function while overall you can use this view to get upload the file in form-data.

class FileUploadView(GenericAPIView):

    def post(self, request):
        try:
            file = request.data['file']
            if file.content_type == 'image/png' or file.content_type == 'image/jpeg':
                file_name = upload_file(file)
                return Response({"name": file_name}, status=status.HTTP_202_ACCEPTED)
            else:
                raise UnsupportedMediaType(file.content_type)
        except KeyError:
            return Response("file missing.", status=status.HTTP_404_NOT_FOUND)
1
    from rest_framework import status
    from rest_framework.response import Response
    class FileUpload(APIView):
         def put(request):
             try:
                file = request.FILES['filename']
                #now upload to s3 bucket or your media file
             except Exception as e:
                   print e
                   return Response(status, 
                           status.HTTP_500_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR)
             return Response(status, status.HTTP_200_OK)
1

If you are using ModelViewSet, well actually you are done! It handles every things for you! You just need to put the field in your ModelSerializer and set content-type=multipart/form-data; in your client.

BUT as you know you can not send files in json format. (when content-type is set to application/json in your client). Unless you use Base64 format.

So you have two choices:

  • let ModelViewSet and ModelSerializer handle the job and send the request using content-type=multipart/form-data;
  • set the field in ModelSerializer as Base64ImageField (or) Base64FileField and tell your client to encode the file to Base64 and set the content-type=application/json
1
from rest_framework import status, generics
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework import serializers
import logging
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)`enter code here`
class ImageUploadSerializer(serializers.Serializer):
    file = serializers.FileField()

class UploadImages(generics.GenericAPIView):
    
    serializer_class = ImageUploadSerializer
    permission_classes = [IsAuthenticated, ]

    def post(self, request):

        try:
            data = self.serializer_class(data=request.data)
            if data.is_valid() is False:
                return Response({'error': ERROR_MESSAGES.get('400')}, status=status.HTTP_400_BAD_REQUEST)
                is_file_upload_success, file_item = save_aws_article_image(data.validated_data.get('file'),
                                                                           request.user, upload_type)

            if is_file_upload_success:
                logger.info('{0} file uploaded {1}'.format(file_item['file_obj'].path, datetime.now()))
                return Response({'path': file_item['file_obj'].path, 'id': file_item['file_obj'].uuid,
                                 'name': file_item['file_obj'].name},
                                status=status.HTTP_201_CREATED)
        except Exception as e:
            logger.error(e, exc_info=True)
            return Response({"error": e}, status=status.HTTP_500_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR)
1
  • 2
    COuld you add an explanation to your code? May 15, 2021 at 5:43
0

In django-rest-framework request data is parsed by the Parsers.
http://www.django-rest-framework.org/api-guide/parsers/

By default django-rest-framework takes parser class JSONParser. It will parse the data into json. so, files will not be parsed with it.
If we want files to be parsed along with other data we should use one of the below parser classes.

FormParser
MultiPartParser
FileUploadParser
1
  • 1
    On the current version of DRF 3.8.2, it will parse by default application/json, application/x-www-form-urlencoded, and multipart/form-data.
    – liquidki
    Sep 23, 2018 at 10:05
0
def post(self,request):
        serializer = ProductSerializer(data=request.DATA, files=request.FILES)
        if serializer.is_valid():
            serializer.save()
            return Response(serializer.data)
1
  • This answer could use a bit of context
    – nicbou
    Jul 17, 2021 at 10:39
0

This is the one of the approach I've applied hopefully it'll help.

     class Model_File_update(APIView):
         parser_classes = (MultiPartParser, FormParser)
         permission_classes = [IsAuthenticated]  # it will check if the user is authenticated or not
         authentication_classes = [JSONWebTokenAuthentication]  # it will authenticate the person by JSON web token

         def put(self, request):
            id = request.GET.get('id')
            obj = Model.objects.get(id=id)
            serializer = Model_Upload_Serializer(obj, data=request.data)
            if serializer.is_valid():
               serializer.save()
               return Response(serializer.data, status=200)
            else:
               return Response(serializer.errors, status=400)
0

You can generalize @Nithin's answer to work directly with DRF's existing serializer system by generating a parser class to parse specific fields which are then fed directly into the standard DRF serializers:

from django.http import QueryDict
import json
from rest_framework import parsers


def gen_MultipartJsonParser(json_fields):
    class MultipartJsonParser(parsers.MultiPartParser):

        def parse(self, stream, media_type=None, parser_context=None):
            result = super().parse(
                stream,
                media_type=media_type,
                parser_context=parser_context
            )
            data = {}
            # find the data field and parse it
            qdict = QueryDict('', mutable=True)
            for json_field in json_fields:
                json_data = result.data.get(json_field, None)
                if not json_data:
                    continue
                data = json.loads(json_data)
                if type(data) == list:
                    for d in data:
                        qdict.update({json_field: d})
                else:
                    qdict.update({json_field: data})

            return parsers.DataAndFiles(qdict, result.files)

    return MultipartJsonParser

This is used like:

class MyFileViewSet(ModelViewSet):
    parser_classes = [gen_MultipartJsonParser(['tags', 'permissions'])]
    #                                           ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
    #                              Fields that need to be further JSON parsed
    ....
0

A DRF viewset fileupload example with React(axios) to send an audioBlob:

class MyViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    parser_classes = (MultiPartParser, FormParser)
    queryset = MyModel.objects.all().order_by('created_at')
    serializer_class = MySerializer

serializer:

class MySerializer(serializers.ModelSerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = MyModel
        fields = '__all__'

model:

class MyModel(models.Model):
    sentence = models.ForeignKey(Sentence, related_name="voice_sentence", on_delete=models.CASCADE)
    voice_record = models.FileField(blank=True, default='')
    created_at = models.DateTimeField(auto_now_add=True)

axios:

export const sendSpeechText = async (audioBlob: any) => {
    const headers = {
        'Content-Type': 'application/json',
        'Content-Disposition': 'attachment; filename=audiofile.webm'
    }

    const audiofile = new File([audioBlob], "audiofile.webm", { type: "audio/webm" })

    const formData = new FormData();
    formData.append("sentence", '1');
    formData.append("voice_record", audiofile);

    return await axios.post(
        SEND_SPEECH_URL,
        formData,
        {
            crossDomain: true,
            headers: headers
        },
    )
}

NOTE: voice_record in formData should be the same in your model

0

There are majorly 3 ways for upload files in drf

suppose you have Tag model with title and logo fields and TagSerializer

class Tag(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(max_length=10, default='')
    file = models.FileField(upload_to='tag/', blank=True, null=True, )


class TagSerializer(rest_serializers.ModelSerializer):
    class Meta:
        model = Tag
        fields = '__all__'

you can choose one of them according to your situation.

1- using serializer:

class UploadFile(APIView):
    parser_classes = (MultiPartParser, FormParser)

    def post(self, request):

        serializer = TagSerializer(data=request.data)
        serializer.is_valid(raise_exception=True)
        serializer.save()

        return Response(serializer.data, status=status.HTTP_200_OK)

2- using write method :

def save_file(file: InMemoryUploadedFile, full_path):
    with open(full_path, 'wb+') as f:
        for chunk in file.chunks():
            f.write(chunk)


class UploadFile(APIView):
    parser_classes = (MultiPartParser, FormParser)

    def post(self, request):
        file: InMemoryUploadedFile = request.FILES['file']
        # define file_save_path variable 
        full_path = file_save_path + file.name
        save_file(file, full_path)
        return Response(serializer.data, status=status.HTTP_200_OK)

3- using FileSystemStorage:

class UploadFile(APIView):
parser_classes = (MultiPartParser, FormParser)

def post(self, request):
    file: InMemoryUploadedFile = request.FILES['file']
    f = FileSystemStorage()
    # this will save file in MEDIA_ROOT path
    f.save(file.name, file)
    return Response(serializer.data, status=status.HTTP_200_OK)
0

For the users who want to use or prefer a Function-Based Views for uploading files.

This is a Complete Guide from Creating Models > views > Serializers > URLs and Testing the endpoint with Postman. I have put the comments inside the code where required.

# models.py
# Imports 
from django.db import models
import os

def document_path_and_name(instance, filename):
    '''  Change the filename to 'instance_id + document_name '''
    ext = filename.split('.')[-1]
    filename = "%s_%s.%s" % (instance.id, instance.document_name, ext)

    ''' if document_name is 'doucment one' in pdf and id is 1
    then filname will be saved as = 1_document_one.pdf '''

    return os.path.join('files/', filename)

class Document(models.Model):
    # I'm using document_name and id to give the filename that would be save with
    # this using document_path_and_name function.
    # you can modify on your need. 
    document_name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
    file = models.FileField(upload_to=document_path_and_name)

    def __str__(self):
        return self.document_name

We don't need a Serializer to validate the file upload here but would need one if we need to serialize the response. So let's go with a simple ReadOnly Serializer in this case.

# serializers.py
# imports
from rest_framework import serializers

class DocumentSerializer(serializers.Serializer):
    id = serializers.IntegerField(read_only=True)
    document_name = serializers.CharField(read_only=True)
    file = serializers.URLField(read_only=True)

Now in the api_view, we will be using the MultiPartParser decorator to upload files via a POST request. We would need a document_name and a file for this function to upload the file correctly as we had set the Model.

# views.py
# imports
from rest_framework.decorators import api_view, parser_classes
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework.parsers import MultiPartParser
from .models import Document
from .serializers import DocumentSerializer

@api_view(['POST'])
@parser_classes([MultiPartParser])
def upload_document(request, filename, format=None):
    """
    A view that can accept POST requests with .media_type: multipart/form-data content.
    """
    file = request.FILES['file']
    doc = Document.objects.create(document_name=filename, file=file)
    # Do any thing else here
    serializer = DocumentSerializer(doc, many=False)
    return Response(serializer.data)

So, We will be passing document_name in the URL param, we can call it anything but I defined it as the filename. and our API ENDPOINT or Url will be like;

# imports
from django.urls import path
from .views import upload_document

urlpatterns = [
    path('upload_document/<str:filename>/', upload_document),
]

So to test this via Postman, go to your valid API endpoint like below enter image description here

I'm passing the filename for the document_name you can pass anything. You would notice that the actual file name is something else in pdf format in the screenshot below. That will be replaced with the help of our document_path_and_name function to id_document_name. So here the save filename is 1_filename.pdf

enter image description here

Now just make a request and your file will be uploaded to your directed file storage path. And you will get the JSON Response from DocumentSerializer. The main thing which was responsible for the file upload is the MultiPartParser decorator. Must visit the Docs for more details.

0

If you're using ViewSets, you can add a custom action to handle file uploads:

from rest_framework.decorators import action
from rest_framework.response import Response
from rest_framework.parsers import FileUploadParser
from rest_framework import viewsets
...

class SomeViewSet(viewsets.ModelViewSet):
    serializer_class = ...
    permission_classes = [...]
    queryset = ...

    @action(methods=['put'], detail=True, parser_classes=[FileUploadParser])
    def upload_file(self, request, pk=None):
        obj = self.get_object()
        obj.file = request.data['file']
        obj.save()
        return Response(status=204)

This keeps everything within the ViewSet. You'll get an endpoint that looks something like this api/item/32/upload_file/.

The reason you'd use FileUploadParser as opposed to other options like multipart is if you're uploading from a native app for example and don't want to rely on a multi part encoder.

0

I was using @Nithin's answer (case 2) but still had some issues with nested serializers due to limitations of the QueryDict format. I found you can instead return a plain dict from the parser just like DRF's JSONParser but with files added:

class MultipartJsonParser(parsers.MultiPartParser):
    def parse(self, stream, media_type=None, parser_context=None):
        result = super().parse(stream, media_type=media_type, parser_context=parser_context)

        data = json.loads(result.data["data"])
        for k, v in result.files.items():
            data[k] = v
        return data

Just specify the parser in the view and it'll work with arbitrary nested json and with files. Note all the data including files will be in request.data in the view; the (deprecated) request.FILES will be empty but the serializers read the files as usual.

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