30

I need to return generated file download as a Django REST Framework response. I tried the following:

def retrieve(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
    template = webodt.ODFTemplate('test.odt')
    queryset = Pupils.objects.get(id=kwargs['pk'])
    serializer = StudentSerializer(queryset)
    context = dict(serializer.data)
    document = template.render(Context(context))
    doc = converter().convert(document, format='doc')
    res = HttpResponse(
        FileWrapper(doc),
        content_type='application/msword'
    )
    res['Content-Disposition'] = u'attachment; filename="%s_%s.zip"' % (context[u'surname'], context[u'name'])
    return res

But it returns a msword document as json.

How do I make it start downloading as file instead?

3
  • You mean to say that you have created an word file which you need to pass to Front End so that Front end user should able to download it? Aug 1, 2016 at 11:23
  • @PiyushS.Wanare exactly
    – Viktor
    Aug 1, 2016 at 11:39
  • Maybe after the file is generated, if it's publicly accessible from your web server (without Django code, authorisation, etc) you could send a 302 Redirect response.
    – Owen
    Aug 1, 2016 at 12:06

7 Answers 7

24

Here's an example of returning a file download directly from DRF. The trick is to use a custom renderer so you can return a Response directly from the view:

from django.http import FileResponse
from rest_framework import viewsets, renderers
from rest_framework.decorators import action

class PassthroughRenderer(renderers.BaseRenderer):
    """
        Return data as-is. View should supply a Response.
    """
    media_type = ''
    format = ''
    def render(self, data, accepted_media_type=None, renderer_context=None):
        return data

class ExampleViewSet(viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):
    queryset = Example.objects.all()

    @action(methods=['get'], detail=True, renderer_classes=(PassthroughRenderer,))
    def download(self, *args, **kwargs):
        instance = self.get_object()

        # get an open file handle (I'm just using a file attached to the model for this example):
        file_handle = instance.file.open()

        # send file
        response = FileResponse(file_handle, content_type='whatever')
        response['Content-Length'] = instance.file.size
        response['Content-Disposition'] = 'attachment; filename="%s"' % instance.file.name

        return response

Note I'm using a custom endpoint download instead of the default endpoint retrieve, because that makes it easy to override the renderer just for this endpoint instead of for the whole viewset -- and it tends to make sense for list and detail to return regular JSON anyway. If you wanted to selectively return a file download you could add more logic to the custom renderer.

1
  • AssertionError: .accepted_media_type not set on Response getting this error sometimes. Aug 25, 2022 at 3:44
12

This may work for you:

file_path = file_url
FilePointer = open(file_path,"r")
response = HttpResponse(FilePointer,content_type='application/msword')
response['Content-Disposition'] = 'attachment; filename=NameOfFile'

return response.

For FrontEnd code refer this

6
  • I don't get this line yourFilePointer.write(response,text) . My file is already generated and saved on server. What text should I write there?
    – Viktor
    Aug 1, 2016 at 11:45
  • Text will be the your word file text. Aug 1, 2016 at 11:49
  • as we write text file like f = open('c:\file.doc', "w") f.write(text) Aug 1, 2016 at 11:49
  • As I said, my file is already on disk. I don't need to write it
    – Viktor
    Aug 1, 2016 at 11:50
  • 2
    It should be: ´response = HttpResponse(FilePointer.read(), content_type='application/msword')´ Dec 2, 2017 at 15:39
8

I am using DRF and i found a view code to download file, which would be like

from rest_framework import generics
from django.http import HttpResponse
from wsgiref.util import FileWrapper

class FileDownloadListAPIView(generics.ListAPIView):

    def get(self, request, id, format=None):
        queryset = Example.objects.get(id=id)
        file_handle = queryset.file.path
        document = open(file_handle, 'rb')
        response = HttpResponse(FileWrapper(document), content_type='application/msword')
        response['Content-Disposition'] = 'attachment; filename="%s"' % queryset.file.name
        return response

and url.py will be

path('download/<int:id>/',FileDownloadListAPIView.as_view())

I am using React.js in frontend and i get a response like

handleDownload(id, filename) {
  fetch(`http://127.0.0.1:8000/example/download/${id}/`).then(
    response => {
      response.blob().then(blob => {
      let url = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
      let a = document.createElement("a");
      console.log(url);
      a.href = url;
      a.download = filename;
      a.click();
    });
  });
}

and after i got successful in downloading a file which also opens correctly and i hope this gonna work. Thanks

1
  • what if you dont know the content_type? how to handle auto content_type Sep 14, 2020 at 16:17
6

For me, using Python 3.6, Django 3.0, and DRF 3.10, The problem came from using the wrong type of response. I needed to use a django.http.HttpResponse, as seen below:

from django.http import HttpResponse
...
with open('file.csv', 'r') as file:
    response = HttpResponse(file, content_type='text/csv')
    response['Content-Disposition'] = 'attachment; filename=file.csv'
    return response
4

I solved my problem by saving file in media folder and sending of the link of it to front-end.

@permission_classes((permissions.IsAdminUser,))
class StudentDocxViewSet(mixins.RetrieveModelMixin, viewsets.GenericViewSet):
    def retrieve(self, request, *args, **kwargs):
        template = webodt.ODFTemplate('test.odt')
        queryset = Pupils.objects.get(id=kwargs['pk'])
        serializer = StudentSerializer(queryset)
        context = dict(serializer.data)
        document = template.render(Context(context))
        doc = converter().convert(document, format='doc')
        p = u'docs/cards/%s/%s_%s.doc' % (datetime.now().date(), context[u'surname'], context[u'name'])
        path = default_storage.save(p, doc)
        return response.Response(u'/media/' + path)

And handled this like in my front-end (AngularJS SPA)

$http(req).success(function (url) {
    console.log(url);
    window.location = url;
})
1
  • 1
    But how did you made media path accessible to frontend? Like I did the same thing with path in static folder and it worked but when I did it for media folder, it said "page not found"! Dec 9, 2020 at 11:06
2

In models.py

class Attachment(models.Model):
    file = models.FileField(upload_to=attachment_directory_path, blank=True, null=True)
    ...

    @property
    def filename(self):
        return self.file.name.split('/')[-1:][0]

in views.py

import mimetypes
from django.http import FileResponse


class AttachmentViewSet(ModelViewSet):
    ...

    @action(methods=['GET'], detail=True)
    def download(self, request, **kwargs):
        att = self.get_object()
        file_handle = att.file.open()

        mimetype, _ = mimetypes.guess_type(att.file.path)
        response = FileResponse(file_handle, content_type=mimetype)
        response['Content-Length'] = att.file.size
        response['Content-Disposition'] = "attachment; filename={}".format(att.filename)
        return response

and in frontend, I used axios for download files. api is axios client.

export function fileDownload(url, filename){
  return api.get(url, { responseType: 'blob' })
    .then((response)=>{
      const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([response.data]));
      const link = document.createElement('a');
      link.href = url;
      link.setAttribute('download', filename);
      document.body.appendChild(link);
      link.click();
    })
}

hope that it helps

0

Using django-downloadview this can be done like so:

from rest_framework.decorators import action
from django_downloadview import ObjectDownloadView


class DocumentViewSet(viewsets.ReadOnlyModelViewSet):

    @action(detail=True)
    def download(self, request, pk):
        return ObjectDownloadView.as_view(
            model=, # your model here
        )(request, pk=pk)

The viewset can then be registered via DRF routers.

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