I need to get the full file path including file name information to handle later with PHP.
I am running into many difficulties.
We can use a html form with the html
<form method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
<input type="file" />
However, to pass this information we need to the server, we actually have to upload the file, I do not want to do this as its wasteful, The reason being is that this project is just for my local machine, The file already exists on my machine.
A manual way of achieving this is to provide a input text field, and inserting the file(s) full location path here via another file navigation window(copy/paste), But this quickly becomes boring and requires to much work when using the tool often.
Any other suggestions to achieve this?
This isn't possible. This has been discussed before and the explanations they give there are good, so I won't repeat:
How to get full path of selected file on change of <input type=‘file’> using javascript, jquery-ajax?
paste following line under file tag,your problem will be solved
webkitdirectory directory multiple
<input type="file" id="ctrl" webkitdirectory directory multiple/>
I want to upload the files to this address: http://chusmix.com/Imagenes/grupos and I'm trying with this simple this code but it doesn't work:
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" action="http://chusmix.com/Imagenes/grupos">
Please specify a file:<br>
<input type="file" name="datafile" size="40">
</p>
<div>
<input type="submit" value="Send">
</div>
</form>
Oddly enough, the first result of a Google search yielded this rather helpful tutorial. Why not read it?
Read the PHP manual chapter "Handling file uploads":
http://php.net/manual/en/features.file-upload.php
The way you think uploads work is not the way they work. The form posts to the script you want to handle the request, not the location you want the uploads to be. When you upload a file to Apache, it places that file in the temporary directory of the computer (in Linux, that's /tmp by default).
Your script has to move the file from the temp directory to wherever you want it to be. The manual has plenty of code showing you how.
Make sure the form is loaded via
http://chusmix.com/Imagenes
The browsers wont you allow to upload to a unkown website (Same origin policy).
Edit your form
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post" action="/grupos">
My PHP book gives a template HTML form for uploading a file:
<form action="upload.php" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data"/>
<div>
<input type="hidden" name="MAX_FILE_SIZE" value="10000000"/>
<label for="userfile">Upload a file:</label>
<input type="file" name="userfile" id="userfile"/>
<input type="submit" value="Send File"/>
</div>
</form>
The book displays it as "Upload a file:" [textbox] [Browse...] [Send File]
I copied it verbatim, and the result I'm getting is "Upload a file:" [Choose File] "no file chosen" [Send File]
I'm wondering why the discrepancy exists. Is there a way around it? I'm using XHTML Transitional. No doctype is given in the book. But I doubt that's the issue.
The script I'm writing aims to take the file the user chooses, process it, and write the result into another file that doesn't exist yet. I'm asking this question because it would be useful to let the user more easily copy the initial file path/name, paste it into the other field, and just change a part of it.
(Also: why the difference between "Browse..." and "Choose File"? I tried manually setting the value of the "userfile" field to "Browse..." but nothing happened. This is less important but I'm curious nonetheless.)
It is probably showing a different browser and/or version.
It sounds like you are looking at it under Safari and the book has screenshots of IE, for example.
There are a few ways to get complete control of file uploading and the <input type="file" /> element. You can use Flash, or you can set the input to opacity: 0 and then position what you want beneath it.
Some time ago the browser engines took almost complete control over the input type="file" - fields, since it nowadays is regarded as a security issue. For example the days before that you could easily prefill the file input filed with some path and filename (e.g. something like /etc/passwd) and hide the field, so sending the form you would not remark that you're also sending the file...
That's why for example you could not preset the filename of such a field and that's also why browsers now all do their own thing with these special input fields.
As Alex said above, you could get around this, but it will be some hassle, because it would mean to "fake" the file input field.
I have WampServer 2 installed on my Windows 7 computer. I'm using Apache 2.2.11 and PHP 5.2.11. When I attempt to upload any file from a form, it seems to upload, but in PHP, the $_FILES array is empty. There is no file in the c:\wamp\tmp folder. I have configured php.ini to allow file uploads and such. The tmp folder has read/write privileges for the current user. I'm stumped.
HTML:
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
</head>
<body>
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" action="vanilla-upload.php" method="POST">
Choose a file to upload: <input name="uploadedfile" type="file" /><br />
<input type="submit" value="Upload File" />
</form>
</body>
</html>
PHP:
<?php
echo 'file count=', count($_FILES),"\n";
var_dump($_FILES);
echo "\n";
?>
Here's a check-list for file uploading in PHP:
Check php.ini for:
file_uploads = On
post_max_size = 100M
upload_max_filesize = 100M
You might need to use .htaccess or .user.ini if you are on shared hosting and don't have access to php.ini.
Make sure
you’re editing the correct ini file –
use the phpinfo() function to verify your
settings are actually being applied.
Also make sure you don’t
misspell the sizes - it should be 100M not 100MB.
Make sure your <form> tag has the enctype="multipart/form-data" attribute. No other tag will work, it has to be your FORM tag. Double check that it is spelled correctly. Double check that multipart/form-data is surrounded by STRAIGHT QUOTES, not smart quotes pasted in from Word OR from a website blog (WordPress converts straight quotes to angle quotes!). If you have multiple forms on the page, make sure they both have this attribute. Type them in manually, or try straight single quotes typed in manually.
Make sure you do not have two input file fields with the same name attribute. If you need to support multiple, put square brackets at the end of the name:
<input type="file" name="files[]">
<input type="file" name="files[]">
Make sure your tmp and upload directories have the correct read+write permissions set. The temporary upload folder is specified in PHP settings as upload_tmp_dir.
Make sure your file destination and tmp/upload directories do not
have spaces in them.
Make sure all <form>'s on your page have </form> close tags.
Make sure your FORM tag has method="POST". GET requests do not support multipart/form-data uploads.
Make sure your file input tag has a NAME attribute. An ID attribute is NOT sufficient! ID attributes are for use in the DOM, not for POST payloads.
Make sure you are not using Javascript to disable your <input type="file"> field on submission
Make sure you're not nesting forms like <form><form></form></form>
Check your HTML structure for invalid/overlapping tags like <div><form></div></form>
Also make sure that the file you are uploading does not have any non-alphanumeric characters in it.
Once, I just spent hours trying to figure out why this was happening to me all of a sudden. It turned out that I had modified some of the PHP settings in .htaccess, and one of them (not sure which yet) was causing the upload to fail and $_FILES to be empty.
You could potentially try avoiding underscores (_) in the name="" attribute of the <input> tag
Try uploading very small files to narrow down whether it's a file-size issue.
Check your available disk space. Although very rare, it is mentioned in this PHP Manual page comment:
If the $_FILES array suddenly goes mysteriously empty, even though your form seems correct, you should check the disk space available for your temporary folder partition. In my installation, all file uploads failed without warning. After much gnashing of teeth, I tried freeing up additional space, after which file uploads suddenly worked again.
Be sure that you're not submitting the form through an AJAX POST request instead of a normal POST request that causes a page to reload. I went through each and every point in the list above, and finally found out that the reason due to which my $_FILES variable was empty was that I was submitting the form using an AJAX POST request. I know that there are methods to upload files using ajax too, but this could be a valid reason why your $_FILES array is empty.
Source for some of these points:
https://web.archive.org/web/20050426084124/http://getluky.net/2004/10/04/apachephp-_files-array-mysteriously-empty/
As far as the HTML you appear to have set that part up correctly. You already have the enctype="multipart/form-data" which is very important to have on the form.
As far as your php.ini setup, sometimes on systems multiple php.ini files exist. Be sure you are editing the correct one. I know you said you have configured your php.ini file to have file uploads, but did you also set your upload_max_filesize and post_max_size to be larger than the file you are trying to upload? So you should have:
file_uploads = On; sounds like you already did this
post_max_size = 8M; change this higher if needed
upload_max_filesize = 8M; change this higher if needed
Does your directory: "c:\wamp\tmp" have both read and write permissions? Did you remember to restart Apache after you made the php.ini changes?
It is important to add enctype="multipart/form-data" to your form, example
<form action="upload.php" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
Select image to upload:
<input type="file" name="fileToUpload" id="fileToUpload">
<input type="submit" value="Upload Image" name="submit">
</form>
Thank you everybody for the vary comprehensive replies. Those are all very helpful. The answer turned out to be something very odd. It turns out that PHP 5.2.11 doesn't like the following:
post_max_size = 2G
or
post_max_size = 2048M
If I change it to 2047M, the upload works.
I have a same problem looking 2 hours ,is very simple to we check our server configuration first.
Example:
echo $upload_max_size = ini_get('upload_max_filesize');
echo $post_max_size=ini_get('post_max_size');
any type of file size is :20mb, but our upload_max_size is above 20mb but array is null. Answer is our post_max_size should be greater than upload_max_filesize
post_max_size = 750M
upload_max_filesize = 750M
Make sure your input element has a 'name' attribute.
<input type="file" name="uploadedfile" />
If this is missing the $_FILES will be empty.
Here another cause I found:
When using JQuery Mobile and the form attribute data-ajax is set to true, the FILES array will be empty. So set data-ajax to false.
No one mentioned this but it helped me out and not many places on the net mention it.
Make sure your php.ini sets the following key:
upload_tmp_dir="/path/to/some/tmp/folder"
You'll need to check with your webhost if they want you to use an absolute server file path. You should be able to see other directory examples in your php.ini file to determine this. As soon as I set it I got values in my _FILES object.
Finally make sure that your tmp folder and wherever you are moving files to have the correct permissions so that they can be read and written to.
I was struggling with the same problem and testing everything, not getting error reporting and nothing seemed to be wrong.
I had error_reporting(E_ALL)
But suddenly I realized that I had not checked the apache log and voilà!
There was a syntax error on the script...! (a missing "}" )
So, even though this is something evident to be checked, it can be forgotten...
In my case (linux) it is at:
/var/log/apache2/error.log
Check your php.ini for enable_post_data_reading=On , because:
Disabling this option causes $_POST and $_FILES not to be populated. The only way to read postdata will then be through the php://input stream wrapper. (... )
In http://php.net/manual/en/ini.core.php#ini.enable-post-data-reading
If you are trying to upload an array of files then you may need to increase max_file_uploads in php.ini which is by default set to 20
Note: max_file_uploads can NOT be changed outside php.ini. See PHP "Bug" #50684
Another possible culprit is apache redirects. In my case I had apache's httpd.conf set up to redirect certain pages on our site to http versions, and other pages to https versions of the page, if they weren't already. The page on which I had a form with a file input was one of the pages configured to force ssl, but the page designated as the action of the form was configured to be http. So the page would submit the upload to the ssl version of the action page, but apache was redirecting it to the http version of the page and the post data, including the uploaded file was lost.
If your main script is http://Some_long_URL/index.php be carefull to specify the full URL (with explicit index.php and not only http://Some_long_URL) in the action field. Surprisingly, if not, the right script is executed, but with en empty $_FILES !
Do not trust the temp folder location provided by sys_get_temp_dir if you're in a shared hosting environment.
Here is one more thing to check that has not yet been mentioned...
I assumed, naturally, that the folder where my PHP script stored temporary file uploads was /tmp. This belief was reinforced by the fact that echo sys_get_temp_dir() . PHP_EOL; returns/tmp. Also, echo ini_get('upload_tmp_dir'); returns nothing.
To verify that the uploaded file does in fact briefly appear in my /tmp folder, I added a sleep(30); statement to my script (as suggested here) and navigated to my /tmp folder in cPanel File Manager to locate the file. However, no matter what, the uploaded file was nowhere to be found there.
I spent hours trying to determine the reason for this, and implemented every suggestion that's been offered here.
Finally, after searching my website files for the query tmp, I discovered that my site contained other folders named tmp in different directories. I realized that my PHP script was actually writing the uploaded files to .cagefs/tmp. (The "Show Hidden Files" setting must be enabled in cPanel in order to view this folder.)
So, why does the sys_get_temp_dir function return inaccurate info?
Here's an explanation from the PHP.net webpage for sys_get_temp_dir (i.e., the top comment):
If running on a Linux system where systemd has PrivateTmp=true (which
is the default on CentOS 7 and perhaps other newer distros), this
function will simply return "/tmp", not the true, much longer,
somewhat dynamic path.
This SO post delves into the issue, as well:
Stack Overflow: sys_get_temp_dir in shared hosting environment
I ran into the same issue and found that it was my IDE was part of the issue. I was launching the debugger directly from the IDE (PHPStorm) instead of just using the browser directly. The IDE spawned URL was like this:
"...localhost:63342/CB_Upload/index.php?_ijt=j2hcbacqepj87bvg66ncuohvne"
and just using:
"...localhost/CB_Upload/index.php"
worked just fine. My set up is PC / Windows 10 / WAMPSERVER 3.0.6 64bit
I got the same problem and none of theme was my error. Check in your .htaccess file, if you got one, if "MultiViews" are enabled. I had to disable them.
I had similar problem and the issue was in wrong value in htaccess as shamittomar mentioned.
Change php_value post_max_size 10MB to php_value post_max_size 10M
I was empty $_FILES because after <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post"> i placed
</div>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
Initial code was like
<span class="span_left">Photos (gif/jpg/jpeg/png) </span>
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post">
<input name="files[]" type="file" id="upload_file" />
<input type="button" id="upload" value="Upload photo" />
</form>
I decided to modify and
<div>
<span class="span_left">Photos (gif/jpg/jpeg/png) </span>
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post">
</div>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
<input name="files[]" type="file" id="upload_file" />
<input type="button" id="upload" value="Upload photo" />
</form>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
So conclusion is that after <form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post"> must be <input name, type, id and must not be <div> or some other tags
In my situation correct code was
<div>
<span class="span_left">Photos (gif/jpg/jpeg/png) </span>
</div>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
<form enctype="multipart/form-data" method="post">
<input name="files[]" type="file" id="upload_file" />
<input type="button" id="upload" value="Upload photo" />
</form>
<div style="clear:both"></div>
I too had problems with $_FILES empty. The above check-list do not mention MultiViews in .htaccess, httpd.conf or httpd-vhost.conf.
If you have MultiViews set in the options directive for your directory containing the web site, $_FILES will be empty, even though Content-Length header if showing that the file i uploaded.
If you are using JQuery Mobile
Using a multipart form with a file input is not supported by Ajax. In this case you should decorate the parent form with data-ajax="false" to ensure the form is submitted properly to the server.
<form action="upload.php" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data" data-ajax="false">
Select image to upload:
<input type="file" name="fileToUpload" id="fileToUpload">
<input type="submit" value="Upload Image" name="submit">
</form>
Detach your form form the page you-re using
into a simple php page that has the form and
php code only, and test it like that.
Any bootstrap or java script might clean out
the _FILES[]. That was my case
If you're using AJAX instead of a Form submission, then ensure the request header Content-Type is set to multipart/form-data; boundary=myAwesomeBoundary' where myAwesomeBoundary is the unique string that separates the request body parts. I made the mistake of overriding the Content-Type header by setting it to only multipart/form-data without setting the boundary. The fix was to not override the header but let the browser generate it for me.
I have an image uploader that uses the imgur.com API and jQuery's .ajax() function to upload images to their servers. However, if I browse for an image using the <input type="file"/> element of the form, it will only be successful in uploading an image if the image file is found in the same directory as the page.php file that the form is found in (shown below). How can I allow the form to upload images from any directory on my computer?
page.php:
<form action="page.php" method="post">
<input type="file" name="doc" id="doc" /><br/>
<input type="image" src="go.gif" name="submit" id="submit" />
</form>
You've forgotten the enctype="multipart/form-data" attribute on your form tag, for one. Without that, file uploads generally don't work too well.
Beyond that, the server won't really care what directory you're uploading FROM, especially under PHP. The uploaded copy on the server is stored with temporary filename ($_FILES['file']['tmp_name']) that has absolutely nothing to do with the directory/filename on your computer.
Once it's on the server, you'll have to actually move that temporary file somewhere else, as PHP will auto-delete it once the script terminates and you've not handled it yourself. move_uploaded_file() is what's generally used to take of that process.
Perhaps this is the only folder with write-permissions.
I guess it is jquery that is doing the actual posting to http://imgur.com/api/upload as the form is just posting to itself, so my guess is that jquery / javascript can only read files in your web-space and not on your whole hard-drive.