I have been trying to follow different posts on downloading a file sent from my Web API. So far I can get the file to come, it will open the download window and it will save. However, I cannot open it so something must be wrong somewhere.
Here is my AngularJS so far.
return $http({
url: State.Endpoint + "/api/account/picture",
method: "GET",
responseType: 'arrayBuffer'
}).then(function (data) {
var octetStreamMime = 'application/octet-stream';
var success = false;
var file = new Blob([data.data], {
type: "image/jpeg"
});
var fileUrl = URL.createObjectURL(file);
var a = document.createElement('a');
a.href = fileUrl;
a.target = "_blank";
a.download = "myFile.jpg";
document.body.appendChild(a);
a.click();
});
That will make my successfully download the image for me. However, this doesn't let me open the file so either something is still wrong on client side or server side.
Server Side Code:
[Route("picture")]
[HttpGet]
public HttpResponseMessage GetPictureBlob()
{
HttpResponseMessage response = null;
var localFilePath = HttpContext.Current.Server.MapPath("~/Content/Images/demo.jpg");
if (!File.Exists(localFilePath))
{
response = Request.CreateResponse(HttpStatusCode.Gone);
}
else
{
var fStream = new FileStream(localFilePath, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read);
// Serve the file to the client
response = new HttpResponseMessage
{
StatusCode = HttpStatusCode.OK,
Content = new StreamContent(fStream)
};
response.Content.Headers.ContentDisposition =
new ContentDispositionHeaderValue("attachment")
{
FileName = Path.GetFileName(fStream.Name)
};
response.Content.Headers.ContentType = new MediaTypeHeaderValue("application/octet-stream");
//response.Headers.Add("content-type", "application/octet-stream");
}
return response;
}
The provided value 'arrayBuffer' is not a valid enum value of type XMLHttpRequestResponseType.
Use arraybuffer
all lowercase:
$http({
url: State.Endpoint + "/api/account/picture",
method: "GET",
//responseType: 'arrayBuffer'
//USE arraybuffer lowercase
responseType: 'arraybuffer'
//OR
//responseType: 'blob'
})
When the responseType is not valid, the XHR API defaults to decoding the response as UTF-8. This corrupts binary files such as JPEG images.
For more information, see MDN XHR Web API - responseType.
Instead of creating a <a download></a>
element with JavaScript DOM manipulation, consider using the AngularJS framework.
This is an example of a Download button that becomes active after the data is loaded from the server:
<a download="data_{{files[0].name}}" xd-href="data">
<button ng-disabled="!data">Download</button>
</a>
The xdHref
Directive
app.module("myApp").directive("xdHref", function() {
return function linkFn (scope, elem, attrs) {
scope.$watch(attrs.xdHref, function(newVal) {
if (newVal) {
elem.attr("href", newVal);
}
});
};
});
The DEMO on PLNKR.