As @Akanksha singh mentioned, you need to set the Content-Type
header to multipart/form-data
and use the formData
object on the client side:
const onFileUpload = () => {
console.log(myFile);
try {
const formData = new FormData()
formData.append('file', myFile)
Axios.post("http://localhost:10000/uploads", formData, {
headers: {
'Content-Type': 'multipart/form-data'
}
});
} catch (error) {
console.error('Error while uploading image to server', error)
}
};
<div>
<h1> GeeksforGeeks </h1> <h3 > File Upload using React! </h3>
<div>
<input
type="file"
onChange={
(event) => {
setmyFile(event.target.files[0]);
}
}
/>
<button onClick={onFileUpload}> Upload! </button>
</div>
</div>
After testing this, logging the req.body
on the server side returns a buffer instead of an empty object.
In order to deal with this buffer, which contains the form data, I suggest you follow the steps mentioned in the official docs to deal with multipart/form-data
in Cloud Functions
Here is the code sample from the docs:
/**
* Parses a 'multipart/form-data' upload request
*
* @param {Object} req Cloud Function request context.
* @param {Object} res Cloud Function response context.
*/
const path = require('path');
const os = require('os');
const fs = require('fs');
// Node.js doesn't have a built-in multipart/form-data parsing library.
// Instead, we can use the 'busboy' library from NPM to parse these requests.
const Busboy = require('busboy');
exports.uploadFile = (req, res) => {
if (req.method !== 'POST') {
// Return a "method not allowed" error
return res.status(405).end();
}
const busboy = new Busboy({headers: req.headers});
const tmpdir = os.tmpdir();
// This object will accumulate all the fields, keyed by their name
const fields = {};
// This object will accumulate all the uploaded files, keyed by their name.
const uploads = {};
// This code will process each non-file field in the form.
busboy.on('field', (fieldname, val) => {
/**
* TODO(developer): Process submitted field values here
*/
console.log(`Processed field ${fieldname}: ${val}.`);
fields[fieldname] = val;
});
const fileWrites = [];
// This code will process each file uploaded.
busboy.on('file', (fieldname, file, filename) => {
// Note: os.tmpdir() points to an in-memory file system on GCF
// Thus, any files in it must fit in the instance's memory.
console.log(`Processed file ${filename}`);
const filepath = path.join(tmpdir, filename);
uploads[fieldname] = filepath;
const writeStream = fs.createWriteStream(filepath);
file.pipe(writeStream);
// File was processed by Busboy; wait for it to be written.
// Note: GCF may not persist saved files across invocations.
// Persistent files must be kept in other locations
// (such as Cloud Storage buckets).
const promise = new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
file.on('end', () => {
writeStream.end();
});
writeStream.on('finish', resolve);
writeStream.on('error', reject);
});
fileWrites.push(promise);
});
// Triggered once all uploaded files are processed by Busboy.
// We still need to wait for the disk writes (saves) to complete.
busboy.on('finish', async () => {
await Promise.all(fileWrites);
/**
* TODO(developer): Process saved files here
*/
for (const file in uploads) {
fs.unlinkSync(uploads[file]);
}
res.send();
});
busboy.end(req.rawBody);
};