View Source Uploads

LiveView supports interactive file uploads with progress for both direct to server uploads as well as direct-to-cloud external uploads on the client.

Built-in Features

  • Accept specification - Define accepted file types, max number of entries, max file size, etc. When the client selects file(s), the file metadata is automatically validated against the specification. See Phoenix.LiveView.allow_upload/3.

  • Reactive entries - Uploads are populated in an @uploads assign in the socket. Entries automatically respond to progress, errors, cancellation, etc.

  • Drag and drop - Use the phx-drop-target attribute to enable. See Phoenix.Component.live_file_input/1.

Allow uploads

You enable an upload, typically on mount, via allow_upload/3:

@impl Phoenix.LiveView
def mount(_params, _session, socket) do
  {:ok,
   socket
   |> assign(:uploaded_files, [])
   |> allow_upload(:avatar, accept: ~w(.jpg .jpeg), max_entries: 2)}
end

That's it for now! We will come back to the LiveView to implement some form- and upload-related callbacks later, but most of the functionality around uploads takes place in the template.

Render reactive elements

Use the Phoenix.Component.live_file_input/1 component to render a file input for the upload:

<%!-- lib/my_app_web/live/upload_live.html.heex --%>

<form id="upload-form" phx-submit="save" phx-change="validate">
  <.live_file_input upload={@uploads.avatar} />
  <button type="submit">Upload</button>
</form>

Important: You must bind phx-submit and phx-change on the form.

Note that while live_file_input/1 allows you to set additional attributes on the file input, many attributes such as id, accept, and multiple will be set automatically based on the allow_upload/3 spec.

Reactive updates to the template will occur as the end-user interacts with the file input.

Upload entries

Uploads are populated in an @uploads assign in the socket. Each allowed upload contains a list of entries, irrespective of the :max_entries value in the allow_upload/3 spec. These entry structs contain all the information about an upload, including progress, client file info, errors, etc.

Let's look at an annotated example:

<%!-- lib/my_app_web/live/upload_live.html.heex --%>

<%!-- use phx-drop-target with the upload ref to enable file drag and drop --%>
<section phx-drop-target={@uploads.avatar.ref}>

<%!-- render each avatar entry --%>
<%= for entry <- @uploads.avatar.entries do %>
  <article class="upload-entry">

    <figure>
      <.live_img_preview entry={entry} />
      <figcaption><%= entry.client_name %></figcaption>
    </figure>

    <%!-- entry.progress will update automatically for in-flight entries --%>
    <progress value={entry.progress} max="100"> <%= entry.progress %>% </progress>

    <%!-- a regular click event whose handler will invoke Phoenix.LiveView.cancel_upload/3 --%>
    <button type="button" phx-click="cancel-upload" phx-value-ref={entry.ref} aria-label="cancel">&times;</button>

    <%!-- Phoenix.Component.upload_errors/2 returns a list of error atoms --%>
    <%= for err <- upload_errors(@uploads.avatar, entry) do %>
      <p class="alert alert-danger"><%= error_to_string(err) %></p>
    <% end %>

  </article>
<% end %>

<%!-- Phoenix.Component.upload_errors/1 returns a list of error atoms --%>
<%= for err <- upload_errors(@uploads.avatar) do %>
  <p class="alert alert-danger"><%= error_to_string(err) %></p>
<% end %>

</section>

The section element in the example acts as the phx-drop-target for the :avatar upload. Users can interact with the file input or they can drop files over the element to add new entries.

Upload entries are created when a file is added to the form input and each will exist until it has been consumed, following a successfully completed upload.

Entry validation

Validation occurs automatically based on any conditions that were specified in allow_upload/3 however, as mentioned previously you are required to bind phx-change on the form in order for the validation to be performed. Therefore you must implement at least a minimal callback:

@impl Phoenix.LiveView
def handle_event("validate", _params, socket) do
  {:noreply, socket}
end

Entries for files that do not match the allow_upload/3 spec will contain errors. Use Phoenix.Component.upload_errors/2 and your own helper function to render a friendly error message:

defp error_to_string(:too_large), do: "Too large"
defp error_to_string(:not_accepted), do: "You have selected an unacceptable file type"

For error messages that affect all entries, use Phoenix.Component.upload_errors/1, and your own helper function to render a friendly error message:

defp error_to_string(:too_many_files), do: "You have selected too many files"

Cancel an entry

Upload entries may also be canceled, either programmatically or as a result of a user action. For instance, to handle the click event in the template above, you could do the following:

@impl Phoenix.LiveView
def handle_event("cancel-upload", %{"ref" => ref}, socket) do
  {:noreply, cancel_upload(socket, :avatar, ref)}
end

Consume uploaded entries

When the end-user submits a form containing a live_file_input/1, the JavaScript client first uploads the file(s) before invoking the callback for the form's phx-submit event.

Within the callback for the phx-submit event, you invoke the Phoenix.LiveView.consume_uploaded_entries/3 function to process the completed uploads, persisting the relevant upload data alongside the form data:

@impl Phoenix.LiveView
def handle_event("save", _params, socket) do
  uploaded_files =
    consume_uploaded_entries(socket, :avatar, fn %{path: path}, _entry ->
      dest = Path.join(Application.app_dir(:my_app, "priv/static/uploads"), Path.basename(path))
      # You will need to create `priv/static/uploads` for `File.cp!/2` to work.
      File.cp!(path, dest)
      {:ok, ~p"/uploads/#{Path.basename(dest)}"}
    end)

  {:noreply, update(socket, :uploaded_files, &(&1 ++ uploaded_files))}
end

Note: While client metadata cannot be trusted, max file size validations are enforced as each chunk is received when performing direct to server uploads.

This example writes the file directly to disk, under the priv folder. In order to access your upload, for example in an <img /> tag, you need to add the uploads directory to static_paths/0. In a vanilla Phoenix project, this is found in lib/my_app_web.ex.

Another thing to be aware of is that in development, changes to priv/static/uploads will be picked up by live_reload. This means that as soon as your upload succeeds, your app will be reloaded in the browser. This can be temporarily disabled by setting code_reloader: false in config/dev.exs.

Besides the above, this approach also has limitations in production. If you are running multiple instances of your application, the uploaded file will be stored only in one of the instances. Any request routed to the other machine will ultimately fail.

For these reasons, it is best if uploads are stored elsewhere, such as the database (depending on the size and contents) or a separate storage service. For more information on implementing client-side, direct-to-cloud uploads, see the External Uploads guide.

Appendix A: UploadLive

A complete example of the LiveView from this guide:

# lib/my_app_web/live/upload_live.ex
defmodule MyAppWeb.UploadLive do
  use MyAppWeb, :live_view

  @impl Phoenix.LiveView
  def mount(_params, _session, socket) do
    {:ok,
    socket
    |> assign(:uploaded_files, [])
    |> allow_upload(:avatar, accept: ~w(.jpg .jpeg), max_entries: 2)}
  end

  @impl Phoenix.LiveView
  def handle_event("validate", _params, socket) do
    {:noreply, socket}
  end

  @impl Phoenix.LiveView
  def handle_event("cancel-upload", %{"ref" => ref}, socket) do
    {:noreply, cancel_upload(socket, :avatar, ref)}
  end

  @impl Phoenix.LiveView
  def handle_event("save", _params, socket) do
    uploaded_files =
      consume_uploaded_entries(socket, :avatar, fn %{path: path}, _entry ->
        dest = Path.join([:code.priv_dir(:my_app), "static", "uploads", Path.basename(path)])
        # You will need to create `priv/static/uploads` for `File.cp!/2` to work.
        File.cp!(path, dest)
        {:ok, ~p"/uploads/#{Path.basename(dest)}"}
      end)

    {:noreply, update(socket, :uploaded_files, &(&1 ++ uploaded_files))}
  end

  defp error_to_string(:too_large), do: "Too large"
  defp error_to_string(:too_many_files), do: "You have selected too many files"
  defp error_to_string(:not_accepted), do: "You have selected an unacceptable file type"
end

To access your uploads via your app, make sure to add uploads to MyAppWeb.static_paths/0.