View Source Uploadex
Uploadex is an Elixir library for handling uploads that integrates well with Ecto, Phoenix and Absinthe.
Documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/uploadex.
Migrating from v2 to v3
- In you uploader, change
@behaviour Uploadex.Uploader
touse Uploadex
- Remove all
config :uploadex
from your configuration files - Change all direct functions calls from
Uploadex.Resolver
,Uploadex.Files
andUploadex
to your Uploader module
Installation
The package can be installed by adding uploadex
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:uploadex, "~> 3.1.0"},
# S3 dependencies(required for S3 storage only)
{:ex_aws, "~> 2.1"},
{:ex_aws_s3, "~> 2.0.2"},
{:sweet_xml, "~> 0.6"},
]
end
Usage
Follow these steps to use Uploadex:
1: Uploader
This library relies heavily on pattern matching for configuration, so the first step is to define your Uploader configuration module:
defmodule MyApp.Uploader do
@moduledoc false
use Uploadex,
repo: MyApp.Repo # only necessary if using the functions from Uploadex.Context
alias MyAppWeb.Endpoint
@impl true
def get_fields(%User{}), do: :photo
def get_fields(%Company{}), do: [:photo, :logo]
@impl true
def default_opts(Uploadex.FileStorage), do: [base_path: Path.join(:code.priv_dir(:my_app), "static/"), base_url: Endpoint.url()]
def default_opts(Uploadex.S3Storage), do: [bucket: "my_bucket", region: "sa-east-1", upload_opts: [acl: :public_read]]
@impl true
def storage(%User{id: id}, :photo), do: {Uploadex.FileStorage, directory: "/uploads/users/#{id}"}
def storage(%Company{id: id}, :photo), do: {Uploadex.S3Storage, directory: "/thumbnails/#{id}"}
def storage(%Company{}, :logo), do: {Uploadex.S3Storage, directory: "/logos"}
# Optional:
@impl true
def accepted_extensions(%User{}, :photo), do: ~w(.jpg .png)
def accepted_extensions(_any, _field), do: :any
end
This example shows the configuration for the Uploadex.FileStorage and Uploadex.S3Storage implementations, but you are free to implement your own Storage.
Note: To avoid too much metaprogramming magic, the use
in this module is very simple and, in fact, optional. If you wish to do so, you can just define the @behaviour Uploadex.Uploader
instead of the use
and then call all lower level modules directly, passing your Uploader module as argument. The use
makes life much easier, though!
2: Ecto Migration
A string field is required in the database to save the file reference. The example below shows what would be needed to have a field to upload.
defmodule MyApp.Repo.Migrations.AddPhotoToUsers do
use Ecto.Migration
def change do
alter table(:users) do
add :photo, :string
end
end
end
3: Schema
In your schema, use the Ecto Type Uploadex.Upload:
schema "users" do
field :name, :string
field :photo, Uploadex.Upload
end
# No special cast is needed, and casting does not have any side effects.
def create_changeset(%User{} = user, attrs) do
user
|> cast(attrs, [:name, :photo])
end
4: Configuration
Depending on which features you are using, you may need extra configurations:
S3 Configuration
If you are using the S3 adapter, add this to your configuration file. For more information access the ex_aws_s3 documentation:
config :ex_aws, :s3,
access_key_id: "key",
secret_access_key: "secret",
region: "us-east-1",
host: "localhost",
port: "9000",
scheme: "http://"
config :my_project, :uploads,
bucket: "uploads",
region: "us-east-1"
5: Enjoy!
Now, you can use your defined Uploader to handle your records with their files!
The use Uploadex
line in your Uploader module will import 3 groups of functions:
Context
The highest level functions are context helpers (see Context for more documentation), which will allow you to easily create, update and delete your records with associated files:
defmodule MyApp.Accounts do
alias MyApp.Accounts.User
alias MyApp.MyUploader
def create_user(attrs) do
%User{}
|> User.create_changeset(attrs)
|> MyUploader.create_with_file()
end
def update_user(%User{} = user, attrs) do
user
|> User.update_changeset(attrs)
|> MyUploader.update_with_file(user)
end
def delete_user(%User{} = user) do
MyUploader.delete_with_file(user)
end
end
Resolver
There are also functions to help you easily fetch the files in Absinthe schemas:
object :user do
field :photo_url, :string, resolve: MyUploader.get_file_url(:photo)
end
object :user do
field :photos, list_of(:string), resolve: MyUploader.get_files_url(:photos)
end
See Resolver for more documentation.
Files
If you need more flexibility, you can use the lower-level functions defined in Files, which provide some extra functionalities, such as get_temporary_file
, useful when the files are not publicly available.
Some examples:
{:ok, %User{}} = MyUploader.store_files(user)
{:ok, %User{}} = MyUploader.delete_files(user)
{:ok, %User{}} = MyUploader.delete_previous_files(user, user_after_change)
{:ok, files} = MyUploader.get_files_url(user, :photos)
Testing
For knowing how to test with Uploadex, check the hexdocs of the Testing module.
Motivation
Even though there already exists a library for uploading files that integrates with ecto (https://github.com/stavro/arc_ecto), this library was created because:
- arc_ecto does not support upload of binary files
- Uploadex makes it easier to deal with records that contain files without having to manage those files manually on every operation
- Using uploadex, the changeset operations have no side-effects and no special casting is needed
- Uploadex offers more flexibility by allowing to define different storage configurations for each struct (or even each field in a struct) in the application
- Uploadex does not rely on global configuration, which makes it easier to work in umbrella applications