ActiveStorage is an amazing addition to Rails 5.2, and as usual the team have made it fantastically simple to use... if you’re generating HTML server-side, that is. This component aims to make it just as easy to use from React.
ActiveStorageProvider handles the direct upload of a file to an ActiveStorage service and the attachment of that file to your model. It uses the render props pattern so you can build your own upload widget.
npm install --save react-activestorage-provider
ActiveStorageProvider makes it easy to add a simple upload button. When you call handleUpload
with a FileList
or an array of File
s, this component creates a Blob
record, uploads the file directly to your storage service, and then hits your Rails controller to attach the blob to your model. (If you want to handle the attachment yourself in order to, for example, provide other attributes, see the lower level DirectUploadProvider
.)
import ActiveStorageProvider from 'react-activestorage-provider'
// ...
return (
<ActiveStorageProvider
endpoint={{
path: '/profile',
model: 'User',
attribute: 'avatar',
method: 'PUT',
}}
onSubmit={user => this.setState({ avatar: user.avatar })}
render={({ handleUpload, uploads, ready }) => (
<div>
<input
type="file"
disabled={!ready}
onChange={e => handleUpload(e.currentTarget.files)}
/>
{uploads.map(upload => {
switch (upload.state) {
case 'waiting':
return <p key={upload.id}>Waiting to upload {upload.file.name}</p>
case 'uploading':
return (
<p key={upload.id}>
Uploading {upload.file.name}: {upload.progress}%
</p>
)
case 'error':
return (
<p key={upload.id}>
Error uploading {upload.file.name}: {upload.error}
</p>
)
case 'finished':
return (
<p key={upload.id}>Finished uploading {upload.file.name}</p>
)
}
})}
</div>
)}
/>
)
These are your options for configuring ActiveStorageProvider.
Prop (*required) | Description |
---|---|
directUploadsPath |
string The direct uploads path on your Rails app, if you’ve overridden ActiveStorage::DirectUploadsController |
endpoint * |
{ path: string, model: string, attribute: string, method: string, host?: string, port?: string, protocol?: string } The details for the request to attach the file |
headers |
{[key: string]: string} Optional headers to add to request, can also be used to override default headers |
multiple |
boolean (false)Whether the component should accept multiple files. If true, the model should use has_many_attached |
onBeforeBlobRequest |
({ id: string, file: File, xhr: XMLHttpRequest }) => mixed A callback that allows you to modify the blob request |
onBeforeStorageRequest |
({ id: string, file: File, xhr: XMLHttpRequest }) => mixed A callback that allows you to modify the storage request |
onError |
Response => mixed A callback to handle an error (>= 400) response by the server in saving your model |
onSubmit * |
Object => mixed A callback for the server response to successfully saving your model |
render * |
RenderProps => React.Node Render props |
This is the type of the argument with which your render function will be called.
export type RenderProps = {
ready: boolean /* false while any file is uploading */,
uploads: ActiveStorageFileUpload[] /* uploads in progress */,
handleUpload: (FileList | File[]) => mixed /* call to initiate an upload */,
/* or, if you want more granular control... */
/* call to set list of files to be uploaded */
handleChooseFiles: (FileList | File[]) => mixed,
/* then call to begin the upload of the files in the list */
handleBeginUpload: () => mixed,
}
type ActiveStorageFileUpload =
| { state: 'waiting', id: string, file: File }
| { state: 'uploading', id: string, file: File, progress: number }
| { state: 'error', id: string, file: File, error: string }
| { state: 'finished', id: string, file: File }
ActiveStorageProvider makes it simple to add a quick “upload” button by taking care of both uploading and attaching your file, but it shouldn’t stand in your way if you’re doing something more interesting. If you want to handle the second step, attaching your Blob
record to your model, yourself, you can use the lower level DirectUploadProvider
. It creates the blob records and uploads the user’s files directly to your storage service, then calls you back with the signed ids of those blobs. Then, you can create or update your model as you need.
function PostForm() {
function handleAttachment(signedIds) {
const body = JSON.stringify({ post: { title: ..., images: signedIds }})
fetch('/posts.json', { method: 'POST', body })
}
return (
<DirectUploadProvider multiple onSuccess={handleAttachment} render={...} />
)
}
DirectUploadProvider
is a named export, so
import { DirectUploadProvider } from 'react-activestorage-provider'
and use it with the following props:
Prop (*required) | Description |
---|---|
directUploadsPath |
string The direct uploads path on your Rails app, if you’ve overridden ActiveStorage::DirectUploadsController |
headers |
{[key: string]: string} Optional headers to add to request |
multiple |
boolean Whether the component should accept multiple files. If true, the model should use has_many_attached |
onBeforeBlobRequest |
({ id: string, file: File, xhr: XMLHttpRequest }) => mixed A callback that allows you to modify the blob request |
onBeforeStorageRequest |
({ id: string, file: File, xhr: XMLHttpRequest }) => mixed A callback that allows you to modify the storage request |
onSuccess * |
(string[]) => mixed The callback that will be called with the signed ids of the files after the upload is complete |
origin |
{ host?: string, port?: string, protocol?: string } The origin of your rails server. Defaults to where your React app is running |
render * |
RenderProps => React.Node Render props |