The Multipart
middleware converts a Faraday::Request#body
Hash of key/value pairs into a multipart form request, but
only under these conditions:
- The request's Content-Type is "multipart/form-data"
- Content-Type is unspecified, AND one of the values in the Body responds to
#content_type
.
Faraday contains a couple helper classes for multipart values:
Faraday::Multipart::FilePart
wraps binary file data with a Content-Type. The file data can be specified with a String path to a local file, or an IO object.Faraday::Multipart::ParamPart
wraps a String value with a Content-Type, and optionally a Content-ID.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'faraday-multipart'
And then execute:
bundle install
Or install it yourself as:
gem install faraday-multipart
First of all, you'll need to add the multipart middleware to your Faraday connection:
require 'faraday'
require 'faraday/multipart'
conn = Faraday.new(...) do |f|
f.request :multipart, **options
# ...
end
Payload can be a mix of POST data and multipart values.
# regular POST form value
payload = { string: 'value' }
# filename for this value is File.basename(__FILE__)
payload[:file] = Faraday::Multipart::FilePart.new(__FILE__, 'text/x-ruby')
# specify filename because IO object doesn't know it
payload[:file_with_name] = Faraday::Multipart::FilePart.new(
File.open(__FILE__),
'text/x-ruby',
File.basename(__FILE__)
)
# Sets a custom Content-Disposition:
# nil filename still defaults to File.basename(__FILE__)
payload[:file_with_header] = Faraday::Multipart::FilePart.new(
__FILE__,
'text/x-ruby',
nil,
'Content-Disposition' => 'form-data; foo=1'
)
# Upload raw json with content type
payload[:raw_data] = Faraday::Multipart::ParamPart.new(
{ a: 1 }.to_json,
'application/json'
)
# optionally sets Content-ID too
payload[:raw_with_id] = Faraday::Multipart::ParamPart.new(
{ a: 1 }.to_json,
'application/json',
'foo-123'
)
conn.post('/', payload)
Sometimes, the server you're calling will expect an array of documents or other values for the same key.
The multipart
middleware will automatically handle this scenario for you:
payload = {
files: [
Faraday::Multipart::FilePart.new(__FILE__, 'text/x-ruby'),
Faraday::Multipart::FilePart.new(__FILE__, 'text/x-pdf')
],
url: [
'http://mydomain.com/callback1',
'http://mydomain.com/callback2'
]
}
conn.post(url, payload)
#=> POST url[]=http://mydomain.com/callback1&url[]=http://mydomain.com/callback2
#=> and includes both files in the request under the `files[]` name
However, by default these will be sent with files[]
key and the URLs with url[]
, similarly to arrays in URL parameters.
Some servers (e.g. Mailgun) expect each document to have the same parameter key instead.
You can instruct the multipart
middleware to do so by providing the flat_encode
option:
require 'faraday'
require 'faraday/multipart'
conn = Faraday.new(...) do |f|
f.request :multipart, flat_encode: true
# ...
end
payload = ... # see example above
conn.post(url, payload)
#=> POST url=http://mydomain.com/callback1&url=http://mydomain.com/callback2
#=> and includes both files in the request under the `files` name
This works for both UploadIO
and normal parameters alike.
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies.
Then, run bin/test
to run the tests.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run rake build
.
To release a new version, make a commit with a message such as "Bumped to 0.0.2", and change the Unreleased heading in CHANGELOG.md
to a heading like "0.0.2 (2022-01-01)", and then use GitHub Releases to author a release. A GitHub Actions workflow then publishes a new gem to RubyGems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.