What is formdata-node?
The formdata-node package is a Node.js module that allows you to create, manipulate, and encode multipart/form-data streams. It can be used to submit forms and upload files via HTTP requests in a way that is compatible with browser FormData API.
What are formdata-node's main functionalities?
Creating FormData
This feature allows you to create a new FormData instance and append fields to it, similar to how you would in a browser environment.
const { FormData } = require('formdata-node');
const formData = new FormData();
formData.append('key', 'value');
Appending Files
This feature enables appending files to the FormData instance, which can then be used to upload files to a server.
const { FormData, fileFromPath } = require('formdata-node');
const formData = new FormData();
formData.append('file', fileFromPath('./path/to/file.txt'));
Retrieving FormData Content
This feature allows you to iterate over the entries in the FormData object, enabling you to access the keys and values that have been appended.
const { FormData } = require('formdata-node');
const formData = new FormData();
formData.append('key', 'value');
for (const [key, value] of formData) {
console.log(key, value);
}
Encoding FormData
This feature is used to encode the FormData into a Blob, which can then be used to send the data over an HTTP request.
const { FormData, formDataToBlob } = require('formdata-node');
const formData = new FormData();
formData.append('key', 'value');
const blob = formDataToBlob(formData);
Other packages similar to formdata-node
form-data
The 'form-data' package is similar to 'formdata-node' and is used to create readable 'multipart/form-data' streams. It can be used in the Node.js environment and is compatible with 'request' library. It differs in API and internal implementation but serves a similar purpose.
busboy
Busboy is a Node.js module for parsing incoming HTML form data. It's different from 'formdata-node' as it focuses on parsing form data rather than creating it, but it can handle multipart/form-data, which is commonly used for file uploads.
multiparty
Multiparty is a Node.js module for parsing multipart/form-data requests, which is used for uploading files. Unlike 'formdata-node', which is for creating and encoding form data, 'multiparty' is designed for the server-side to parse incoming data.
FormData
FormData implementation for Node.js. Built over Readable stream and async generators.
Installation
You can install this package from npm:
npm install formdata-node
Or with yarn:
yarn add formdata-node
Usage
Each FormData instance allows you to read its data from Readable
stream,
just use FormData#stream
property for that.
You can send queries via HTTP clients that supports headers setting Readable stream as body.
- Let's take a look at minimal example with got:
import {FormData} from "formdata-node"
import got from "got"
const fd = new FormData()
fd.set("greeting", "Hello, World!")
const options = {
body: fd.stream,
headers: fd.headers
}
got.post("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
.then(res => console.log("Res: ", res.body))
.catch(err => console.error("Error: ", err))
- Because every FormData instance (in this package) has Symbol.asyncIterator method, you can create a stream from it using
Readable.from()
:
import {Readable} from "stream"
import {FormData} from "formdata-node"
import fetch from "node-fetch"
const options = {
method: "post",
headers: fd.headers,
body: Readable.from(fd)
}
await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", options)
Note that this method is preferable over the FormData#stream
and will be the only option in next major release.
- Sending files over form-data:
import {createReadStream} from "fs"
import {FormData} from "formdata-node"
import fetch from "node-fetch"
const fd = new FormData()
fd.set("file", createReadStream("/path/to/a/file"))
await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", {method: "post", body: fd})
- You can also append files using
fileFromPathSync
helper. It does the same thing as fetch-blob/from
, but returns a File
instead of Blob
:
import {FormData, fileFromPathSync} from "formdata-node"
import fetch from "node-fetch"
const fd = new FormData()
fd.set("file", fileFromPathSync("/path/to/a/file"))
await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", {method: "post", body: fd})
Note that this method is preferable over the fs.createReadStream()
and will be the only option (along with its async version) in next major release.
- And of course you can create your own File manually – formdata-node gets you covered. It has a
File
object that inherits Blob
from fetch-blob
package:
import {FormData, File} from "formdata-node"
import fetch from "node-fetch"
const fd = new FormData()
const file = new File(["My hovercraft is full of eels"], "hovercraft.txt")
fd.set("file", file)
await fetch("https://httpbin.org/post", {method: "post", body: fd})
- Blobs as field's values allowed too:
import {FormData} from "formdata-node"
import Blob from "fetch-blob"
const fd = new FormData()
const blob = new Blob(["Some content"], {type: "text/plain"})
fd.set("blob", blob)
fd.get("blob")
API
constructor FormData([entries])
Initialize new FormData instance
- {array} [entries = null] – an optional FormData initial entries.
Each initial field should be passed as a collection of the objects
with "name", "value" and "filename" props.
See the FormData#append() for more info about the available format.
Instance properties
boundary -> {string}
Returns a boundary string of the current FormData
instance. Read-only property.
stream -> {stream.Readable}
Returns an internal Readable stream. Use it to send queries, but don't push
anything into it. Read-only property.
Returns object with Content-Type
header. Read-only property.
Instance methods
set(name, value[, filename, options]) -> {void}
Set a new value for an existing key inside FormData,
or add the new field if it does not already exist.
- {string} name – The name of the field whose data is contained in value
- {any} value – The field value. You can pass any JavaScript primitive type (including
null
and undefined
),
Buffer
, ReadStream
, Blob
or File
.
Note that Arrays and Object will be converted to string by using String function. - {string} [filename = undefined] – A filename of given field. Can be added only for
Buffer
, File
, Blob
and ReadStream
. You can set it either from and argument or options. - {object} [object = {}] - Additional field options
- {string} [object.filename = undefined] – A filename of given field. Can be added only for
Buffer
, File
, Blob
and ReadStream
. You can set it either from and argument or options. - {number} [options.lastModified = Date.now()] – provides the last modified date of the file as the number of milliseconds since the Unix epoch (January 1, 1970 at midnight). Files without a known last modified date return the current date.
- {string} [options.type = ""] - Returns the media type (
MIME
) of the file represented by a File
object.
append(name, value[, filename, options]) -> {void}
Appends a new value onto an existing key inside a FormData object,
or adds the key if it does not already exist.
- {string} name – The name of the field whose data is contained in value
- {any} value – The field value. You can pass any JavaScript primitive type (including
null
and undefined
),
Buffer
, ReadStream
, Blob
or File
.
Note that Arrays and Object will be converted to string by using String function. - {string} [filename = undefined] – A filename of given field. Can be added only for
Buffer
, File
, Blob
and ReadStream
. You can set it either from and argument or options. - {object} [object = {}] - Additional field options
- {string} [object.filename = undefined] – A filename of given field. Can be added only for
Buffer
, File
, Blob
and ReadStream
. You can set it either from and argument or options. - {number} [options.lastModified = Date.now()] – provides the last modified date of the file as the number of milliseconds since the Unix epoch (January 1, 1970 at midnight). Files without a known last modified date return the current date.
- {string} [options.type = ""] - Returns the media type (
MIME
) of the file represented by a File
object.
get(name) -> {string | File}
Returns the first value associated with the given name.
If the field has Blob
, Buffer
, File
or ReadStream
value, the File-like object will be returned.
- {string} name – A name of the value you want to retrieve.
getAll(name) -> {Array<string | File>}
Returns all the values associated with a given key from within a FormData object.
If the field has Blob
, Buffer
, File
or ReadStream
value, the File-like object will be returned.
- {string} name – A name of the value you want to retrieve.
has(name) -> {boolean}
Check if a field with the given name exists inside FormData.
- {string} – A name of the field you want to test for.
delete(name) -> {void}
Deletes a key and its value(s) from a FormData
object.
- {string} name – The name of the key you want to delete.
getComputedLength() -> {Promise<number>}
Returns computed length of the FormData content.
forEach(callback[, ctx]) -> {void}
Executes a given callback for each field of the FormData instance
- {function} callback – Function to execute for each element, taking three arguments:
- {string | File} value – A value(s) of the current field.
- {string} name – Name of the current field.
- {FormData} fd – The FormData instance that forEach is being applied to
- {any} [ctx = null] – Value to use as this context when executing the given callback
keys() -> {Generator<string>}
Returns an iterator
allowing to go through the FormData keys
values() -> {Generator<string | File>}
Returns an iterator
allowing to go through the FormData values
entries() -> {Generator<[string, string | File]>}
Returns an iterator
allowing to go through the FormData key/value pairs
[Symbol.iterator]() -> {Generator<[string, string | File]>}
An alias for FormData#entries()
[Symbol.asyncIterator]() -> {AsyncGenerator<Buffer>}
Returns an async iterator allowing to read form-data body using for-await-of syntax.
Read the async iteration proposal
to get more info about async iterators.
constructor File(blobParts, filename[, options])
The File
class provides information about files. The File
object inherits Blob
from fetch-blob
package.
- {(ArrayBufferLike | ArrayBufferView | Blob | Buffer | string)[]} blobParts
- {string} filename – Representing the file name.
- {object} [options = {}] - An options object containing optional attributes for the file. Available options are as follows
- {number} [options.lastModified = Date.now()] – provides the last modified date of the file as the number of milliseconds since the Unix epoch (January 1, 1970 at midnight). Files without a known last modified date return the current date.
- {string} [options.type = ""] - Returns the media type (
MIME
) of the file represented by a File
object.
fileFromPathSync(path[, filename, options]) -> {File}
Creates a File
referencing the one on a disk by given path.
- {string} path - Path to a file
- {string} [filename] - Name of the file. Will be passed as second argument in
File
constructor. If not presented, the file path will be used to get it. - {object} [options = {}] - File options.
- {number} [options.lastModified = Date.now()] – provides the last modified date of the file as the number of milliseconds since the Unix epoch (January 1, 1970 at midnight). Files without a known last modified date return the current date.
- {string} [options.type = ""] - Returns the media type (
MIME
) of the file represented by a File
object.
Related links
FormData
interface documentation on MDNformdata-polyfill
HTML5 FormData
polyfill for Browsers.fetch-blob
a Blob implementation on node.js, originally from node-fetch.then-busboy
a promise-based wrapper around Busboy. Process multipart/form-data content and returns it as a single object. Will be helpful to handle your data on the server-side applications.@octetstream/object-to-form-data
converts JavaScript object to FormData.