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README.md

File metadata and controls

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Dropzone for SilverStripe

Upload with sanity.

Introduction

The Dropzone module provides FileAttachmentField, a robust HTML5 uploading interfaces for SilverStripe, allowing forms to save file uploads to DataObject instances.

Features

  • Upload on the frontend, or in the CMS, with one consistent interface
  • Drag-and-drop uploading
  • Automatic client-side thumbnailing
  • Grid view / List view
  • Upload progress
  • Limit file count, file size, file type
  • Permissions for removing/deleting files
  • Tracking files (remove uploaded files that aren't attached to anything)
  • No jQuery dependency

Screenshots

Grid view

List view

Remove/delete files

Beautiful error handling

Any thumbnail size you like

Usage

The field instantiates similarly to UploadField, taking the name of the file relationship and a label, as the first two arguments. Once instantiated, there are many ways to configure the UI.

FileAttachmentField::create('MyFile', 'Upload a file')
  ->setView('grid')

If the form holding the upload field is bound to a record, (i.e. with loadDataFrom()), the upload field will automatically allow multiple files if the relation is a has_many or many_many. If the form is not bound to a record, you can use setMultiple(true).

Image-only uploads can be forced using the imagesOnly() method. If the form is bound to a record, and the relation points to an Image class, this will be automatically set.

More advanced options

FileAttachmentField::create('MyFiles', 'Upload some  files')
  ->setThumbnailHeight(180)
  ->setThumbnailWidth(180)
  ->setAutoProcessQueue(false) // do not upload files until user clicks an upload button
  ->setMaxFilesize(10) // 10 megabytes. Defaults to PHP's upload_max_filesize ini setting
  ->setAcceptedFiles(array('.pdf','.doc','.docx'))
  ->setPermissions(array(
    'delete' => false,
    'detach' => function () {
      return Member::currentUser() && Member::currentUser()->inGroup('editors');
    }
  ));

Image uploads get a few extra options.

FileAttachmentField::create('MyImage','Upload an image')
    ->imagesOnly() // If bound to a record, with a relation to 'Image', this isn't necessary.
    ->setMaxResolution(50000000); // Do not accept images over 5 megapixels

Default settings

Default values for most settings can be found in the config.yml file included with the module.

Usage in the CMS

FileAttachmentField can be used as a replacement for UploadField in the CMS.

Interacting with the Dropzone interface programatically

For custom integrations, you may want to access the UploadInterface object that manages the upload UI (see file_attachment_field.js). You can do that one of two ways:

  • If you have jQuery installed, simply access the dropzoneInterface data property of the .dropzone element
$('#MyFileDropzone').data('dropzoneInterface').clear();
  • If you are not using jQuery, the UploadInterface object is injected into the browser global window.dropzones, indexed by the id of your .dropzone element.
window.dropzones.MyFileDropzone.clear();

NB: The ID of the actual .dropzone element by default is the name of the form input, with 'Dropzone' appended to it, so FileAttachmentField::create('MyFile') creates a dropzone with an ID of 'MyFileDropzone'

Tracking / removing unused file uploads

FileAttachmentField::create('MyImage','Upload an image')
    ->setTrackFiles(true)

or:

FileAttachmentField:
  track_files: true

To stop users from uploading lots of files and filling the servers hard-drive via the frontend, you can track each file upload in a record, which is then removed when a form saves using Form::saveInto($record).

If you do not use Form::saveInto, you will need to manually untrack the file IDs with:

FileAttachmentFieldTrack::untrack($data['MyImageID']);

To action the deletion of all the tracked files, you can run the FileAttachmentFieldCleanTask.

Troubleshooting

Ring Uncle Cheese.