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Force Download an Image Using Javascript

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-22 14:16 出处:网络
I want to know if there is any way to make a script using Javascript/j开发者_高级运维Query to download (open a download dialog) a image so the browser won\'t just show it.You need to use server-side s

I want to know if there is any way to make a script using Javascript/j开发者_高级运维Query to download (open a download dialog) a image so the browser won't just show it.


You need to use server-side scripting for this. Search on stackoverflow.

Alternately, your server might allow you to alter headers dynamically via configuration.

Apache solution with mod_headers

Place your downloadable images in a directory. Inside this directory, create a .htaccess file with the following contents:

SetEnvIf Request_URI "([^/]+\.jpg)$" REQUESTED_IMAGE_BASENAME=$1
SetEnvIf Request_URI "([^/]+\.png)$" REQUESTED_IMAGE_BASENAME=$1
Header set Content-Disposition "attachment; filename=\"%{REQUESTED_IMAGE_BASENAME}e\"" env=REQUESTED_IMAGE_BASENAME

Test Request:

HEAD /test/Water%20lilies.jpg HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost

Test Response:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Sat, 23 Jul 2011 09:03:52 GMT
Server: Apache/2.2.17 (Win32)
Last-Modified: Thu, 23 Aug 2001 14:00:00 GMT
ETag: "26000000017df3-14752-38c32e813d800"
Accept-Ranges: bytes
Content-Length: 83794
Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="Water lilies.jpg"
Content-Type: image/jpeg

HTML5 Solution

You can use the HTML5 download attribute on anchors:

<p>Example 1<br>
   <a href="http://dummyimage.com/600x400/000/fff.png" download>Download this image</a></p>

<p>Example 2<br>
   <a href="http://dummyimage.com/600x400/000/fff.png" download="alternate-filename.png"><img
       src="http://dummyimage.com/150x100/000/fff.png"></a></p>


I have come up with pure JavaScript way to force download of image, with the following restrictions:

  1. Using HTML5 so not working at all in IE browsers before IE9.
  2. In IE (even 9) limited to very small images, due to URL length limit.
  3. The image name (when saved to machine) can't be determined in the code, in Chrome it will be just "download" without extension and in Firefox it will be what looks like jibberish string with ".part" extension - either way, user will have to rename the file to make it usable.
  4. Can only download images in the same domain - same origin policy.

The above restrictions (especially the third) more or less renders this useless but still, the "core" idea is working and hopefully at some point in the future it will be possible to determine file name then it will become much more useful.

Here is the code:

function DownloadImage(imageURL) {
    var oImage = document.getElementById(imageURL);
    var canvas = document.createElement("canvas");
    document.body.appendChild(canvas);
    if (typeof canvas.getContext == "undefined" || !canvas.getContext) {
        alert("browser does not support this action, sorry");
        return false;
    }

    try {
        var context = canvas.getContext("2d");
        var width = oImage.width;
        var height = oImage.height;
        canvas.width = width;
        canvas.height = height;
        canvas.style.width = width + "px";
        canvas.style.height = height + "px";
        context.drawImage(oImage, 0, 0, width, height);
        var rawImageData = canvas.toDataURL("image/png;base64");
        rawImageData = rawImageData.replace("image/png", "image/octet-stream");
        document.location.href = rawImageData;
        document.body.removeChild(canvas);
    }
    catch (err) {
        document.body.removeChild(canvas);
        alert("Sorry, can't download");
    }

    return true;
}

As you can see, the trick is drawing the image into canvas object, get the raw binary data of the image then force download by using image/octet-stream mime type and changing the browser location.

Usage sample follows as well.

HTML:

<image id="myimage" src="Penguins.jpg" />
<button type="btnDownload" rel="myimage">Download</button>

JavaScript:

window.onload = function() {
    var arrButtons = document.getElementsByTagName("button");
    for (var i = 0; i < arrButtons.length; i++) {
        var oButton = arrButtons[i];
        var sRelatedImage = oButton.getAttribute("rel");
        if (sRelatedImage && sRelatedImage.length > 0) {
            oButton.onclick = function() {
                HandleRelatedImage(this, sRelatedImage);
            }
        }
    }
};

function HandleRelatedImage(oButton, sRelatedImage) {
    var oImage = document.getElementById(sRelatedImage);
    if (!oImage) {
        alert("related image '" + sRelatedImage + "' does not exist");
        return false;
    }

    return DownloadImage(sRelatedImage);
}

This allows to "attach" download button to every existing image by assigning the rel attribute of the button to the image ID - the code will do the rest and attach the actual click events.

Due to the same origin policy can't post live example at jsFiddle - they're using "sandbox" domain to execute the scripts.


Here's a simple solution that uses the HTML5 'download' attribute:

document.getElementById('download').click();
<a id="download" href="https://docs.google.com/uc?id=0B0jH18Lft7ypSmRjdWg1c082Y2M" download hidden></a>
If it can find the picture it will download a cat picture.


This is totally possible. Just encode the image as Base64 then do a window.open with a data:image/jpg,Base64,...-style url.

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