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I'm writing an API and I'm wanting to handle file uploads from a form POST. The mark-up for the form is nothing too complex:

<form action="" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
  <fieldset>
    <input type="file" name="image" id="image" />
    <input type="submit" name="upload" value="Upload" />
  </fieldset>
</form>

However, I'm having difficulties understanding how to handle this server-side and send along with a cURL request.

I'm familiar with sending POST requests with cURL with a data array, and resources I've read on uploading files tell me to prefix the file name with an @ symbol. But these same resources have a hard-coded file name, e.g.

$post = array(
    'image' => '@/path/to/myfile.jpg',
    ...
);

Well which file path is this? Where would I find it? Would it be something like $_FILES['image']['tmp_name'], in which case my $post array should look like this:

$post = array(
    'image' => '@' . $_FILES['image']['tmp_name'],
    ...
);

Or am I going about this the wrong way? Any advice would be most appreciated.

EDIT: I've added a bounty to this question. If someone could give me a code snippet of where I would go with the following code snippets then I'd be most grateful. I'm mainly after what I would send as cURL parameters, and a sample of how to use those parameters with the receiving script (let's call it curl_receiver.php for argument's sake).

I have this web form:

<form action="script.php" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data">
  <fieldset>
    <input type="file" name="image />
    <input type="submit" name="upload" value="Upload" />
  </fieldset>
</form>

And this would be script.php:

if (isset($_POST['upload'])) {
    // cURL call would go here
    // my tmp. file would be $_FILES['image']['tmp_name'], and
    // the filename would be $_FILES['image']['name']
}
share|improve this question
Would the http extension be on topic? Unlike cURL (multi-protocol) it's better tailored to HTTP. – mario Nov 25 '10 at 13:07

2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted
+100

Here is some production code that sends the file to an ftp (may be a good solution for you):

$localFile = $_FILES[$fileKey]['tmp_name']; // This is the entire file that was uploaded to a temp location.
$fp = fopen($localFile, 'r');

//Connecting to website.
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_USERPWD, "email@email.org:password");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL, 'ftp://@ftp.website.net/audio/'.$strFileName);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_UPLOAD, 1);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_TIMEOUT, 86400); // 1 Day Timeout
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_INFILE, $fp);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_NOPROGRESS, false);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_PROGRESSFUNCTION, 'CURL_callback');
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_BUFFERSIZE, 128);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_INFILESIZE, filesize($localFile));
curl_exec ($ch);
if (curl_errno($ch))
    $msg = curl_error($ch);
else
    $msg = 'File uploaded successfully.';
curl_close ($ch);
$Return['msg'] = $msg;

echo json_encode($Return);
share|improve this answer

This should work:

$tmpfile = $_FILES['image']['tmp_name'];
$filename = basename($_FILES['image']['name']);

$data = array(
    'uploaded_file' => '@'.$tmpfile.';filename='.$filename,
);

$ch = curl_init();   
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, $data);
// set your other cURL options here (url, etc.)

curl_exec($ch);

In the receiving script, you would have:

print_r($_FILES);
/* which would output something like
     Array (
        [uploaded_file] => Array (
            [tmp_name] => /tmp/f87453hf
            [name] => myimage.jpg
            [error] => 0
            [size] => 12345
            [type] => image/jpeg
        )
     )
*/

Then, if you want to properly handle the file upload, you would do something like this:

if (move_uploaded_file($_FILES['uploaded_file'], '/path/to/destination/file.zip')) {
   // do stuff
}
share|improve this answer
Thanks. I got a derirative of this solution working, but when I change the request method to PUT it falls over (the $_FILES array is empty, yet is populated as expected when set to POST). Any idea why this would be? – Martin Bean Nov 25 '10 at 10:07
2  
PHP $_FILES array will not be populated on a PUT request ever, because PHP expected $_FILES to be uploaded via POST. If you want to accept file uploads on a PUT request, you will have to parse the php://input stream manually for the multipart format (which is not too hard, but can't be explained in a comment...). – netcoder Nov 25 '10 at 15:39
@netcoder, what if services are located at different services and tmp file needs to be passed as data via PUT request, what would be the approach then? – Eugene Apr 20 at 9:58

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