tus is a new open protocol for resumable uploads built on HTTP. This is the tus protocol 1.0.0 node.js server implementation.
$ npm install tus-node-server
-
Local File Storage
server.datastore = new tus.FileStore({ path: '/files' });
-
Google Cloud Storage
server.datastore = new tus.GCSDataStore({ path: '/files', projectId: 'project-id', keyFilename: 'path/to/your/keyfile.json', bucket: 'bucket-name', });
-
Amazon S3
server.datastore = new tus.S3Store({ path: '/files', bucket: 'bucket-name', accessKeyId: 'access-key-id', secretAccessKey: 'secret-access-key', region: 'eu-west-1', partSize: 8 * 1024 * 1024, // each uploaded part will have ~8MB, tmpDirPrefix: 'tus-s3-store', });
Use the tus-node-deploy Docker image
$ docker run -p 1080:8080 -d bhstahl/tus-node-deploy
const tus = require('tus-node-server');
const server = new tus.Server();
server.datastore = new tus.FileStore({
path: '/files'
});
const host = '127.0.0.1';
const port = 1080;
server.listen({ host, port }, () => {
console.log(`[${new Date().toLocaleTimeString()}] tus server listening at http://${host}:${port}`);
});
Use tus-node-server as Express Middleware
const tus = require('tus-node-server');
const server = new tus.Server();
server.datastore = new tus.FileStore({
path: '/files'
});
const app = express();
const uploadApp = express();
uploadApp.all('*', server.handle.bind(server));
app.use('/uploads', uploadApp);
const host = '127.0.0.1';
const port = 1080;
app.listen(port, host);
Use tus-node-server with Koa or plain Node server
const http = require('http');
const url = require('url');
const Koa = require('koa')
const tus = require('tus-node-server');
const tusServer = new tus.Server();
const app = new Koa();
const appCallback = app.callback();
const port = 1080;
tusServer.datastore = new tus.FileStore({
path: '/files',
});
const server = http.createServer((req, res) => {
const urlPath = url.parse(req.url).pathname;
// handle any requests with the `/files/*` pattern
if (/^\/files\/.+/.test(urlPath.toLowerCase())) {
return tusServer.handle(req, res);
}
appCallback(req, res);
});
server.listen(port)
Execute code when lifecycle events happen by adding event handlers to your server.
const Server = require('tus-node-server').Server;
const EVENTS = require('tus-node-server').EVENTS;
const server = new Server();
server.on(EVENTS.EVENT_UPLOAD_COMPLETE, (event) => {
console.log(`Upload complete for file ${event.file.id}`);
});
-
EVENT_FILE_CREATED
: Fired when aPOST
request successfully creates a new fileExample payload:
{ file: { id: '7b26bf4d22cf7198d3b3706bf0379794', upload_length: '41767441', upload_metadata: 'filename NDFfbWIubXA0' } }
-
EVENT_ENDPOINT_CREATED
: Fired when aPOST
request successfully creates a new upload endpointExample payload:
{ url: 'http://localhost:1080/files/7b26bf4d22cf7198d3b3706bf0379794' }
-
EVENT_UPLOAD_COMPLETE
: Fired when aPATCH
request finishes writing the fileExample payload:
{ file: { id: '7b26bf4d22cf7198d3b3706bf0379794', upload_length: '41767441', upload_metadata: 'filename NDFfbWIubXA0' } }
Add custom GET
handlers to suit your needs, similar to Express routing.
const server = new Server();
server.get('/uploads', (req, res) => {
// Read from your DataStore
fs.readdir(server.datastore.path, (err, files) => {
// Format the JSON response and send it
}
});
const fileNameFromUrl = (req) => {
return req.url.replace(/\//g, '-');
}
server.datastore = new tus.FileStore({
path: '/files',
namingFunction: fileNameFromUrl
});
Start the demo server using Local File Storage
$ npm run demo
Or start up the demo server using Google Cloud Storage
$ npm run gcs_demo
Then navigate to the demo (localhost:1080) which uses tus-js-client