4.1 KiB
title | layout | section |
---|---|---|
How to read a file | default | example |
This page explains how to read an existing zip file or add a existing file into the zip file.
In the browser
AJAX request
Getting binary data with an ajax request is hard (mainly because of IE <= 9). The easy way is to use JSZipUtils.getBinaryContent. With JSZipUtils.getBinaryContent, you can do the following (see the documentation for more examples) :
JSZipUtils.getBinaryContent('path/to/content.zip', function(err, data) {
if(err) {
throw err; // or handle err
}
var zip = new JSZip(data);
});
If you need to adapt an existing solution to what getBinaryContent does, here
are the details. When doing a XHR request (level 1, without setting the
responseType
) the browser will try to interpret the response as a string and
decode it from its charset. To avoid this on Firefox/Chrome/Opera, you need to
set mime type : xhr.overrideMimeType("text/plain; charset=x-user-defined");
.
On IE <= 9, this is harder. The overrideMimeType trick doesn't work so we need
to use vbscript
and non standard attributes.
On IE > 9, overrideMimeType doesn't work but xhr2 does.
With xhr 2, you can just set the responseType
attribute : xhr.responseType = "arraybuffer";
. With this, the browser will
return an ArrayBuffer.
Local files
If the browser supports the FileReader API,
you can use it to read a zip file. JSZip can read ArrayBuffer, so you can use
FileReader.readAsArrayBuffer(Blob)
, see this example.
In nodejs
JSZip can read Buffers so you can do the following :
Local file
"use strict";
var fs = require("fs");
var JSZip = require("jszip");
// read a zip file
fs.readFile("test.zip", function(err, data) {
if (err) throw err;
var zip = new JSZip(data);
});
// read a file and add it to a zip
fs.readFile("picture.png", function(err, data) {
if (err) throw err;
var zip = new JSZip();
zip.file("picture.png", data);
});
Remote file
There are a lot of nodejs libraries doing http requests, from the built-in
http to the
npm packages. Here are two
examples, one with the default http API, the other with
request (but you're free to use your
favorite library !). If possible, download the file as a Buffer (you will get
better performances). If it's not possible, you can fallback to a binary string
(the option is likely to be encoding : "binary"
).
With http :
"use strict";
var http = require("http");
var url = require("url");
var JSZip = require("jszip");
var req = http.get(url.parse("http://localhost/.../file.zip"), function (res) {
if (res.statusCode !== 200) {
console.log(res.statusCode);
// handle error
return;
}
var data = [], dataLen = 0;
// don't set the encoding, it will break everything !
// or, if you must, set it to null. In that case the chunk will be a string.
res.on("data", function (chunk) {
data.push(chunk);
dataLen += chunk.length;
});
res.on("end", function () {
var buf = new Buffer(dataLen);
for (var i=0,len=data.length,pos=0; i<len; i++) {
data[i].copy(buf, pos);
pos += data[i].length;
}
// here we go !
var zip = new JSZip(buf);
console.log(zip.file("content.txt").asText());
});
});
req.on("error", function(err){
// handle error
});
With request :
"use strict";
var request = require('request');
var JSZip = require("jszip");
request({
method : "GET",
url : "http://localhost/.../file.zip",
encoding: null // <- this one is important !
}, function (error, response, body) {
if(error || response.statusCode !== 200) {
// handle error
return;
}
var zip = new JSZip(body);
console.log(zip.file("content.txt").asText());
});