Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 4, 2015, at 8:09 AM, Darran Lofthouse
<darran.lofthouse(a)jboss.com> wrote:
Actually - this makes me think 'Content Length' on a HTTP upload is not
a suitable measure of the file size - this is the length being sent to
the server, not necessarily the actual size of the resulting file.
Well technically we use multipart/form-data, so the file that is appended is actually a
part with its own content-length independent of the http message body.
It's a fair point though that this value is the network size which is not necessarily
the disk size . It just so happens we only support the cases where hey correspond (on the
http side). You can't add a gzip encoding to a part for example. You could only do
that as a special mime-type.
> On 04/11/15 14:06, Brian Stansberry wrote:
> It shouldn't as part of the management API, no.[1] Any total size
> information that gets exchanged is part of the underlying management
> communication protocol used for propagating streams and isn't exposed
> outside that layer. I'd like to see even that bit go away too, as it's
> unnecessary and wastes resources on the client.
>
> [1] In some cases the CLI actually sends the deployment bytes base 64
> encoded as a param to the op, in which case the size info is available
> to the operation step handler. I consider that CLI behavior to be a bug
> though.
>
>> On 11/4/15 7:52 AM, Darran Lofthouse wrote:
>> Does the op in the CLI send any length information? That would help the
>> two be consistent.
>>
>>> On 04/11/15 12:29, Jason T. Greene wrote:
>>>
>>> On Nov 4, 2015, at 4:36 AM, Heiko Braun <hbraun(a)redhat.com
>>> <mailto:hbraun@redhat.com>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> GWT boils down to plain web technologies. And no, AFAIKT there is no
>>>> way to check the size of an uploaded file across web browsers. Most
>>>> browsers do however have an implicit limitation on the file size,
>>>> which for majority is about 2 GB.
>>>
>>> You can now that we have switched to XHR to do the upload. The File
>>> object returned from a file list has a size property that you can use.
>>>
>>> So you could in theory check that there is available space before
>>> posting, however, since as Stuart mentions, browsers set a content
>>> length, the server knows it anyway so it's less racy checking at the
>>> server level, if one was to check.
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>>>> On 04 Nov 2015, at 10:11, Darran Lofthouse
>>>>> <darran.lofthouse(a)jboss.com
<mailto:darran.lofthouse@jboss.com>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> From within GWT is there any option to detect the file size before
>>>>> uploading?
>>>>
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