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Save andrewmilson/19185aab2347f6ad29f5 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
package main | |
import ( | |
"net/http" | |
"os" | |
"bytes" | |
"path" | |
"path/filepath" | |
"mime/multipart" | |
"io" | |
) | |
func main() { | |
fileDir, _ := os.Getwd() | |
fileName := "upload-file.txt" | |
filePath := path.Join(fileDir, fileName) | |
file, _ := os.Open(filePath) | |
defer file.Close() | |
body := &bytes.Buffer{} | |
writer := multipart.NewWriter(body) | |
part, _ := writer.CreateFormFile("file", filepath.Base(file.Name())) | |
io.Copy(part, file) | |
writer.Close() | |
r, _ := http.NewRequest("POST", "http://example.com", body) | |
r.Header.Add("Content-Type", writer.FormDataContentType()) | |
client := &http.Client{} | |
client.Do(r) | |
} |
Will this code use sendfile
to achieve zero copy
?
Спасибо)
Thank you soooooooooo much!!
thanks!! :)
alright!
Thank you
👍
Do you have any ideas how to send a zip file using multipart writer?
Thanks!! Much appreciated!
Thanks! it's working well.
Thanks!
Thank you <3
Thanks.
Thanks 👍
it works
it works
Thanks!
Nice work
Thx, nice gist
Solid
thanks!
if, for whatever reason you need to specify the content type of a part - here's the excerpt:
body := &bytes.Buffer{}
writer := multipart.NewWriter(body)
h := make(textproto.MIMEHeader)
h.Set("Content-Disposition", fmt.Sprintf(`form-data; name="%s"; filename="%s"`, "file", "myfile.xml"))
h.Set("Content-Type", "text/xml")
part, _ := writer.CreatePart(h)
otherwise this code is absolutely perfect, thanks !
thanks!
thanks!
Is it possible to compile this in an executable and then whenever you run that '.exe' the server will start to listen on incoming requests?
Hello, if I need to upload a zip file as form-data in POST request body, I am able to find this,
zipWriter := zip.NewWriter(buf)
zipFile, err := zipWriter.Create(fileName)
Unlike multipart.Writer, in case of zip.Writer I can't find any option to create form file in a key-value fashion.
How can I achieve this for zip as well?
Will this code use
sendfile
to achievezero copy
?
No It doesn't.
If you want to achieve zero copy, you can use os.pipe instead of sendfile.
sendfile is fit to tcp package so, it is hard to use with http package.
See this code snippet and benchmarks of it.
This example is the best. Thanks!