How do I download a file from FastAPI backend using JavaScript Fetch API in the frontend?
Asked Answered
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1

2

This is my FastAPI(python) code, which returns a .ics file:

@app.get("/latLong/")
async def read_item(lat: float,long:float):
    mainFunc(lat,long)
    return FileResponse("/tmp/myics.ics")

This is my frontend code in Javascript using Fetch API:

<script>
  async function apiCall(long,lat) {
    let myObject = await fetch('myapi.com/lat/long');
    let myText = await myObject.text();
  }
</script>

So from my visor (my api logs), it successfully calls the API. But from the front end, I am trying to get it to return the file.

The end result I would like to achieve is when the user clicks a button, the browser grabs the location, then sends the location to the API, and the API returns a file that the user can download.

Skeen answered 20/2, 2022 at 5:45 Comment(0)
B
5

Server side

First, you need to adjust your endpoint on server side to accept path parameters, as in the way that is currently defined, lat and long are expected to be query parameters instead; however, in the JavaScript code you provided, it seems that you are trying to send those coordinates as path parameters. Thus, your endpoint should look like this:

@app.get("/{lat}/{long}/")
async def read_item(lat: float, long: float):
    pass

Next, set the filename in FileResponse, so that it can be included in the Content-Disposition response header, which can later be retrieved on client side:

return FileResponse("/tmp/myics.ics", filename="myics.ics")

If you are doing a cross-origin request (see FastAPI CORS as well), make sure to set the Access-Control-Expose-Headers response header on server side, indicating that the Content-Disposition header should be made available to JS scripts running in the browser; otherwise, the filename won't be accessible on client side. Example:

headers = {'Access-Control-Expose-Headers': 'Content-Disposition'}
return FileResponse("/tmp/myics.ics", filename="myics.ics", headers=headers)

All together (more details and examples can be found at this answer as well):

from fastapi import FastAPI
from fastapi.responses import FileResponse


app = FastAPI()


@app.get("/{lat}/{long}/")
async def read_item(lat: float, long: float):
    headers = {'Access-Control-Expose-Headers': 'Content-Disposition'}
    return FileResponse("/tmp/myics.ics", filename="myics.ics", headers=headers)

Client side

On client side, you could use a similar approach to this answer or this answer. The below example also takes into account scenarios where the filename includes unicode characters (i.e., -, !, (, ), etc.) and hence, comes (utf-8 encoded) in the form of, for instance, filename*=utf-8''Na%C3%AFve%20file.txt (see here for more details). In such cases, the decodeURIComponent() function is used to decode the filename. Working example below:

const url ='http://127.0.0.1:8000/41.64007/-47.285156'
fetch(url)
    .then(res => {
        const disposition = res.headers.get('Content-Disposition');
        filename = disposition.split(/;(.+)/)[1].split(/=(.+)/)[1];
        if (filename.toLowerCase().startsWith("utf-8''"))
            filename = decodeURIComponent(filename.replace("utf-8''", ''));
        else
            filename = filename.replace(/['"]/g, '');
        return res.blob();
    })
    .then(blob => {
        var url = window.URL.createObjectURL(blob);
        var a = document.createElement('a');
        a.href = url;
        a.download = filename;
        document.body.appendChild(a); // append the element to the dom
        a.click();
        a.remove(); // afterwards, remove the element  
    });
Butene answered 20/2, 2022 at 10:41 Comment(0)

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