255

I am allowing the user to load images into a page via drag&drop and other methods. When an image is dropped, I'm using URL.createObjectURL to convert to an object URL to display the image. I am not revoking the url, as I do reuse it.

So, when it comes time to create a FormData object, so that I can allow them to upload a form with one of those images in it, is there some way I can then reverse that Object URL back into a Blob or File so I can then append it to a FormData object?

4
  • nevermind about the previous two comments - all you need to do is send an XMLHttpRequest to the blob URL.
    – gengkev
    Commented Aug 9, 2012 at 3:39
  • 6
    Why not simply store the original file objects somewhere, then use the object URL to display them and on form submit use the original files?
    – user764754
    Commented Jan 17, 2017 at 19:12
  • 1
    @user764754 because trying to get the URL of the file being uploaded by the user displays as "C:\fakepath" Commented Jun 5, 2017 at 23:17
  • This is a XY problem. A script obtains references to one or multiple files as these are dropped onto a page. You only need to create URLs for these in order to create links for these for the user to use (look at what they dragged, f.e.), but for including the file(s) with submission of a form, you need to add them one way or another -- whether gotten back from URLs or the original objects. You can look at the DataTransfer class to reset your file input control, otherwise your form is almost useless anyway (you can forego it for script-assisted submission). Commented Feb 27, 2021 at 20:54

10 Answers 10

277

Modern solution:

let blob = await fetch(url).then(r => r.blob());

The url can be an object url or a normal url.

8
  • 41
    And if you want to directly get a file from the promise, you can generate a file as follows. let file = await fetch(url).then(r => r.blob()).then(blobFile => new File([blobFile], "fileNameGoesHere", { type: "image/png" })
    – dbakiu
    Commented Feb 13, 2019 at 16:11
  • 21
    Unfortunately, this solution does not work for me in Chrome. The browser fails to load this URL.
    – waldgeist
    Commented May 29, 2019 at 11:25
  • 1
    Waldgeist, did you wrap it in the createObjectUrl()? Commented Mar 24, 2020 at 12:27
  • 9
    let file = await fetch(url).then(r => r.blob()).then(blobFile => new File([blobFile], "fileNameGoesHere", { type: "image/png" })). There was a missing bracket at the end Commented Nov 11, 2021 at 10:10
  • 3
    Although it's a popular solution, CORS policy will stop you Commented Apr 25, 2023 at 15:44
93

As gengkev alludes to in his comment above, it looks like the best/only way to do this is with an async xhr2 call:

var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('GET', 'blob:http%3A//your.blob.url.here', true);
xhr.responseType = 'blob';
xhr.onload = function(e) {
  if (this.status == 200) {
    var myBlob = this.response;
    // myBlob is now the blob that the object URL pointed to.
  }
};
xhr.send();
7
  • 21
    When would you ever have a objectURL which is not local to the current domain and scope?
    – BrianFreud
    Commented Oct 4, 2014 at 17:13
  • 6
    i did it same as above, but got 404 not found with the xhr. what's going on?
    – albert yu
    Commented Jan 21, 2015 at 15:20
  • Please note that some browsers (read old IE...), if you need to handle those see post stackoverflow.com/questions/17657184/…
    – mraxus
    Commented Apr 28, 2016 at 5:27
  • 5
    @BrianFreud "When would you ever have a objectURL which is not local to the current domain and scope?" In my case I am trying to give a Amazon S3 blob a different filename, that is currently a "guid" on the S3 without extension. So, in my case I am using a cross-domain call. Commented Nov 22, 2016 at 11:01
  • 7
    "Object URLs are URLs that point to files on disk." ObjectURLs by definition can only be local.
    – BrianFreud
    Commented Nov 24, 2016 at 1:19
20

Maybe someone finds this useful when working with React/Node/Axios. I used this for my Cloudinary image upload feature with react-dropzone on the UI.

    axios({
        method: 'get',
        url: file[0].preview, // blob url eg. blob:http://127.0.0.1:8000/e89c5d87-a634-4540-974c-30dc476825cc
        responseType: 'blob'
    }).then(function(response){
         var reader = new FileReader();
         reader.readAsDataURL(response.data); 
         reader.onloadend = function() {
             var base64data = reader.result;
             self.props.onMainImageDrop(base64data)
         }

    })
1
  • 1
    I was able to use this one-liner to get the result with the blob as data property: const result = await axios.get(url, { responseType: "blob" });
    – Noah Stahl
    Commented Mar 12, 2020 at 15:34
14

The problem with fetching the blob URL again is that this will create a full copy of the Blob's data, and so instead of having it only once in memory, you'll have it twice. With big Blobs this can blow your memory usage quite quickly.

It's rather unfortunate that the File API doesn't give us access to the currently linked Blobs, certainly they thought web-authors should store that Blob themselves at creation time anyway, which is true:

The best here is to store the object you used when creating the blob:// URL.

If you are afraid this would prevent the Blob from being Garbage Collected, you're right, but so does the blob:// URL in the first place, until you revoke it. So holding yourself a pointer to that Blob won't change a thing.

But for those who aren't responsible for the creation of the blob:// URI (e.g because a library made it), we can still fill that API hole ourselves by overriding the default URL.createObjectURL and URL.revokeObjectURL methods so that they do store references to the object passed.

Be sure to call this function before the code that does generate the blob:// URI is called.

// Adds an URL.getFromObjectURL( <blob:// URI> ) method
// returns the original object (<Blob> or <MediaSource>) the URI points to or null
(() => {
  // overrides URL methods to be able to retrieve the original blobs later on
  const old_create = URL.createObjectURL;
  const old_revoke = URL.revokeObjectURL;
  Object.defineProperty(URL, 'createObjectURL', {
    get: () => storeAndCreate
  });
  Object.defineProperty(URL, 'revokeObjectURL', {
    get: () => forgetAndRevoke
  });
  Object.defineProperty(URL, 'getFromObjectURL', {
    get: () => getBlob
  });
  const dict = {};

  function storeAndCreate(blob) {
    const url = old_create(blob); // let it throw if it has to
    dict[url] = blob;
    return url
  }

  function forgetAndRevoke(url) {
    old_revoke(url);
    try {
      if(new URL(url).protocol === 'blob:') {
        delete dict[url];
      }
    } catch(e){}
  }

  function getBlob(url) {
    return dict[url] || null;
  }
})();

//  Usage:
const blob = new Blob( ["foo"] );
const url = URL.createObjectURL( blob );
console.log( url );
const retrieved = URL.getFromObjectURL( url );
console.log( "retrieved Blob is Same Object?", retrieved === blob );
fetch( url ).then( (resp) => resp.blob() )
  .then( (fetched) => console.log( "fetched Blob is Same Object?", fetched === blob ) );

And an other advantage is that it can even retrieve MediaSource objects, while the fetching solutions would just err in that case.

2
  • Good call. If I remember correctly, those URL methods did not exist back when I first asked this question.
    – BrianFreud
    Commented Aug 21, 2021 at 10:26
  • @BrianFreud they still don't exist, we have to implement it ourselves (well I did so now you just have to include that script before URL.createObjectURL is called).
    – Kaiido
    Commented Aug 21, 2021 at 12:33
9

Using fetch for example like below:

 fetch(<"yoururl">, {
    method: 'GET',
    headers: {
        'Content-Type': 'application/json',
        'Authorization': 'Bearer ' + <your access token if need>
    },
       })
.then((response) => response.blob())
.then((blob) => {
// 2. Create blob link to download
 const url = window.URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([blob]));
const link = document.createElement('a');
link.href = url;
link.setAttribute('download', `sample.xlsx`);
 // 3. Append to html page
 document.body.appendChild(link);
 // 4. Force download
 link.click();
 // 5. Clean up and remove the link
 link.parentNode.removeChild(link);
})

You can paste in on Chrome console to test. the file with download with 'sample.xlsx' Hope it can help!

1
  • 2
    I think the OP asked about converting a blob url to actual file/blob, rather than the other way around. Commented Oct 10, 2019 at 19:04
5

See Getting BLOB data from XHR request which points out that BlobBuilder doesn't work in Chrome so you need to use:

xhr.responseType = 'arraybuffer';
2

If you show the file in a canvas anyway you can also convert the canvas content to a blob object.

canvas.toBlob(function(my_file){
  //.toBlob is only implemented in > FF18 but there is a polyfill 
  //for other browsers https://github.com/blueimp/JavaScript-Canvas-to-Blob
  var myBlob = (my_file);
})
1
  • 2
    Note that that's not actually giving you back the same original file; it's making a new image file on the fly. When I last tested that a couple years ago, I found that at least in Chrome, the new image file isn't compressed at all - I had 10k jpgs turning into 2.5 mb jpgs.
    – BrianFreud
    Commented Jun 24, 2016 at 17:09
2

Unfortunately @BrianFreud's answer doesn't fit my needs, I had a little different need, and I know that is not the answer for @BrianFreud's question, but I am leaving it here because a lot of persons got here with my same need. I needed something like 'How to get a file or blob from an URL?', and the current correct answer does not fit my needs because its not cross-domain.

I have a website that consumes images from an Amazon S3/Azure Storage, and there I store objects named with uniqueidentifiers:

sample: http://****.blob.core.windows.net/systemimages/bf142dc9-0185-4aee-a3f4-1e5e95a09bcf

Some of this images should be download from our system interface. To avoid passing this traffic through my HTTP server, since this objects does not require any security to be accessed (except by domain filtering), I decided to make a direct request on user's browser and use local processing to give the file a real name and extension.

To accomplish that I have used this great article from Henry Algus: http://www.henryalgus.com/reading-binary-files-using-jquery-ajax/

1. First step: Add binary support to jquery

/**
*
* jquery.binarytransport.js
*
* @description. jQuery ajax transport for making binary data type requests.
* @version 1.0 
* @author Henry Algus <[email protected]>
*
*/

// use this transport for "binary" data type
$.ajaxTransport("+binary", function (options, originalOptions, jqXHR) {
    // check for conditions and support for blob / arraybuffer response type
    if (window.FormData && ((options.dataType && (options.dataType == 'binary')) || (options.data && ((window.ArrayBuffer && options.data instanceof ArrayBuffer) || (window.Blob && options.data instanceof Blob))))) {
        return {
            // create new XMLHttpRequest
            send: function (headers, callback) {
                // setup all variables
                var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest(),
        url = options.url,
        type = options.type,
        async = options.async || true,
        // blob or arraybuffer. Default is blob
        dataType = options.responseType || "blob",
        data = options.data || null,
        username = options.username || null,
        password = options.password || null;

                xhr.addEventListener('load', function () {
                    var data = {};
                    data[options.dataType] = xhr.response;
                    // make callback and send data
                    callback(xhr.status, xhr.statusText, data, xhr.getAllResponseHeaders());
                });

                xhr.open(type, url, async, username, password);

                // setup custom headers
                for (var i in headers) {
                    xhr.setRequestHeader(i, headers[i]);
                }

                xhr.responseType = dataType;
                xhr.send(data);
            },
            abort: function () {
                jqXHR.abort();
            }
        };
    }
});

2. Second step: Make a request using this transport type.

function downloadArt(url)
{
    $.ajax(url, {
        dataType: "binary",
        processData: false
    }).done(function (data) {
        // just my logic to name/create files
        var filename = url.substr(url.lastIndexOf('/') + 1) + '.png';
        var blob = new Blob([data], { type: 'image/png' });

        saveAs(blob, filename);
    });
}

Now you can use the Blob created as you want to, in my case I want to save it to disk.

3. Optional: Save file on user's computer using FileSaver

I have used FileSaver.js to save to disk the downloaded file, if you need to accomplish that, please use this javascript library:

https://github.com/eligrey/FileSaver.js/

I expect this to help others with more specific needs.

1
  • 1
    ObjectURLs are by definition local. Object URLs are URLs that point to files on disk. Given that there is no such thing as a cross-domain objectURL, you're combing two different concepts, thus your problem using the given solution.
    – BrianFreud
    Commented Nov 24, 2016 at 1:19
2

Following @Kaiido answer, another way to overload URL without messing with URL is to extend the URL class like this:

export class URLwithStore extends URL {
  static createObjectURL(blob) {
    const url = super.createObjectURL(blob);
    URLwithStore.store = { ...(URLwithStore.store ?? {}), [url]: blob };
    return url;
  }

  static getFromObjectURL(url) {
    return (URLwithStore.store ?? {})[url] ?? null;
  }

  static revokeObjectURL(url) {
    super.revokeObjectURL(url);
    if (
      new URL(url).protocol === "blob:" &&
      URLwithStore.store &&
      url in URLwithStore.store
    )
      delete URLwithStore.store[url];
  }
}

Usage

const blob = new Blob( ["foo"] );
const url = URLwithStore.createObjectURL( blob );
const retrieved = URLwithStore.getFromObjectURL( url );
console.log( "retrieved Blob is Same Object?", retrieved === blob );
0

Open Chrome, press F12 then to open console window then write

var url = "https://images.rawpixel.com/image_800/cHJpdmF0ZS9sci9pbWFnZXMvd2Vic2l0ZS8yMDIyLTA1L3BmLXMxMjctdGQtMDAyMV80LmpwZw.jpg"

then write

fetch(url).then(res => res.blob()).then(blob => {
    console.log(blob) //this will give blob
    var reader = new FileReader()
    reader.readAsDataURL(blob)
    reader.onloadend = function() {
        var base64string = reader.result
        console.log(base64string) //this will give base64string
    }

    var bloburl = URL.createObjectURL(blob)
    console.log(bloburl) //this will give bloburl
    var link = document.createElement("a")
    link.href = bloburl
    link.setAttribute('download', 'image.jpeg')
    document.body.appendChild(link)
    link.click()
})

enter image description here

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