Downloading images with node.js
You can use Axios (a promise-based HTTP client for Node.js) to download images in the order of your choosing in an asynchronous environment:
npm i axios
Then, you can use the following basic example to begin downloading images:
const fs = require('fs');
const axios = require('axios');
/* ============================================================
Function: Download Image
============================================================ */
const download_image = (url, image_path) =>
axios({
url,
responseType: 'stream',
}).then(
response =>
new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
response.data
.pipe(fs.createWriteStream(image_path))
.on('finish', () => resolve())
.on('error', e => reject(e));
}),
);
/* ============================================================
Download Images in Order
============================================================ */
(async () => {
let example_image_1 = await download_image('https://example.com/test-1.png', 'example-1.png');
console.log(example_image_1.status); // true
console.log(example_image_1.error); // ''
let example_image_2 = await download_image('https://example.com/does-not-exist.png', 'example-2.png');
console.log(example_image_2.status); // false
console.log(example_image_2.error); // 'Error: Request failed with status code 404'
let example_image_3 = await download_image('https://example.com/test-3.png', 'example-3.png');
console.log(example_image_3.status); // true
console.log(example_image_3.error); // ''
})();
I'd suggest using the request module. Downloading a file is as simple as the following code:
var fs = require('fs'),
request = require('request');
var download = function(uri, filename, callback){
request.head(uri, function(err, res, body){
console.log('content-type:', res.headers['content-type']);
console.log('content-length:', res.headers['content-length']);
request(uri).pipe(fs.createWriteStream(filename)).on('close', callback);
});
};
download('https://www.google.com/images/srpr/logo3w.png', 'google.png', function(){
console.log('done');
});
var fs = require('fs'),
http = require('http'),
https = require('https');
var Stream = require('stream').Transform;
var downloadImageToUrl = (url, filename, callback) => {
var client = http;
if (url.toString().indexOf("https") === 0){
client = https;
}
client.request(url, function(response) {
var data = new Stream();
response.on('data', function(chunk) {
data.push(chunk);
});
response.on('end', function() {
fs.writeFileSync(filename, data.read());
});
}).end();
};
downloadImageToUrl('https://www.google.com/images/srpr/logo11w.png', 'public/uploads/users/abc.jpg');
I ran into this problem some days ago, for a pure NodeJS answer I would suggest using Stream to merge the chunks together.
var http = require('http'),
Stream = require('stream').Transform,
fs = require('fs');
var url = 'http://www.google.com/images/srpr/logo11w.png';
http.request(url, function(response) {
var data = new Stream();
response.on('data', function(chunk) {
data.push(chunk);
});
response.on('end', function() {
fs.writeFileSync('image.png', data.read());
});
}).end();
The newest Node versions won't work well with binary strings, so merging chunks with strings is not a good idea when working with binary data.
*Just be careful when using 'data.read()', it will empty the stream for the next 'read()' operation. If you want to use it more than once, store it somewhere.