XHR Upload Progress is 100% from the start
I also recently had some difficulty setting an event listener for XHR onprogress events. I ended up implementing it as an anonymous function, which works beautifully:
xhr.upload.onprogress = function(evt)
{
if (evt.lengthComputable)
{
var percentComplete = parseInt((evt.loaded / evt.total) * 100);
console.log("Upload: " + percentComplete + "% complete")
}
};
I stumbled across a lot of other gotchas along the way, though, so it's quite likely one of those was tripping up my event listener. The only other difference between what you've got there and my setup is that I'm using xhr.sendAsBinary().
I have similar issue and I found reason. In my case the troublemaker is antivirus (bitdefender) on my PC. When I turn off bitdefender protection, the progress behaves exactly as it should.
I ran into a similar issue myself, where my event handler function for progress
events on XMLHttpRequest
was executed only once -- when the upload was complete.
The cause of the problem ended up being simple -- in Google Chrome (possibly other browsers too, I did not test), the progress
event will only fire in succession if the upload had been running for a second or two. In other words, if your upload finishes quickly, then you'll likely just get one 100% progress
event.
Here's an example of code whose progress
event only fires once at 100% complete ( https://jsfiddle.net/qahs40r6/ ):
$.ajax({
xhr: function()
{
var xhr = new window.XMLHttpRequest();
//Upload progress
xhr.upload.addEventListener("progress", function(evt){
if (evt.lengthComputable) {
var percentComplete = evt.loaded / evt.total;
console.log("Upload ", Math.round(percentComplete*100) + "% complete.");
}
}, false);
return xhr;
},
type: 'POST',
url: "/echo/json/",
data: {json: JSON.stringify(new Array(20000))}
});
Console output:
Upload 100% complete.
But if you add an extra zero to the size of the array (increasing the payload size by a factor of 10 -- https://jsfiddle.net/qahs40r6/1/):
$.ajax({
xhr: function()
{
var xhr = new window.XMLHttpRequest();
//Upload progress
xhr.upload.addEventListener("progress", function(evt){
if (evt.lengthComputable) {
var percentComplete = evt.loaded / evt.total;
console.log("Upload ", Math.round(percentComplete*100) + "% complete.");
}
}, false);
return xhr;
},
type: 'POST',
url: "/echo/json/",
data: {json: JSON.stringify(new Array(200000))}
});
Then you get the normal progression of progress
events:
Upload 8% complete.
Upload 9% complete.
Upload 19% complete.
Upload 39% complete.
Upload 50% complete.
Upload 81% complete.
Upload 85% complete.
Upload 89% complete.
Upload 100% complete.
This behavior depends upon how fast your Internet connection is, so your mileage will vary. For example, if you take the first example and use Chrome Developer Tools to slow your connection to a simulated "Slow 3G", then you will see the series of progress
events.
Similarly, if you are developing locally and uploading data to a local web server, you'll likely never see progress
events because the upload will finish instantly. This is likely what @brettjonesdev was seeing in localhost vs remote prod deployments.