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109 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
109 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
# Assets
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> The `/assets` endpoint can be used to stream or retrieve the actual file contents from assets managed within Directus.
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- [Accessing an Original File](#accessing-an-original-file)
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- [Requesting a Thumbnail](#requesting-a-thumbnail)
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- [Downloading a File](#downloading-a-file)
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::: tip Uploading Files
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To learn more about uploading files, see the [Upload a File](/reference/api/system/files/#upload-a-file) and
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[Import a File](<(/reference/api/system/files/#import-a-file)>) endpoints.
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:::
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## Accessing an Original File
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The location of your actual file originals is based on the project's configuration, but you can consistently access them
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via the API using the following URL.
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```
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example.com/assets/<file-id>
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example.com/assets/1ac73658-8b62-4dea-b6da-529fbc9d01a4
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```
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 _Original File Used — 602KB and 1800x1200_
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::: warning Direct File Access
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While you may _technically_ be able to expose your storage adapters root filesystem and access your raw files through
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there, it is recommended that you always use the Directus API. This is the only way that you can take advantage of file
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permissions and other built-in features.
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:::
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## Requesting a Thumbnail
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Fetching thumbnails is as easy as adding query parameters to the original file's URL. If a requested thumbnail doesn't
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yet exist, it is dynamically generated and immediately returned. When requesting a thumbnail, the following parameters
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are all required, supports thumbnail for `jpeg`,`png` and `webp`
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- **`fit`** — The **fit** of the thumbnail while always preserving the aspect ratio, can be any of the following
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options:
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- `cover` — Covers both width/height by cropping/clipping to fit
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- `contain` — Contain within both width/height using "letterboxing" as needed
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- `inside` — Resize to be as large as possible, ensuring dimensions are less than or equal to the requested width and
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height
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- `outside` — Resize to be as small as possible, ensuring dimensions are greater than or equal to the requested width
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and height
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- **`width`** — The **width** of the thumbnail in pixels
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- **`height`** — The **height** of the thumbnail in pixels
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- **`quality`** — The **quality** of the thumbnail (`1` to `100`) is `Optional`
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- **`withoutEnlargement`** — Disable image up-scaling
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- **`download`** — Add `Content-Disposition` header and force browser to download file
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```
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example.com/assets/<file-id>?fit=<fit>&width=<width>&height=<height>&quality=<quality>
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example.com/assets/1ac73658-8b62-4dea-b6da-529fbc9d01a4?fit=cover&width=200&height=200&quality=80
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```
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Alternatively, you can reference a specific thumbnail by its preset key.
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- **`key`** — This **key** of the [Storage Asset Preset](/guides/files#creating-thumbnail-presets), a shortcut for the
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above parameters
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```
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example.com/assets/<file-id>?key=<preset-key>
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example.com/assets/1ac73658-8b62-4dea-b6da-529fbc9d01a4?key=card
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```
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### Cover vs Contain
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For easier comparison, both of the examples below were requested at `200` width, `200` height, and `75` quality. The
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`cover` thumbnail forces the dimensions, trimming the outside edges as needed. The `contain` thumbnail always maintains
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its aspect ratio, shrinking the image to fit _within_ the dimensions and adding "letterboxing" as needed.
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| Cover | Contain |
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| -------------------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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| <br>_8KB • 200x200_ | <br>_6KB • 200x133_ |
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::: tip Aspect Ratio
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Images are never stretched or distorted even when changing the aspect ratio.
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:::
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### Quality vs Filesize
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The quality parameter can be any integer from `0-100`. Qualities closer to `0` have lower filesizes, but also poor image
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quality due to compression artifacts. Values closer to `100` have larger filesizes, but better image quality. Below are
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four possible qualities (200x200 cover) to visually compare the balance between compression and filesize.
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| 25% | 50% | 75% | 100% |
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| -------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------- | -------------------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------- |
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| <br>_4KB_ | <br>_6KB_ | <br>_8KB_ | <br>_38KB_ |
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## Downloading a File
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To download an asset with the correct filename, you need to add the `?download` query parameter to the request and the
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`download` attribute to your anchor tag. This will ensure the appropriate
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[Content-Disposition](https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec19.html) headers are added. Without this, the
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download will work on the _same_ domain, however it will have the file's "id" as the filename for cross-origin requests.
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Example:
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```html
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<a href="https://your-directus.com/assets/<file-id>?download" target="_blank" download="Your File.pdf">Download</a>
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```
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