capsule

Upload and store files in Elixir apps with minimal (currently zero) dependencies.

take the purple pill

Capsule intentionally strips file storage logic down to its most composable parts and lets you decide how you want to use them. Here's a complete working example with an Ecto schema, that saves the file onto a local file system and extracts some metadata:

  def create_attachment(url) do
    Multi.new()
    |> Multi.run(:upload, fn _, _ ->
      Disk.put(URI.parse(url), prefix: :crypto.hash(:md5, [user.id, url]) |> Base.encode16())
    end)
    |> Multi.insert(:attachment, fn %{upload: file_data} ->
      Source.changeset(%Attachment{}, %{
        file_data: file_data |> Capsule.add_metadata(%{name: file_data.metadata.name}) |> Map.from_struct(),
      })
    end)
    |> Repo.transaction()
  end

Then to access your file:

%Attachment{file_data: file} = attachment

{:ok, iodata} = Capsule.open(file)

concepts

There are three main concepts in capsule: storage, upload, and the special one, "encapsulation."

storage

A "storage" is behaviour that implements the following "file-like" callbacks:

Currently, capsule only supports the Disk storage, although Memory is planned. But implementing your own storage is as easy as creating a module that quacks this way.

upload

Upload is a protocol consisting of the following two functions:

A storage uses this interface to figure how to extract the file data from a given struct and where to put it. Currently capsule only implements the upload protocol for the URI module, because URI is a standard lib. The following is the example of how you might implement the protocol for Plug.Upload:

defimpl Capsule.Upload, for: Plug.Upload do
  def contents(%{path: path}) do
    case File.read(path) do
      {:error, reason} -> {:error, "Could not read path: #{reason}"}
      success_tuple -> success_tuple
    end
  end

  def destination(%{filename: name}), do: name
end

obamaface.jpg

encapsulation

Encapsulations are the mediators between storages and uploads. They represent the result of putting an upload into a storage. However, they also implement the upload protocol themselves, which means moving a file from one storage to another is as easy as this:

old_busted_encapsulation = Disk.put(upload)

new_shiny_encapsulation = YourCoolStorage.put(encapsulation)

Note: you'll still need to take care of cleaning up the old file (or some poor async Task you probably underpay):

Disk.delete(old_busted_encapsulation)

That's it! Happy uploading.