PmWiki includes a script called upload.php that allows users to upload files to the wiki server using a web browser. Uploaded files (also called attachments) can then be easily accessed using markup within wiki pages. This page describes how to install and configure the upload feature.
PmWiki takes a somewhat, but justifiable, paranoid stance when it comes to the uploads feature. Thus, the default settings for uploads tend to try to restrict the feature as much as possible:
This way the potential damage is limited until/unless the wiki administrator explicitly relaxes the restrictions.
Keep in mind that letting users (anonymously!) upload files to your web server does entail some amount of risk. The upload.php script has been designed to reduce the hazards, but wiki administrators should be aware that the potential for vulnerabilities exist, and that misconfiguration of the upload utility could lead to unwanted consequences.
By default, authorized users are able to overwrite files that have already been uploaded, without the possibility of restoring the previous version of the file. If you want to disallow users from being able to overwrite files that have already been uploaded, add the following line to config.php:
$EnableUploadOverwrite = 0;
Alternatively, an administrator can keep older versions of uploads.
An administrator can also configure PmWiki so the password mechanism controls access to uploaded files.
The upload.php script is automatically included from stdconfig.php if the $EnableUpload variable is true in config.php. In addition, config.php can set the $UploadDir and $UploadUrlFmt variables to specify the local directory where uploaded files should be stored, and the URL that can be used to access that directory. By default, $UploadDir and $UploadUrlFmt assume that uploads will be stored in a directory called uploads/ within the current directory (usually the one containing pmwiki.php). In addition, config.php should also set a default upload password (see PasswordsAdmin).
Thus, a basic config.php for uploads might look like:
<?php if (!defined('PmWiki')) exit(); ## Enable uploads and set a site-wide default upload password. $EnableUpload = 1; $UploadPermAdd = 0; $DefaultPasswords['upload'] = pmcrypt('secret');
If you have edit passwords and wish to allow all users with edit rights to upload, instead of $DefaultPasswords['upload'], you can set $
HandleAuth['upload'] = 'edit'; in config.php.
Important: do NOT create the uploads directory yet! See the next paragraph.
You may also need to explicitly set which filesystem directory will hold uploads and provide a URL that corresponds to that directory like:
$UploadDir = "/home/foobar/public_html/uploads"; $UploadUrlFmt = "https://example.com/~foobar/uploads";
Note: In most installations, you don't need to define or change these variables, usually PmWiki can detect them (and if you do, uploads may simply not work).
Uploads can be configured site-wide, by-group (default), or by-page by changing $UploadPrefixFmt in config.php
.
This determines whether all uploads go in one directory for the site, an individual directory for each group, or an individual directory for each page. The default is to organize upload by group.
It is recommended that the $UploadPrefixFmt variable defined in config.php is the same for all pages in the wiki, and not different in group or page local configuration files. Otherwise you will be unable to link to attachments in other wikigroups.
For site-wide uploads, use
$UploadPrefixFmt = '';
To organize uploads by page, use:
$UploadPrefixFmt = '/$Group/$Name';
You may prefer uploads attached per-page rather than per-group or per-site if you plan to have many files attached to individual pages. This setting simplifies the management of picture galleries for example. (In a page, you can always link to attachments to other pages.)
For the upload feature to work properly, the directory given by $UploadDir must be writable by the web server process, and it usually must be in a location that is accessible to the web somewhere (e.g., in a subdirectory of public_html). Executing PmWiki with uploads enabled will prompt you with the set of steps required to create the uploads directory on your server (it differs from one server to the next). Note that in that case you may be required to explicitly create writable group- or page-specific subdirectories as well!
Once the upload feature is enabled, users can access the upload form by adding "?action=upload
" to the end of a normal PmWiki URL. The user will be prompted for an upload password similar to the way other pages ask for passwords (see Passwords and PasswordsAdmin for information about setting passwords on pages, groups, and the entire site).
Another way to access the upload form is to insert the markup "Attach:filename.ext
" into an existing page, where filename.ext
is the name of a new file to be uploaded. When the page is displayed, a '?-link' will be added to the end of the markup to take the author to the upload page. (See Uploads for syntax variations.)
By default, PmWiki will organize the uploaded files into separate subdirectories for each group. This can be changed by modifying the $UploadPrefixFmt variable. See Cookbook:UploadGroups for details.
PmWiki does not manage versioning of uploaded files by default. However, by setting $EnableUploadVersions=1;
an administrator can have older versions of uploads preserved in the uploads directory along with the most recent version.
Uploads can be enabled only for specific groups or pages by using a group customization. Simply set $EnableUpload=1;
for those groups or pages where uploading is to be enabled; alternately, set $EnableUpload=1;
in the config.php file and then set $EnableUpload=0;
in the per-group or per-page customization files where uploads are to be disabled.
Uploads can be restricted to an overall size limit for groups. In the group configuration file (i.e., local/Group.php), add the line
$UploadPrefixQuota = 1000000; # limit group uploads to 1000KB (1MB)
This will limit the total size of uploads for that group to 1000KB --any upload that pushes the total over the limit will be rejected with an error message. This value defaults to zero (unlimited).
Uploads can also be restricted to an overall size limit for all uploads. Add the line
$UploadDirQuota = 10000000; # limit total uploads to 10000KB (10MB)
This will limit the total size of uploads for the whole wiki to 10000KB --any upload that pushes the total over the limit will be rejected with an error message. This value defaults to zero (unlimited).
The upload script performs a number of verifications on an uploaded file before storing it in the upload directory. The basic verifications are described below.
.gif
", ".jpeg
", ".doc
", etc. are allowed to be uploaded to the web server. This is vitally important for server security, since the web server might attempt to execute or specially process files with extensions like ".php
", ".cgi
", etc.
$UploadMaxSize = 100000;
However, the default maximum file size can also be specified for each type of file uploaded. Thus, an administrator can restrict ".gif
" and ".jpeg
" files to 20K, ".doc
" files to 200K, and all others to the size given by $UploadMaxSize. The $UploadExtSize array is used to determine which file extensions are valid and the maximum upload size (in bytes) for each file type. For example:
$UploadExtSize['gif'] = 20000; # limit .gif files to 20KB
Setting an entry to zero disables file uploads of that type altogether:
$UploadExtSize['zip'] = 0; # disallow .zip files $UploadExtSize[''] = 0; # disallow files with no extension
You can limit which types of files are uploadable by disabling all defaults and specifying only desired types. Setting the variable $UploadMaxSize to zero will disable all default file types. Individual file types may then be enabled by setting their maximum size with the variable $UploadExtSize.
# turns off all upload extensions $UploadMaxSize = 0; # enable only these file types for uploading $aSize=100000; // 100 KB file size limitation $UploadExtSize['jpg' ] = $aSize; $UploadExtSize['gif' ] = $aSize; $UploadExtSize['png' ] = $aSize;
Some installations with the Apache server will try to execute a file which name contains ".php", ".pl" or ".cgi" even if it isn't the last part of the filename. For example, a file named "test.php.txt" may be executed. To disallow such files to be uploaded, add to config.php such a line:
$UploadBlacklist = array('.php', '.pl', '.cgi');
To add a new extension to the list of allowed upload types, add a line like the following to a local customization file:
$UploadExts['ext'] = 'content-type';
where ext is the extension to be added, and content-type is the "MIME type", or content-type (which you may find at IANA or the internet media types) to be used for files with that extension. For example, to add the 'dxf
' extension with a Content-Type of 'image/x-dxf
', place the line
$UploadExts['dxf'] = 'image/x-dxf';
Each entry in $UploadExts needs to be the extension and the mime-type associated with that extension, thus:
$UploadExts = array( 'gif' => 'image/gif', 'jpeg' => 'image/jpeg', 'jpg' => 'image/jpeg', 'png' => 'image/png', 'xxx' => 'yyyy/zzz' );
For the types that PmWiki already knows about it's not necessary to repeat them here (the upload.php script adds PmWiki's defaults to whatever the administrator supplies). See also Cookbook:UploadTypes for additional types.
There are other factors involved that affect upload file sizes. In Apache 2.4, there is a LimitRequestBody directive that controls the maximum size of anything that is posted (including file uploads). Apache has this defaulted to unlimited size. However, some Linux distributions (e.g., Red Hat Linux) limit postings to 512K so this may need to be changed or increased. (Normally these settings are in an httpd.conf configuration file or in a file in /etc/httpd/conf.d.)
Problem noted on Red Hat 8.0/9.0 with Apache 2.0.x, the error "Requested content-length of 670955 is larger than the configured limit of 524288" was occurring under Apache and a "Page not found" would appear in the browser. Trying the above settings made no change with PHP, but on Red Hat 8.0/9.0 there is an additional PHP config file, /etc/httpd/conf.d/php.conf, and increasing the number on the line "LimitRequestBody 524288" solves the issue.
PHP itself has two limits on file uploads (usually located in /etc/php.ini
). The first is the upload_max_filesize
parameter, which is set to 2MB by default. The second is post_max_size
, which is set to 6MB by default.
With the variables in place--PmWiki's maximum file size, Apache's request-size limits, and the PHP file size parameters, the maximum uploaded file size will be the smallest of the three variables.
Setting a read password for pages (and groups) will prevent an attached file from being seen or accessed through the page, but to prevent direct access to the file location (the uploads/ directory) one can do the following:
$EnableDirectDownload=0
;
$
EnableUploadGroupAuth = 1;
See Cookbook:Secure attachments
file_uploads = On
upload_tmp_dir = /tmp
Note that if you change this values, httpd must generally be restarted. Another way to check if uploads are allowed by the server is to set $EnableDiag to 1 in config.php, and set ?action=phpinfo on a URL. The "file_uploads
" variable must have a value of 1 (if it says "no value
", that means it's off).
How do I disable uploading of a certain type of file?
Here's an example of what to add to your local/config.php file to disable uploading of .zip files, or of files with no extension:
$UploadExtSize['zip'] = 0; # Disallow uploading .zip files $UploadExtSize[''] = 0; # Disallow files with no extension
How do I attach uploads to individual pages or the entire site, instead of organizing them by wiki group?
Use the $UploadPrefixFmt variable (see also the Cookbook:UploadGroups recipe).
$UploadPrefixFmt = '/$FullName'; # per-page, in Group.Name directories $UploadPrefixFmt = '/$Group/$Name'; # per-page, in Group directories with Name subdirectories $UploadPrefixFmt = ''; # site-wide
For $UploadDirQuota - can you provide some units and numbers? Is the specification in bytes or bits? What is the number for 100K? 1 Meg? 1 Gig? 1 Terabyte?
Units are in bytes.
$UploadDirQuota = 100*1024; # limit uploads to 100KiB $UploadDirQuota = 1000*1024; # limit uploads to 1000KiB $UploadDirQuota = 1024*1024; # limit uploads to 1MiB $UploadDirQuota = 25*1024*1024; # limit uploads to 25MiB $UploadDirQuota = 2*1024*1024*1024; # limit uploads to 2GiB
Is there a way to allow file names with Unicode or additional characters?
Yes, see $UploadNameChars
Where is the list of attachments stored?
It is generated on the fly by the markup.
Downloading binary files such as pictures or ZIP archives with $EnableDirectDownload=0;
sometimes results in corrupted files, why?
Some recipe or local configuration may output something before the file. This may happen if you have PHP files with a closing "?>" marker at the end, and some text or white space after it. It is recommended to remove these closing markers from your local and cookbook files.
Alternatively, there may be some PHP warning or message before the file data. On Unix-like systems you can peek into the file with the command less -f -L file.ext
and see the first few characters or lines. See Troubleshooting on how to track the source for the errors/warnings.
This page may have a more recent version on pmwiki.org: PmWiki:UploadsAdmin, and a talk page: PmWiki:UploadsAdmin-Talk.