Upload control with signed uploads
Signed uploads allow you to control who can upload files to your Uploadcare
project and when. You need to generate a
signature
on your backend, and a trusted user should use this signature
to upload a new file. It works with both File Uploader,
jQuery File Uploader, and Upload API.
Turning signed uploads on
Signed uploads can be turned on and off to an Uploadcare project, because it has a dedicated storage, Public and Private keys, and security settings.
- Go to your Dashboard and select an existing project or create a new one.
- Click Enable next to Signed Uploads in the uploading settings.
From now on, every request to Upload API should include a signature
part.
However, you’ll still be able to upload files to your project via the Dashboard.
Signature generation
The signature
string sent along with your upload request.
To generate it, you need the secret key of your Uploadcare project,
which you can get from the API keys section.
The signature
is an HMAC/SHA256 with two parameters:
YOUR_SECRET_KEY
— a generated key.expire
— an expiration time message (string).
Here’s how to make the signature
on your backend:
JavaScript
NodeJS
Python
Ruby
Elixir
Expiration
The expire
string sets the expiration date and time or duration for a
signature
. It has a Unix time format.
The expire
function in the Python example above adds a certain duration after
the generation time. In this case, 30 minutes:
Signed upload example
To generate a signed upload, you need to pass 3 parameters:
YOUR_PUBLIC_KEY
signature
expire
Request:
Response:
To work with File Uploader, specify the secure signature and secure expire options.
To work with jQuery File Uploader, specify respective secure signature and secure expire options.
Possible errors
Both signature
and an active expire
are required for every upload request
and should be valid. The list of possible errors:
If expire
is not a valid Unix timestamp:
If your signature
has expired, i.e., expire < now
:
If signature
is incorrect: