Description
I've been testing how files coming from the OS get exposed as File
objects, and in particular how filenames that aren't in the OS's default encoding get mapped to the name
property.
In Windows systems, filenames are sequences of UTF-16 code units (not UTF-16 encoded text, as is sometimes claimed, because the system APIs don't check for lone surrogates), and as expected, they directly map to a DOMString
. An initial BOM doesn't get removed. There doesn't seem to be any browser differences here.
In Unix systems (tested on Fedora Linux; my understanding is all other modern Unix variants/distros work the same), filenames are byte sequences, which are usually taken to be UTF-8. Here's how the various browsers behave on them:
- Firefox does the equivalent of UTF-8 decode without BOM, decoding bytes which aren't valid UTF-8 as a replacement character.
- WebKit does the equivalent of UTF-8 decode without BOM or fail, and handles failures by returning a
File
object with the empty string as filename, empty contents, and MIME typeapplication/octet-stream
instead. The language aroundname
in the spec might allow for an empty string to substitute a filename that cannot be decoded, but it doesn't allow the content to be dropped. Note that the resultingFile
object is identical to theFile
object that HTML's "construct the entry list" creates when a file input has no selected files. - Chrome also does the equivalent of UTF-8 decode without BOM or fail, except that for file inputs, any file whose filename isn't UTF-8 gets dropped from the selection. For drag and drop, Chrome behaves the same as WebKit.
Since it doesn't seem good to drop files or replace them by an empty file, even when their filenames don't match the OS's conventions, it seems like it would be best to agree on Firefox's behavior.