Browser event when downloaded file is saved to disk
This is a good solution:
http://gruffcode.com/2010/10/28/detecting-the-file-download-dialog-in-the-browser/
It basically works by setting a cookie in the reponse header of the downloaded file, so javascript periodically can check for the existence of this cookie...
There's no such browser event in JavaScript and even if there was you can not trust the user's browser to provide security for you.
You're better off using a GUID to generate a unique URL for each download. You can then for example:
- let the URL be valid only for a specific time period
- allow transfers only from a specific IP address associated with the unique URL
- let your server-side code detect when the content for a unique URL has been fully transferred and then invalidate the URL.
Let me clarify the last bullet. Say you're using Java - you will in.read(buffer)
and out.write(buffer)
in a loop until EOF. If the client disconnects you will receive an IOException
during out.write()
and will be able to tell a successful download from an interrupted one. On other platforms, I'm sure there are ways to tell whether the connection was lost or not.
EDIT: You could actually fire a browser event using the trick outlined in the accepted answer of one of the questions you linked to. That would however not be a reliable solution to limit the number of downloads.