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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T05:57:45+00:00 2026-05-12T05:57:45+00:00

I am uploading large files to an ASP.NET server using a standard HTML <input>

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I am uploading large files to an ASP.NET server using a standard HTML <input> control posting multipart-form data. This is an ASP.NET MVC application.

According to MSDN, the HttpPostedFile class buffers to disk out of the box:

“Files are uploaded in MIME
multipart/form-data format. By
default, all requests, including form
fields and uploaded files, larger than
256 KB are buffered to disk, rather
than held in server memory.”

I assume this means that when I access HttpPostedFileBase in my controller, that when I access the HttpPostedFileBase‘s InputStream property, I can write the file buffer somewhere without having to worry about the server running out of memory, which is obviously an unworkable solution.

Here’s a bit of pseudocode for how I’m handling each of the incoming files from HttpPostedFileBase.

for(var i = 0; i< Request.Files.Count;i++)
{
    var fileBase = Request.Files[i];
    if (fileBase.ContentLength == 0)
    {
        continue;
    }

    // One thread per file
    ThreadPool.QueueUserWorkItem(state =>
    {
        // Read from fileBase.InputStream
    }, 
    null);
}

My web.config’s httpRuntime block looks like this:

<httpRuntime
  executionTimeout="1200"
  requestLengthDiskThreshold="2097151"
  maxRequestLength="2097151"
  useFullyQualifiedRedirectUrl="false"
  minFreeThreads="8"
  minLocalRequestFreeThreads="4"
  appRequestQueueLimit="100" />

My implementation works, multiple files are uploaded as expected, except that the same amount of memory required to buffer the entire payload is consumed by the server. I have to assume that the InputStream is buffering everything. When I upload more files than I have memory, it predictably crashes with an OutOfMemoryException. Here’s an image of the memory spike when uploading an 800mb file.

alt text

I know I could use a Flash/Silverlight widget or write a custom HttpModule to intercept uploads and handle them myself, but the current requirement would work flawlessly if HttpPostedFile did what MSDN says it does (or I’m doing it wrong).

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T05:57:45+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 5:57 am

    why do you set

    requestLengthDiskThreshold="2097151"
    

    in the configuration? Doesn’t that force the server to keep all uploads in RAM rather than buffering to disk?

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