You have to use the HTTP header "Content-Disposition" and 'Content-Type: application/force-download' which will force browser to download the content instead of displaying it there.
Depending upon the server side language you are having the implementation differs. In case of
PHP:
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="'.$nameOfFile.'"');
will do the job for you.
Ofcourse to simplify and generalize this for all your files, you may need to write a method which will route a link to downloadable content.
The link you can show in the html will be like:
<a href="http://yoursite.com/downloadFile?id=1234">Click here to Download Hello.mp4</a>
And in the server side, you need a script which is being called on /downloadFile (depending on your routing), get the file by id and send it to user as an attachment.
<?php
$fileId = $_POST['id'];
// so for url http://yoursite.com/downloadFile?id=1234 will download file
// /pathToVideoFolder/1234.mp4
$filePath = "/pathToVideoFolder/".$fileId."mp4";
$fileName = $fileId."mp4"; //or a name from database like getFilenameForID($id)
//Assume that $filename and $filePath are correclty set.
header('Content-Description: File Transfer');
header('Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="'.$filename.'"');
header('Content-Type: application/force-download');
readfile($filePath);
Here 'Content-Type: application/force-download' will force the browser to show the download option no matter what's the default setting is for a mime-type.
No matter what your server side technology is, the headers to look out for are:
'Content-Description: File Transfer'
'Content-Type: application/force-download'
'Content-Disposition: attachment; filename="myfile.mp4"
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