/excel-streaming-reader

An easy-to-use implementation of a streaming Excel reader using Apache POI

Primary LanguageJavaApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

Run Status

Excel Streaming Reader

If you've used Apache POI in the past to read in Excel files, you probably noticed that it's not very memory efficient. Reading in an entire workbook will cause a severe memory usage spike, which can wreak havoc on a server.

There are plenty of good reasons for why Apache has to read in the whole workbook, but most of them have to do with the fact that the library allows you to read and write with random addresses. If (and only if) you just want to read the contents of an Excel file in a fast and memory effecient way, you probably don't need this ability. Unfortunately, the only thing in the POI library for reading a streaming workbook requires your code to use a SAX-like parser. All of the friendly classes like Row and Cell are missing from that API.

This library serves as a wrapper around that streaming API while preserving the syntax of the standard POI API. Read on to see if it's right for you.

Important! Read first!

This README is for the newly minted 1.0.0 version. You may be looking for the old version's documentation or code, which you can still find in the 0.2.x branch. The 0.2.x branch will have important bugfixes backported to it going forward, but new features will not be (apart from any exceptional circumstances).

The 1.x versions include a new API that allows users to interact with POI Workbooks and Sheets in a streaming fashion. The new API is mostly backwards compatible with the 0.2 version, with a slight difference:

0.2.x

InputStream is = new FileInputStream(new File("/path/to/workbook.xlsx"));
StreamingReader reader = StreamingReader.builder()
        .rowCacheSize(100)    // number of rows to keep in memory (defaults to 10)
        .bufferSize(4096)     // buffer size to use when reading InputStream to file (defaults to 1024)
        .sheetIndex(0)        // index of sheet to use (defaults to 0)
        .sheetName("sheet1")  // name of sheet to use (overrides sheetIndex)
        .read(is);            // InputStream or File for XLSX file (required)

1.x

InputStream is = new FileInputStream(new File("/path/to/workbook.xlsx"));
Workbook workbook = StreamingReader.builder()
        .rowCacheSize(100)    // number of rows to keep in memory (defaults to 10)
        .bufferSize(4096)     // buffer size to use when reading InputStream to file (defaults to 1024)
        .open(is);            // InputStream or File for XLSX file (required)

In the interests of easing the transition from the old API, the 0.2.x method will still work, however it is marked deprecated and will be removed in a future release. If it's at all possible, please update your code to use the 1.x API.

Include

This library is available from from Maven Central, and you can optionally install it yourself. The Maven installation instructions can be found on the release page.

To use it, add this to your POM:

<dependencies>
  <dependency>
    <groupId>com.monitorjbl</groupId>
    <artifactId>xlsx-streamer</artifactId>
    <version>1.2.0</version>
  </dependency>
</dependencies>  

Usage

This library is very specific in how it is meant to be used. You should initialize it like so:

import com.monitorjbl.xlsx.StreamingReader;

InputStream is = new FileInputStream(new File("/path/to/workbook.xlsx"));
Workbook workbook = StreamingReader.builder()
        .rowCacheSize(100)    // number of rows to keep in memory (defaults to 10)
        .bufferSize(4096)     // buffer size to use when reading InputStream to file (defaults to 1024)
        .open(is);            // InputStream or File for XLSX file (required)

Once you've done this, you can then iterate through the rows and cells like so:

for (Sheet sheet : workbook){
  System.out.println(sheet.getSheetName());
  for (Row r : sheet) {
    for (Cell c : r) {
      System.out.println(c.getStringCellValue());
    }
  }
}

Or open a sheet by name or index:

Sheet sheet = workbook.getSheet("My Sheet")

The StreamingWorkbook is an autoclosable resource, and it's important that you close it to free the filesystem resource it consumed. With Java 7, you can do this:

try (
  InputStream is = new FileInputStream(new File("/path/to/workbook.xlsx"));
  Workbook workbook = StreamingReader.builder()
          .rowCacheSize(100)
          .bufferSize(4096)
          .open(is)) {
  for (Sheet sheet : workbook){
    System.out.println(sheet.getSheetName());
    for (Row r : sheet) {
      for (Cell c : r) {
        System.out.println(c.getStringCellValue());
      }
    }
  }
}

You may access cells randomly within a row, as the entire row is cached. However, there is no way to randomly access rows. As this is a streaming implementation, only a small number of rows are kept in memory at any given time.

Supported Methods

Not all POI Cell and Row functions are supported. The most basic ones are (Cell.getStringCellValue(), Cell.getColumnIndex(), etc.), but don't be surprised if you get a NotSupportedException on the more advanced ones.

I'll try to add more support as time goes on, but some items simply can't be read in a streaming fashion. Methods that require dependent values will not have said dependencies available at the point in the stream in which they are read.

This is a brief and very generalized list of things that are not supported for reads:

  • Functions
  • Macros
  • Styled cells (the styles are kept at the end of the ZIP file)

Logging

This library uses SLF4j logging. This is a rare use case, but you can plug in your logging provider and get some potentially useful output. Below is an example of doing this with log4j:

pom.xml

<dependencies>
  <dependency>
    <groupId>com.monitorjbl</groupId>
    <artifactId>xlsx-streamer</artifactId>
    <version>1.2.0</version>
  </dependency>
  <dependency>
    <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId>
    <artifactId>slf4j-log4j12</artifactId>
    <version>1.7.6</version>
  </dependency>
  <dependency>
    <groupId>log4j</groupId>
    <artifactId>log4j</artifactId>
    <version>1.2.17</version>
  </dependency>
</dependencies>

log4j.properties

log4j.rootLogger=DEBUG, A1
log4j.appender.A1=org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender
log4j.appender.A1.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.A1.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{ISO8601} [%c] %p: %m%n

log4j.category.com.monitorjbl=DEBUG

Implementation Details

This library will take a provided InputStream and output it to the file system. The stream is piped safely through a configurable-sized buffer to prevent large usage of memory. Once the file is created, it is then streamed into memory from the file system.

The reason for needing the stream being outputted in this manner has to do with how ZIP files work. Because the XLSX file format is basically a ZIP file, it's not possible to find all of the entries without reading the entire InputStream.

This is a problem that can't really be gotten around for POI, as it needs a complete list of ZIP entries. The default implementation of reading from an InputStream in POI is to read the entire stream directly into memory. This library works by reading out the stream into a temporary file. As part of the auto-close action, the temporary file is deleted.

If you need more control over how the file is created/disposed of, there is an option to initialize the library with a java.io.File. This file will not be written to or removed:

File f = new File("/path/to/workbook.xlsx");
Workbook workbook = StreamingReader.builder()
        .rowCacheSize(100)    
        .bufferSize(4096)     
        .open(f);

This library will ONLY work with XLSX files. The older XLS format is not capable of being streamed.