--- title: Web Workers --- Parsing and writing large spreadsheets takes time. During the process, if the SheetJS library is running in the web browser, the website may freeze. Workers provide a way to off-load the hard work so that the website does not freeze during processing. The work is still performed locally. No data is sent to a remote server. The following diagrams show the normal and Web Worker flows when exporting a dataset. The regions with a red background mark when the browser is frozen.
Normal ExportWeb Worker Export
```mermaid sequenceDiagram autonumber actor User participant Page User->>Page: click button rect rgba(255,0,0,.2) activate Page Note over Page: collect dataset Note over Page: generate workbook Note over Page: create file Note over Page: setup download end Page->>User: download workbook deactivate Page ``` ```mermaid sequenceDiagram autonumber actor User participant Page participant Worker User->>Page: click button rect rgba(255,0,0,.2) activate Page Note over Page: collect dataset Page->>Worker: transfer dataset end deactivate Page activate Worker Note over Worker: generate workbook Note over Worker: create file Note over Worker: setup download Worker->>Page: URL to download deactivate Worker activate Page Page->>User: download workbook deactivate Page ```
:::note Browser Compatibility IE10+ and modern browsers support basic Web Workers. Some APIs like `fetch` were added later. Feature testing is highly recommended. ::: :::info Inline Workers Due to limitations of the live code blocks, all of the workers in this section are in-line. The code is embedded in template literals. For production sites, typically workers are written in separate JS files.
Example (click to show) For example, an in-line worker like ```js const worker = new Worker(URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([`\ /* load standalone script from CDN */ importScripts("https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/package/dist/xlsx.full.min.js"); /* this callback will run once the main context sends a message */ self.addEventListener('message', (e) => { /* Pass the version string back */ postMessage({ version: XLSX.version }); }, false); `]))); ``` would typically be stored in a separate JS file like "worker.js": ```js title="worker.js" /* load standalone script from CDN */ importScripts("https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/package/dist/xlsx.full.min.js"); /* this callback will run once the main context sends a message */ self.addEventListener('message', (e) => { /* Pass the version string back */ postMessage({ version: XLSX.version }); }, false); ``` and the main script would pass a URL: ```js const worker = new Worker("./worker.js"); ```
::: ## Installation In all cases, `importScripts` in a Worker can load the [Standalone scripts](/docs/getting-started/installation/standalone) ```js importScripts("https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/package/dist/xlsx.full.min.js"); ``` For production use, it is highly encouraged to download and host the script.
ECMAScript Module Support (click to show) :::note Browser Compatibility ESM is supported in Web Workers in the Chromium family of browsers (including Chrome and Edge) as well as in browsers powered by WebKit (including Safari). For support in legacy browsers like Firefox, `importScripts` should be used. ::: ```js import * as XLSX from "https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/package/xlsx.mjs"; ``` When using modules, the script must be served with the correct MIME type and the Worker constructor must set the `type` option: ```js const worker_code = `\ /* load standalone script from CDN */ import * as XLSX from "https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/package/xlsx.mjs"; // ... do something with XLSX here ... `; const worker = new Worker( URL.createObjectURL( new Blob( [ worker_code ], // highlight-next-line { type: "text/javascript" } // second argument to the Blob constructor ) ), // highlight-next-line {type: "module"} // second argument to Worker constructor ); ```
## Downloading a Remote File :::note fetch in Web Workers `fetch` was enabled in Web Workers in Chrome 42 and Safari 10.3 ::: Typically the Web Worker performs the `fetch` operation, processes the workbook, and sends a final result (HTML table or raw data) to the main browser context: ```mermaid sequenceDiagram autonumber actor User participant Page participant Worker User->>Page: click button activate Page Page->>Worker: send URL deactivate Page activate Worker Note over Worker: fetch file Note over Worker: parse file Note over Worker: generate table Worker->>Page: HTML table deactivate Worker activate Page Note over Page: add to DOM Page->>User: table is visible deactivate Page ```
Live Demo (click to show) In the following example, the script: - downloads in a Web Worker - loads the SheetJS library and parses the file in the Worker - generates an HTML string of the first table in the Worker - sends the string to the main browser context - adds the HTML to the page in the main browser context ```jsx live function SheetJSFetchDLWorker() { const [__html, setHTML] = React.useState(""); return ( <>
); } ```
## Creating a Local File :::caution Writing files from Web Workers `XLSX.writeFile` will not work in Web Workers! Raw file data can be passed from the Web Worker to the main browser context for downloading. ::: Typically the Web Worker receives an array of JS objects, generates a workbook, and sends a URL to the main browser context for download: ```mermaid sequenceDiagram autonumber actor User participant Page participant Worker User->>Page: click button activate Page Note over Page: collect dataset Page->>Worker: transfer dataset deactivate Page activate Worker Note over Worker: generate workbook Note over Worker: create file Note over Worker: setup download Worker->>Page: URL to download deactivate Worker activate Page Page->>User: download workbook deactivate Page ```
Live Demo (click to show) In the following example, the script: - sends a dataset (array of JS objects) to the Web Worker - generates a workbook object in the Web Worker - generates a XLSB file using `XLSX.write` in the Web Worker - generates an object URL in the Web Worker - sends the object URL to the main browser context - performs a download action in the main browser context ```jsx live function SheetJSWriteFileWorker() { const [__html, setHTML] = React.useState(""); const data = [ { "SheetJS": "வணக்கம்", "in": "สวัสดี", "Web": "你好", "Workers": "가지마" }, { "SheetJS": 1, "in": 2, "Web": 3, "Workers": 4 }, ]; return ( <>
); } ```
## User-Submitted File :::note FileReaderSync Typically `FileReader` is used in the main browser context. In Web Workers, the synchronous version `FileReaderSync` is more efficient. ::: Typically the Web Worker receives a file pointer, reads and parses the file, and sends a final result (HTML table or raw data) to the main browser context: ```mermaid sequenceDiagram autonumber actor User participant Page participant Worker User->>Page: click button activate Page Page->>Worker: send URL deactivate Page activate Worker Note over Worker: fetch file Note over Worker: parse file Note over Worker: generate table Worker->>Page: HTML table deactivate Worker activate Page Note over Page: add to DOM Page->>User: table is visible deactivate Page ```
Live Demo (click to show) In the following example, when a file is dropped over the DIV or when the INPUT element is used to select a file, the script: - sends the `File` object to the Web Worker - loads the SheetJS library and parses the file in the Worker - generates an HTML string of the first table in the Worker - sends the string to the main browser context - adds the HTML to the page in the main browser context ```jsx live function SheetJSDragDropWorker() { const [__html, setHTML] = React.useState(""); /* suppress default behavior for drag and drop */ function suppress(e) { e.stopPropagation(); e.preventDefault(); } /* this worker is shared between drag-drop and file input element */ const worker = new Worker(URL.createObjectURL(new Blob([`\ /* load standalone script from CDN */ importScripts("https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-latest/package/dist/xlsx.full.min.js"); /* this callback will run once the main context sends a message */ self.addEventListener('message', (e) => { try { /* Read file data */ const ab = new FileReaderSync().readAsArrayBuffer(e.data.file); /* Parse file */ const wb = XLSX.read(ab, {dense: true}); const ws = wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]; /* Generate HTML */ const html = XLSX.utils.sheet_to_html(ws); /* Reply with result */ postMessage({ html }); } catch(e) { /* Pass the error message back */ postMessage({html: String(e.message || e).bold() }); } }, false); `]))); /* when the worker sends back the HTML, add it to the DOM */ worker.onmessage = function(e) { setHTML(e.data.html); }; return ( <>
{ suppress(e); /* post a message with the first File to the worker */ worker.postMessage({ file: e.dataTransfer.files[0] }); }}>Drag a file to this DIV to process! (or use the file input)
{ suppress(e); /* post a message with the first File to the worker */ worker.postMessage({ file: e.target.files[0] }); }}/>
); } ```
## Streaming Write A more general discussion, including row-oriented processing demos, is included in the ["Large Datasets"](/docs/demos/stream#browser) demo. `XLSX.stream.to_csv` incrementally generates CSV rows. #### File System Access API :::warning Browser Compatibility At the time of writing, the File System Access API is only available in Chromium and Chromium-based browsers like Chrome and Edge. ::: :::caution Performance In local testing, committing each CSV row as it is generated is significantly slower than accumulating and writing once at the end. When the target CSV is known to be less than 500MB, it is preferable to batch. Strings larger than 500M may hit browser length limits. ::: ```mermaid sequenceDiagram autonumber actor User participant Page participant Worker User->>Page: click button activate Page Page->>User: seek permission User->>Page: grant permission Note over Page: collect dataset Page->>Worker: transfer dataset deactivate Page activate Worker Note over Worker: setup stream Worker->>User: start download loop every 100 rows Note over Worker: generate rows Worker->>User: write rows to file (without freezing) Worker->>Page: progress message activate Page Page->>User: display progress deactivate Page end Worker->>User: finish download Worker->>Page: send competion message deactivate Worker activate Page Page->>User: download complete deactivate Page ```
Live Demo (click to show) The following live demo fetches and parses a file in a Web Worker. The script: - prompts user to save file (`window.showSaveFilePicker` in the main thread) - passes the URL and the file object to the Web Worker - loads the SheetJS library in the Web Worker - fetches the requested URL and parses the workbook from the Worker - creates a Writable Stream from the file object. - uses `XLSX.stream.to_csv` to generate CSV rows of the first worksheet + every 100th row, a progress message is sent back to the main thread + at the end, a completion message is sent back to the main thread The demo has a checkbox. If it is not checked (default), the Worker will collect each CSV row and write once at the end. If it is checked, the Worker will try to commit each row as it is generated. The demo also has a URL input box. Feel free to change the URL. For example: `https://raw.githubusercontent.com/SheetJS/test_files/master/large_strings.xls` is an XLS file over 50 MB. The generated CSV file is about 55 MB. `https://raw.githubusercontent.com/SheetJS/libreoffice_test-files/master/calc/xlsx-import/perf/8-by-300000-cells.xlsx` is an XLSX file with 300000 rows (approximately 20 MB) yielding a CSV of 10 MB. ```jsx live function SheetJSFetchCSVStreamFile() { const [state, setState] = React.useState(""); const [__html, setHTML] = React.useState(""); const [cnt, setCnt] = React.useState(0); const [hz, setHz] = React.useState(0); const [url, setUrl] = React.useState("https://oss.sheetjs.com/test_files/large_strings.xlsx"); const ref = React.useRef(null); return ( <> URL: setUrl(e.target.value)} size="80"/>
Commit each row:
State: {state}
Count: {cnt} ({hz|0} Hz)
   );
}
```