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Sharing Sheets with Hermes | C++ + Hermes | Process structured data in C++ programs. Seamlessly integrate spreadsheets into your program by pairing Hermes and SheetJS. Handle the most complex files without breaking a sweat. | demos/bigdata/index | solutions/input |
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Hermes is an embeddable JS engine written in C++.
SheetJS is a JavaScript library for reading and writing data from spreadsheets.
This demo uses Hermes and SheetJS to pull data from a spreadsheet and print CSV rows. We'll explore how to load SheetJS in a Hermes context and process spreadsheets from a C++ program.
The "Integration Example" section includes a complete command-line tool for reading data from files.
Integration Details
:::info pass
Many Hermes functions are not documented. The explanation was verified against
commit 15b323d
.
:::
:::danger pass
The main target for Hermes is React Native. At the time of writing, there was no official documentation for embedding the Hermes engine in C++ programs.
:::
Initialize Hermes
A Hermes engine instance is created with facebook::hermes::makeHermesRuntime
:
std::unique_ptr<facebook::jsi::Runtime> rt(facebook::hermes::makeHermesRuntime());
Essential Objects
Hermes does not expose a console
or global
variable, but they can be
synthesized from JS code in the runtime:
global
can be obtained from a reference tothis
in an unbound function:
/* create global object */
var global = (function(){ return this; }).call(null);
console.log
can be constructed from the builtinprint
function:
/* create a fake `console` from the hermes `print` builtin */
var console = { log: function(x) { print(x); } };
The code can be stored in a C string and evaluated using prepareJavascript
to
prepare code and evaluatePreparedJavascript
to evaluate:
const char *init_code =
/* create global object */
"var global = (function(){ return this; }).call(null);"
/* create a fake `console` from the hermes `print` builtin */
"var console = { log: function(x) { print(x); } };"
;
auto src = std::make_shared<facebook::jsi::StringBuffer>(init_code);
auto js = rt->prepareJavaScript(src, std::string("<eval>"));
rt->evaluatePreparedJavaScript(js);
:::info Exception handling
Standard C++ exception handling patterns are used in Hermes integration code.
The base class for Hermes exceptions is facebook::jsi::JSIException
:
try {
const char *init_code = "...";
auto src = std::make_shared<facebook::jsi::StringBuffer>(init_code);
auto js = rt->prepareJavaScript(src, std::string("<eval>"));
rt->evaluatePreparedJavaScript(js);
} catch (const facebook::jsi::JSIException &e) {
std::cerr << "JavaScript exception: " << e.what() << std::endl;
return 1;
}
:::
Load SheetJS Scripts
SheetJS Standalone scripts can be parsed and evaluated in a Hermes context.
The main library can be loaded by reading the script from the file system and evaluating in the Hermes context.
:::note pass
There are nonstandard tricks to embed the entire script in the binary. There are
language proposals such as #embed
(mirroring the same feature in C23).
For simplicity, the examples read the script file from the filesystem.
:::
Reading scripts from the filesystem
For the purposes of this demo, the standard C <stdio.h>
methods are used:
static char *read_file(const char *filename, size_t *sz) {
FILE *f = fopen(filename, "rb");
if(!f) return NULL;
long fsize; { fseek(f, 0, SEEK_END); fsize = ftell(f); fseek(f, 0, SEEK_SET); }
char *buf = (char *)malloc(fsize * sizeof(char));
*sz = fread((void *) buf, 1, fsize, f);
fclose(f);
return buf;
}
// ...
/* read SheetJS library from filesystem */
size_t sz; char *xlsx_full_min_js = read_file("xlsx.full.min.js", &sz);
:::caution pass
For Windows applications, the string must be null-terminated:
/* Hermes-Windows requires the null terminator */
static char *read_file_null(const char *filename, size_t *sz) {
FILE *f = fopen(filename, "rb");
if(!f) return NULL;
long fsize; { fseek(f, 0, SEEK_END); fsize = ftell(f) + 1; fseek(f, 0, SEEK_SET); }
char *buf = (char *)malloc(fsize * sizeof(char));
*sz = fread((void *) buf, 1, fsize, f);
buf[fsize - 1] = 0;
fclose(f);
return buf;
}
// ...
/* read SheetJS library from filesystem */
size_t sz; char *xlsx_full_min_js = read_file_null("xlsx.full.min.js", &sz);
:::
Hermes Wrapper
Hermes does not provide a friendly way to prepare JavaScript code stored in a standard heap-allocated C string. Fortunately a wrapper can be created:
/* Unfortunately the library provides no C-friendly Buffer classes */
class CBuffer : public facebook::jsi::Buffer {
public:
CBuffer(const uint8_t *data, size_t size) : buf(data), sz(size) {}
size_t size() const override { return sz; }
const uint8_t *data() const override { return buf; }
private:
const uint8_t *buf;
size_t sz;
};
// ...
/* load SheetJS library */
auto src = std::make_shared<CBuffer>(CBuffer((uint8_t *)xlsx_full_min_js, sz));
Evaluating SheetJS Library Code
The code wrapper can be "prepared" with prepareJavascript
and "evaluated" with
evaluatePreparedJavascript
.
The second argument to preparedJavascript
is a C++ std::string
that holds
the source URL. Typically a name like xlsx.full.min.js
helps distinguish
SheetJS library exceptions from other parts of the application.
auto js = rt->prepareJavaScript(src, std::string("xlsx.full.min.js"));
rt->evaluatePreparedJavaScript(js);
Testing
If the library is loaded, XLSX.version
will be a string. This string can be
pulled into the main C++ program.
The evaluatePreparedJavascript
method returns a facebook::jsi::Value
object
that represents the result:
/* evaluate XLSX.version and capture the result */
auto src = std::make_shared<facebook::jsi::StringBuffer>("XLSX.version");
auto js = rt->prepareJavaScript(src, std::string("<eval>"));
facebook::jsi::Value jsver = rt->evaluatePreparedJavaScript(js);
The getString
method extracts the string value and returns an internal string
object (facebook::jsi::String
). Given that string object, the utf8
method
returns a proper C++ std::string
that can be printed:
/* pull the version string into C++ code and print */
facebook::jsi::String jsstr = jsver.getString(*rt);
std::string cppver = jsstr.utf8(*rt);
std::cout << "SheetJS version " << cppver << std::endl;
Reading Files
Typically C++ code will read files and Hermes will project the data in the JS
engine as an ArrayBuffer
. SheetJS libraries can parse ArrayBuffer
data.
Standard SheetJS operations can pick the first worksheet and generate CSV string
data from the worksheet. Hermes provides methods to convert the JS strings back
to std::string
objects for further processing in C++.
:::note pass
It is strongly recommended to create a stub function to perform the entire workflow in JS code and pass the final result back to C++.
:::
Hermes Wrapper
Hermes supports ArrayBuffer
but has no simple helper to read raw memory.
Libraries are expected to implement MutableBuffer
:
/* ArrayBuffer constructor expects MutableBuffer */
class CMutableBuffer : public facebook::jsi::MutableBuffer {
public:
CMutableBuffer(uint8_t *data, size_t size) : buf(data), sz(size) {}
size_t size() const override { return sz; }
uint8_t *data() override { return buf; }
private:
uint8_t *buf;
size_t sz;
};
A facebook::jsi::ArrayBuffer
object can be created using the wrapper:
/* load payload as ArrayBuffer */
size_t sz; char *data = read_file("pres.xlsx", &sz);
auto payload = std::make_shared<CMutableBuffer>(CMutableBuffer((uint8_t *)data, sz));
auto ab = facebook::jsi::ArrayBuffer(*rt, payload);
SheetJS Operations
In this example, the goal is to pull the first worksheet and generate CSV rows.
XLSX.read
1 parses the ArrayBuffer
and returns a SheetJS workbook object:
var wb = XLSX.read(buf);
The SheetNames
property2 is an array of the sheet names in the workbook.
The first sheet name can be obtained with the following JS snippet:
var first_sheet_name = wb.SheetNames[0];
The Sheets
property3 is an object whose keys are sheet names and whose
corresponding values are worksheet objects.
var first_sheet = wb.Sheets[first_sheet_name];
The sheet_to_csv
utility function4 generates a CSV string from the sheet:
var csv = XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv(first_sheet);
C++ integration code
:::note pass
The stub function will be passed an ArrayBuffer
object:
function(buf) {
/* `buf` will be an ArrayBuffer */
var wb = XLSX.read(buf);
return XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]);
}
:::
The result after evaluating the stub is a facebook::jsi::Value
object:
/* define stub function to read and convert first sheet to CSV */
auto src = std::make_shared<facebook::jsi::StringBuffer>(
"(function(buf) {"
"var wb = XLSX.read(buf);"
"return XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]);"
"})"
);
auto js = rt->prepareJavaScript(src, std::string("<eval>"));
facebook::jsi::Value funcval = rt->evaluatePreparedJavaScript(js);
To call this function, the opaque Value
must be converted to a Function
:
facebook::jsi::Function func = func.asObject(*rt).asFunction(*rt);
The Function
exposes a call
method to perform the function invocation. The
stub accepts an ArrayBuffer
argument:
/* call stub function and capture result */
facebook::jsi::Value csv = func.call(*rt, ab);
In the same way the library version string was pulled into C++ code, the CSV
data can be captured using getString
and utf8
methods:
/* interpret as utf8 */
std::string str = csv.getString(*rt).utf8(*rt);
std::cout << str << std::endl;
Complete Example
The "Integration Example" covers a traditional integration in a C++ application,
while the "CLI Test" demonstrates other concepts using the hermes
CLI tool.
Integration Example
:::note Tested Deployments
This demo was tested in the following deployments:
Architecture | Git Commit | Date |
---|---|---|
darwin-x64 |
d070c74 |
2024-04-25 |
darwin-arm |
d070c74 |
2024-05-23 |
linux-x64 |
d217af8 |
2024-03-21 |
linux-arm |
d070c74 |
2024-05-25 |
The main Hermes source tree does not have Windows support. The hermes-windows
fork, which powers React Native for Windows, does have built-in support5
Architecture | Git Commit | Date |
---|---|---|
win10-x64 |
240573e |
2024-03-24 |
win11-arm |
240573e |
2024-06-20 |
The "Windows Example" covers hermes-windows
.
:::
- Install dependencies
Installation Notes (click to show)
The official guidance6 has been verified in macOS and HoloOS (Linux).
On macOS:
brew install icu4c cmake ninja
On HoloOS (and other Arch Linux distros):
sudo pacman -Syu cmake git ninja icu python zip readline
On Debian and Ubuntu:
sudo apt install cmake git ninja-build libicu-dev python zip libreadline-dev
:::note pass
When using virtual machines, Linux builds require at least 8 GB memory.
:::
- Make a project directory:
mkdir sheetjs-hermes
cd sheetjs-hermes
- Download the
Makefile
:
curl -LO https://docs.sheetjs.com/hermes/Makefile
- Download
sheetjs-hermes.cpp
:
curl -LO https://docs.sheetjs.com/hermes/sheetjs-hermes.cpp
- Build the library (this is the
init
target):
make init
:::caution pass
In some test runs, the build failed due to Ninja issues:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:64 (project):
Running
'/usr/local/lib/depot_tools/ninja' '--version'
failed with:
depot_tools/ninja.py: Could not find Ninja in the third_party of the current project, nor in your PATH.
This is due to a conflict with the Ninja version that ships with depot_tools
.
Since depot_tools
typically is added before other folders in the system PATH
variable, it is strongly recommended to rename the ninja
binary, build the
Hermes libraries, and restore the ninja
binary:
# Rename `ninja`
mv /usr/local/lib/depot_tools/ninja /usr/local/lib/depot_tools/ninja_tmp
# Build Hermes
make init
# Restore `ninja`
mv /usr/local/lib/depot_tools/ninja_tmp /usr/local/lib/depot_tools/ninja
:::
:::note pass
In some tests, the build failed with a message referencing a missing header:
hermes/API/hermes/inspector/chrome/tests/SerialExecutor.cpp:34:16: note: ‘std::runtime_error’ is defined in header ‘<stdexcept>’; did you forget to ‘#include <stdexcept>’?
This error affects the official Hermes releases!
The fix is to manually add a #include
statement in the corresponding header
file (API/hermes/inspector/chrome/tests/SerialExecutor.h
in the repo):
#include <memory>
#include <mutex>
#if !defined(_WINDOWS) && !defined(__EMSCRIPTEN__)
// highlight-next-line
#include <stdexcept>
#include <pthread.h>
#else
#include <thread>
:::
- Build the application:
make sheetjs-hermes
- Download the SheetJS Standalone script and the test file. Save both files in the project directory:
- xlsx.full.min.js
- pres.numbers
{\ curl -LO https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/dist/xlsx.full.min.js curl -LO https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.numbers
}
- Copy the
libhermes
andlibjsi
libraries into the current folder:
cp ./build_release/API/hermes/libhermes.so .
cp ./build_release/jsi/libjsi.so .
cp ./build_release/API/hermes/libhermes.dylib .
cp ./build_release/jsi/libjsi.dylib .
- Run the application:
./sheetjs-hermes pres.numbers
If successful, the program will print the library version number and the contents of the first sheet as CSV rows.
Windows Example
:::info pass
On ARM64, the commands must be run in a "ARM64 Native Tools Command Prompt".
:::
- Install dependencies.
Installation Notes (click to show)
The build sequence requires Python, which can be installed from the official Windows installer7.
Visual Studio with "Desktop development with C++" workload and Cmake must be installed8. In addition, the following Spectre-mitigated libs must be added:
- MSVC C++ x64/x86 Spectre-mitigated libs (Latest)
- C++ ATL for latest build tools with Spectre Mitigations (x86 & x64)
- C++ MFC for latest build tools with Spectre Mitigations (x86 & x64)
The easiest way to install is to select "Individual components" and search for "spectre latest" (no quotation marks). Pick each option for the relevant CPU.
- Set up
depot_tools
.
depot_tools.zip
must be downloaded and extracted to c:\src\depot_tools\
.
:::note pass
This ZIP has a number of hidden files and folders (including .git
) which
should be extracted along with the normal files.
:::
Add the path c:\src\depot_tools\
to the User PATH
environment variable
Environment Variable Setup (click to show)
Type env
in the search bar and select "Edit the system environment variables".
In the new window, click the "Environment Variables..." button.
In the new window, look for the "User variables" section. Select "Path" in the list and click "Edit".
In the new window, click "New" and type c:\src\depot_tools
and press Enter.
Select the row and repeatedly click "Move Up" until it is the first entry.
Click "OK" in each window (3 windows) and restart your computer.
-
Delete
c:\src\depot_tools\ninja
if it exists, then download the official Windows release and move theninja.exe
intoc:\src\depot_tools
. If aninja.exe
exists in the folder, replace the existing program. -
Make a project directory:
mkdir sheetjs-hermes
cd sheetjs-hermes
- Clone the
hermes-windows
repo:
git clone https://github.com/microsoft/hermes-windows
cd hermes-windows
git checkout 240573e
cd ..
:::note pass
If there are errors related to SSL or certificates or CApath
, temporarily
disable SSL in Git:
git config --global http.sslVerify false
git clone https://github.com/microsoft/hermes-windows
git config --global http.sslVerify true
:::
- Build the library:
cd hermes-windows
.\.ado\scripts\cibuild.ps1 -AppPlatform win32 -Platform x64 -ToolsPlatform x64
cd ..
:::note pass
The script may fail with the message:
cannot be loaded because running scripts is disabled on this system
In a "Run as Administrator" powershell window, run the following command:
Set-ExecutionPolicy -ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned
:::
:::info pass
In some test runs, the command failed when trying to copy hermes.exe
:
Copy-Item: C:\Users\Me\Documents\hermes-windows\.ado\scripts\cibuild.ps1:331
Line |
331 | Copy-Item "$compilerAndToolsBuildPath\bin\hermes.exe" -Destinatio …
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| Cannot find path 'C:\Users\Me\Documents\hermes-windows\workspace\build\tools\bin\hermes.exe'
| because it does not exist.
The libraries are built first and the standalone binary is not needed when embedding Hermes, so the error message can be safely ignored.
:::
cmake -S hermes-windows -B build -G "Visual Studio 17 2022" -A arm64
cmake --build ./build
- Copy every generated
.lib
and.dll
file into the main folder:
dir -r -Path .\hermes-windows\workspace\build\win32-x64-debug\ -Filter "*.dll" | Copy-Item -Destination .\
dir -r -Path .\hermes-windows\workspace\build\win32-x64-debug\ -Filter "*.lib" | Copy-Item -Destination .\
Run the following commands in a PowerShell session:
dir -r -Path .\build -Filter "*.dll" | Copy-Item -Destination .\
dir -r -Path .\build -Filter "*.lib" | Copy-Item -Destination .\
- Download
sheetjs-hermes.cpp
:
curl -o sheetjs-hermesw.cpp https://docs.sheetjs.com/hermes/sheetjs-hermesw.cpp
- Build the application:
cl /MDd sheetjs-hermesw.cpp DbgHelp.lib *.lib /I hermes-windows\API /I hermes-windows\include /I hermes-windows\public\ /I hermes-windows\API\jsi
:::caution pass
If cl
is not found, run the command in the "Native Tools Command Prompt"
:::
- Download the SheetJS Standalone script and the test file. Save both files in the project directory:
- xlsx.full.min.js
- pres.numbers
{\ curl -o xlsx.full.min.js https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/dist/xlsx.full.min.js curl -o pres.numbers https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.numbers
}
- Run the application:
.\sheetjs-hermesw.exe pres.numbers
If successful, the program will print the library version number and the contents of the first sheet as CSV rows.
CLI Test
:::note Tested Deployments
This demo was tested in the following deployments:
Architecture | Hermes | Date |
---|---|---|
darwin-x64 |
0.12.0 |
2024-03-13 |
:::
Due to limitations of the standalone binary, this demo will encode a test file as a Base64 string and directly add it to an amalgamated script.
Install CLI
- Install the Hermes command line tools:
npx jsvu hermes@0.12.0
When prompted, select the appropriate operating system.
- Inspect the output of the installer. Look for "Installing binary" lines:
❯ Extracting…
// highlight-next-line
Installing binary to ~/.jsvu/engines/hermes-0.12.0/hermes-0.12.0…
Installing symlink at ~/.jsvu/bin/hermes-0.12.0 pointing to ~/.jsvu/engines/hermes-0.12.0/hermes-0.12.0…
Installing binary to ~/.jsvu/engines/hermes-0.12.0/hermes-0.12.0-compiler…
Installing symlink at ~/.jsvu/bin/hermes-0.12.0-compiler pointing to ~/.jsvu/engines/hermes-0.12.0/hermes-0.12.0-compiler…
The first "Installing binary" line mentions the path to the hermes
tool.
Setup Project
- Create a new project folder:
mkdir sheetjs-hermes-cli
cd sheetjs-hermes-cli
- Copy the binary from Step 1 into the current folder. For example, on macOS:
cp ~/.jsvu/engines/hermes-0.12.0/hermes-0.12.0 .
Create Script
- Download the SheetJS Standalone script and the test file. Save both files in the project directory:
- xlsx.full.min.js
- pres.numbers
{\ curl -LO https://cdn.sheetjs.com/xlsx-${current}/package/dist/xlsx.full.min.js curl -LO https://docs.sheetjs.com/pres.numbers
}
- Bundle the test file and create
payload.js
:
node -e "fs.writeFileSync('payload.js', 'var payload = \"' + fs.readFileSync('pres.numbers').toString('base64') + '\";')"
- Create support scripts:
global.js
creates aglobal
variable and defines a fakeconsole
:
var global = (function(){ return this; }).call(null);
var console = { log: function(x) { print(x); } };
hermes.js
will callXLSX.read
andXLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv
:
var wb = XLSX.read(payload, {type:'base64'});
console.log(XLSX.utils.sheet_to_csv(wb.Sheets[wb.SheetNames[0]]));
- Create the amalgamation
sheetjs.hermes.js
:
cat global.js xlsx.full.min.js payload.js hermes.js > sheetjs.hermes.js
The final script defines global
before loading the standalone library. Once
ready, it will read the bundled test data and print the contents as CSV.
Testing
- Run the script using the Hermes standalone binary:
./hermes-0.12.0 sheetjs.hermes.js
If successful, the script will print CSV data from the test file.
-
See "Workbook Object" ↩︎
-
See "Workbook Object" ↩︎
-
See
microsoft/hermes-windows
on GitHub ↩︎ -
See "Dependencies" in "Building and Running" in the Hermes Documentation ↩︎
-
See "Download Python" in the Python website. ↩︎
-
See the Visual Studio website for download links. ↩︎