24

I don't understand it. The XSLX table is about 3MB large yet even 1024MB of RAM is not enough for PHPExcel to load it into memory?

I might be doing something horribly wrong here:

function ReadXlsxTableIntoArray($theFilePath)
{
    require_once('PHPExcel/Classes/PHPExcel.php');
    $inputFileType = 'Excel2007';
    $objReader = PHPExcel_IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
    $objReader->setReadDataOnly(true);
    $objPHPExcel = $objReader->load($theFilePath);
    $rowIterator = $objPHPExcel->getActiveSheet()->getRowIterator();
    $arrayData = $arrayOriginalColumnNames = $arrayColumnNames = array();
    foreach($rowIterator as $row){
        $cellIterator = $row->getCellIterator();
        $cellIterator->setIterateOnlyExistingCells(false); // Loop all cells, even if it is not set
        if(1 == $row->getRowIndex ()) {
            foreach ($cellIterator as $cell) {
                $value = $cell->getCalculatedValue();
                $arrayOriginalColumnNames[] = $value;
                // let's remove the diacritique
                $value = iconv('UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-1//TRANSLIT', $value);
                // and white spaces
                $valueExploded = explode(' ', $value);
                $value = '';
                // capitalize the first letter of each word
                foreach ($valueExploded as $word) {
                    $value .= ucfirst($word);
                }
                $arrayColumnNames[] = $value;
            }
            continue;
        } else {
            $rowIndex = $row->getRowIndex();
            reset($arrayColumnNames);
            foreach ($cellIterator as $cell) {
                $arrayData[$rowIndex][current($arrayColumnNames)] = $cell->getCalculatedValue();
                next($arrayColumnNames);
            }
        }
    }
    return array($arrayOriginalColumnNames, $arrayColumnNames, $arrayData);
}

The function above reads data from an excel table to an array.

Any suggestions?

At first, I allowed PHP to use 256MB of RAM. It was not enough. I then doubled the amount and then also tried 1024MB. It still runs out of memory with this error:

Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 1073741824 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 50331648 bytes) in D:\data\o\WebLibThirdParty\src\PHPExcel\Classes\PHPExcel\Reader\Excel2007.php on line 688

Fatal error (shutdown): Allowed memory size of 1073741824 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 50331648 bytes) in D:\data\o\WebLibThirdParty\src\PHPExcel\Classes\PHPExcel\Reader\Excel2007.php on line 688

8 Answers 8

74

There's plenty been written about the memory usage of PHPExcel on the PHPExcel forum; so reading through some of those previous discussions might give you a few ideas. PHPExcel holds an "in memory" representation of a spreadsheet, and is susceptible to PHP memory limitations.

The physical size of the file is largely irrelevant... it's much more important to know how many cells (rows*columns on each worksheet) it contains.

The "rule of thumb" that I've always used is an average of about 1k/cell, so a 5M cell workbook is going to require 5GB of memory. However, there are a number of ways that you can reduce that requirement. These can be combined, depending on exactly what information you need to access within your workbook, and what you want to do with it.

If you have multiple worksheets, but don't need to load all of them, then you can limit the worksheets that the Reader will load using the setLoadSheetsOnly() method. To load a single named worksheet:

$inputFileType = 'Excel5'; 
$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
$sheetname = 'Data Sheet #2'; 
/**  Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType  **/
$objReader = PHPExcel_IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
/**  Advise the Reader of which WorkSheets we want to load  **/ 
$objReader->setLoadSheetsOnly($sheetname); 
/**  Load $inputFileName to a PHPExcel Object  **/
$objPHPExcel = $objReader->load($inputFileName);

Or you can specify several worksheets with one call to setLoadSheetsOnly() by passing an array of names:

$inputFileType = 'Excel5'; 
$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
$sheetnames = array('Data Sheet #1','Data Sheet #3'); 
/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/ 
$objReader = PHPExcel_IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
/** Advise the Reader of which WorkSheets we want to load **/ 
$objReader->setLoadSheetsOnly($sheetnames); 
/**  Load $inputFileName to a PHPExcel Object  **/
$objPHPExcel = $objReader->load($inputFileName);

If you only need to access part of a worksheet, then you can define a Read Filter to identify just which cells you actually want to load:

$inputFileType = 'Excel5'; 
$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
$sheetname = 'Data Sheet #3'; 

/**  Define a Read Filter class implementing PHPExcel_Reader_IReadFilter  */ 
class MyReadFilter implements PHPExcel_Reader_IReadFilter {
    public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
        //  Read rows 1 to 7 and columns A to E only 
        if ($row >= 1 && $row <= 7) {
           if (in_array($column,range('A','E'))) { 
              return true;
           }
        } 
        return false;
    }
}

/**  Create an Instance of our Read Filter  **/ 
$filterSubset = new MyReadFilter(); 
/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/ 
$objReader = PHPExcel_IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
/**  Advise the Reader of which WorkSheets we want to load 
     It's more efficient to limit sheet loading in this manner rather than coding it into a Read Filter  **/ 
$objReader->setLoadSheetsOnly($sheetname); 
echo 'Loading Sheet using filter';
/**  Tell the Reader that we want to use the Read Filter that we've Instantiated  **/ 
$objReader->setReadFilter($filterSubset); 
/**  Load only the rows and columns that match our filter from $inputFileName to a PHPExcel Object  **/
$objPHPExcel = $objReader->load($inputFileName);

Using read filters, you can also read a workbook in "chunks", so that only a single chunk is memory-resident at any one time:

$inputFileType = 'Excel5'; 
$inputFileName = './sampleData/example2.xls';

/**  Define a Read Filter class implementing PHPExcel_Reader_IReadFilter  */ 
class chunkReadFilter implements PHPExcel_Reader_IReadFilter {
    private $_startRow = 0;
    private $_endRow = 0;

    /**  Set the list of rows that we want to read  */ 
    public function setRows($startRow, $chunkSize) { 
        $this->_startRow    = $startRow; 
        $this->_endRow      = $startRow + $chunkSize;
    } 

    public function readCell($column, $row, $worksheetName = '') {
        //  Only read the heading row, and the rows that are configured in $this->_startRow and $this->_endRow 
        if (($row == 1) || ($row >= $this->_startRow && $row < $this->_endRow)) { 
           return true;
        }
        return false;
    } 
}

/**  Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType  **/
$objReader = PHPExcel_IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
/**  Define how many rows we want to read for each "chunk"  **/ 
$chunkSize = 20;
/**  Create a new Instance of our Read Filter  **/ 
$chunkFilter = new chunkReadFilter(); 
/**  Tell the Reader that we want to use the Read Filter that we've Instantiated  **/ 
$objReader->setReadFilter($chunkFilter); 

/**  Loop to read our worksheet in "chunk size" blocks  **/ 
/**  $startRow is set to 2 initially because we always read the headings in row #1  **/
for ($startRow = 2; $startRow <= 65536; $startRow += $chunkSize) { 
    /**  Tell the Read Filter, the limits on which rows we want to read this iteration  **/ 
    $chunkFilter->setRows($startRow,$chunkSize); 
    /**  Load only the rows that match our filter from $inputFileName to a PHPExcel Object  **/ 
    $objPHPExcel = $objReader->load($inputFileName); 
    //    Do some processing here 

    //    Free up some of the memory 
    $objPHPExcel->disconnectWorksheets(); 
    unset($objPHPExcel); 
}

If you don't need to load formatting information, but only the worksheet data, then the setReadDataOnly() method will tell the reader only to load cell values, ignoring any cell formatting:

$inputFileType = 'Excel5';
$inputFileName = './sampleData/example1.xls';
/** Create a new Reader of the type defined in $inputFileType **/ 
$objReader = PHPExcel_IOFactory::createReader($inputFileType);
/** Advise the Reader that we only want to load cell data, not formatting **/ 
$objReader->setReadDataOnly(true);
/**  Load $inputFileName to a PHPExcel Object  **/
$objPHPExcel = $objReader->load($inputFileName);

Use cell caching. This is a method for reducing the PHP memory that is required for each cell, but at a cost in speed. It works by storing the cell objects in a compressed format, or outside of PHP's memory (eg. disk, APC, memcache)... but the more memory you save, the slower your scripts will execute. You can, however, reduce the memory required by each cell to about 300bytes, so the hypothetical 5M cells would require about 1.4GB of PHP memory.

Cell caching is described in section 4.2.1 of the Developer Documentation

EDIT

Looking at your code, you're using the iterators, which aren't particularly efficient, and building up an array of cell data. You might want to look at the toArray() method, which is already built into PHPExcel, and does this for you. Also take a look at this recent discussion on SO about the new variant method rangeToArray() to build an associative array of row data.

8
  • Thanks. By the way, the toArray() method uses iterators the same way I do so it would not be more efficient imho. Jan 27, 2011 at 15:14
  • @Richard - toArray() has been completely rewritten in the latest SVN code... and one of the drawbacks of the iterators was that they created cells if they didn't exist (slower and adding extra memory overhead) when setIterateOnlyExistingCells(false). The new toArray() methods are not only faster, but they don't create cells either.
    – Mark Baker
    Jan 27, 2011 at 15:20
  • Bravo on a great answer! The ReadFilter example should be very helpful in implementing a class that reads and process a large XLSX file in chunks to save memory, or convert to a flat CSV file on disk! Jul 27, 2011 at 14:58
  • @MarkBaker: Thank you for a very informative answer, but implementing a sliding window iterator over a large worksheet does not produce good results. Here's what happens when the window size is 1K rows and 10K rows; as you can see (first "GCed" line) after the data is unloaded memory usage drops to "zero". However, when loading data more memory is consumed the farther the window slides. Loading rows 9K-10K requires more memory than loading 0-10K at once. Any insights into why and how to proceed?
    – Jon
    Dec 28, 2012 at 15:27
  • @MarkBaker: FYI, the only code between the two "GCed" lines is $filter->setRows(...) and $reader->load(...).
    – Jon
    Dec 28, 2012 at 15:31
10

I had the same memory issue problem with PHPExcel and actually all the other libraries. Reading the data in chunks, as Mark Baker suggested could fix the issue (caching works too), but it turned out that the memory issue became a time issue. The reading and writing time was exponential so for large spreadsheets, it was not a good fit.

PHPExcel and others are not meant to handle large files so I created a library that solves this problem. You can check it out here: https://github.com/box/spout

Hope that helps!

2
  • If you have any problems, feel free to either post something here or on the Github page directly (issues / pull requests). Myself as well as other developers will be able to help you out with whatever you are trying to build!
    – Adrien
    Jun 9, 2015 at 7:30
  • Kudos!! @Adrien
    – Duke
    Apr 12, 2018 at 8:53
5

There are plenty of measures you can take to reserve less memory when working with PHPExcel. I recommend you to take the following actions to optimize memory usage before modifying your server's memory limit in Apache.

/* Use the setReadDataOnly(true);*/
    $objReader->setReadDataOnly(true);

/*Load only Specific Sheets*/
    $objReader->setLoadSheetsOnly( array("1", "6", "6-1", "6-2", "6-3", "6-4", "6-5", "6-6", "6-7", "6-8") );

/*Free memory when you are done with a file*/
$objPHPExcel->disconnectWorksheets();
   unset($objPHPExcel);

Avoid using very large Exel files, remember it is the file size that makes the process run slowly and crash.

Avoid using the getCalculatedValue(); function when reading cells.

2

Ypu can try PHP Excel http://ilia.ws/archives/237-PHP-Excel-Extension-0.9.1.html Its an C extension for php and its very fast. (Also uses less memory than PHP implementations)

3
  • 13
    And requires a commercial ($199) component
    – Mark Baker
    Jan 27, 2011 at 14:40
  • 4
    Ilia's code is open source, but it is just a PHP wrapper for the commercial libX library (libxl.com)... Ilia's wrapper is also Linux only, no Windows or Mac versions yet, unless you're prepared to compile your own
    – Mark Baker
    Jan 27, 2011 at 15:13
  • +1 for libXL, although it is commercial it's indispensable when working with very large spreadsheets.
    – Sara
    Jan 8, 2013 at 19:47
1

In my case, phpexcel always iterated through 19999 rows. no matter, how many rows actually were filled. So 100 rows of data always ended up in a memory error.

Perhaps you just have to check, if the cells in the current row are empty and then "continue" oder break the loop, that iterates the rows.

1
  • Except that the only way to check if the cells in a row are empty is to iterate over them
    – Mark Baker
    Jun 4, 2012 at 11:58
1

Just reposting my post from another thread. It describes different approach to serverside generating or editing of Excel spreadsheets that should be taken in account. For large amount of data I would not recommend tools like PHPExcel or ApachePOI (for Java) because of their memory requirements. There is another quite convenient (although maybe little bit fiddly) way to inject data into spreadsheets. Serverside generation or updating of Excel spreadsheets can be achieved thus simple XML editing. You can have XLSX spreadsheet sitting on the server and every time data is gathered from dB, you unzip it using php. Then you access specific XML files that are holding contents of worksheets that need to be injected and insert data manually. Afterwards, you compress spreadsheet folder in order to distribute it as an regular XLSX file. Whole process is quite fast and reliable. Obviously, there are few issues and glitches related to inner organisation of XLSX/Open XML file (e. g. Excel tend to store all strings in separate table and use references to this table in worksheet files). But when injecting only data like numbers and strings, it is not that hard. If anyone is interested, I can provide some code.

1
  • @Ian: You can check it here: link.
    – bazinac
    Oct 23, 2013 at 10:25
1

I ran into this problem and unfortunately none of the suggested solutions could help me. I need the functionality that PHPExcel provides (formulas, conditional styling, etc) so using a different library was not an option.

What I eventually did was writing each worksheet to an individual (temporary) file, and then combining these separate files with some special software I wrote. This reduced my memory consumption from >512 Mb to well under 100 Mb. See https://github.com/infostreams/excel-merge if you have the same problem.

0

PHPExcel is archived, and other options as of today would be:

  • box/spout (or FastExcel wrapper for Laravel)
  • PhpSpreadsheet

For working with very large datasets (5-20k rows etc), you would need chunking support which is absent in spout. You will have to implement some solution yourself (like write a custom limit into a file, open that in the next iteration, create a new file with new data appended ...)

Alternatively, PhpSpreadsheet has chunking support by default. However, it costs more resources than spout.

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