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I've setup a script to process excel files uploaded by a user. The scripts works fine when the file is stored on the local disk.

from openpyxl import load_workbook

wb = load_workbook("file_path.xlsx")  # Load workbook from disk works fine
ws = wb.worksheets[0]

I've then setup django-storages to allow user uploaded files to be stored on digital ocean spaces.

My problem now is how to access and process the cloud stored file. For the record, if I pass the file URL to load_workbook it fails with the error No such file or directory: file_url.

Do I have to download the file using requests and then process it as a local file? Feels inefficient? What options do I have?

1 Answer 1

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You can get byte content of the file, wrap it in ContentFile and pass it to openpyxl. Assuming your model is FileContainer and field name is file:

from django.core.files.base import ContentFile
from openpyxl import load_workbook

fc = FileContainer.objects.first()
bytefile = fc.file.read()
wb = load_workbook(ContentFile(bytefile))
ws = wb.worksheets[0]

I checked it with S3 and it works just fine.

If you want to actually save file locally, you can try this:

from django.core.files.base import ContentFile
from django.core.files.storage import FileSystemStorage
from openpyxl import load_workbook

fc = FileContainer.objects.first()
local_storage = FileSystemStorage()

bytefile = fc.file.read()
newfile = ContentFile(bytefile)

relative_path = local_storage.save(fc.file.name, newfile)

wb = load_workbook(local_storage.path(relative_path))
ws = wb.worksheets[0]
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  • Thanks. This works for Digital Ocean's Spaces also. For small files I believe it will suffice. Would you change it to allow it to be more efficient for large files (100-400 MB range)?
    – lukik
    May 18, 2019 at 10:50
  • For large files I would rather download file and save it with default FileSysteStorage. Not via requests but native django functionality, to keep AWS credentials and flexibility.
    – Gasanov
    May 18, 2019 at 10:59
  • A few minutes of reviewing the Django link and quick googling and am not sure how I'd go about using FileStystemStorage to download and save the file. Can you provide snippet or a link to show how to accomplish this?
    – lukik
    May 18, 2019 at 11:12
  • @lukik I started to doubt that it is better solution, but anyway attached it for reference. Couldn't think of another solution without ContentFile. Don't forget to delete file afterwards.
    – Gasanov
    May 18, 2019 at 11:44
  • @lukik another option would be to download file from S3 via low-level boto3 library (that is used underneath django-storages) and then open it directly. No django files API would be used.
    – Gasanov
    May 18, 2019 at 12:15

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