There is a table phonenumbers
with two columns: id
, and number
. There are about half a million entries
in the table. Data
There's a bit more to properly formatting CSV output. It would be easiest to use an existing library such as this one to generate the output file.
You can generate output to a file on disk (on the web server) and then redirect the browser to that file (with a cron job or whatever to clean up old data) or just stream the result directly back to the user.
If you are streaming directly be sure and set the MIME type to something that will trigger a download in the user's browser (e.g. text/csv or text/comma-separated-values)
Your best bet is to not store the data in Java's memory in any way, but just write the obtained data to the response immediately as the data comes in. You also need to configure the MySQL JDBC driver to serve the resultset row-by-row by Statement#setFetchSize() as per the MySQL JDBC driver documentation, otherwise it will cache the whole thing in memory.
Assuming you're familiar with Servlets, here's a kickoff example which takes that all into account:
protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
response.setContentType("text/plain");
response.setHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment;filename=numbers.txt"); // Force download popup.
Connection connection = null;
Statement statement = null;
ResultSet resultSet = null;
Writer writer = response.getWriter();
try {
connection = database.getConnection();
statement = connection.createStatement(ResultSet.TYPE_FORWARD_ONLY, ResultSet.CONCUR_READ_ONLY);
statement.setFetchSize(Integer.MIN_VALUE);
resultSet = statement.executeQuery("SELECT number FROM phonenumbers");
while (resultSet.next()) {
writer.write(resultSet.getString("number"));
if (!resultSet.isLast()) {
writer.write(",");
}
}
} catch (SQLException e) {
throw new ServletException("Query failed!", e);
} finally {
if (resultSet != null) try { resultSet.close; } catch (SQLException logOrIgnore) {}
if (statement != null) try { statement.close; } catch (SQLException logOrIgnore) {}
if (connection != null) try { connection.close; } catch (SQLException logOrIgnore) {}
}
}
If using Mysql 5.1+, I would simply use the proprietary syntax to dump the file somewhere and stream it in a Servlet response.
SELECT a,b,a+b INTO OUTFILE '/tmp/result.txt'
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' OPTIONALLY ENCLOSED BY '"'
LINES TERMINATED BY '\n'
FROM test_table;
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/select.html
For so many records, if you still want to use JDBC, you may try the following: