Awesome
Zip4j - A Java library for zip files / streams
Thank you
for rating Zip4j as the best Java library for zip files <sup>[1, 2, 3, 4]</sup>. It has encouraged me to
bring this project to life again after a gap of several years. I tried to add some of the important features that
were requested over this time, and also made the API much more neater. The newer version (> 2.0.0) now supports streams,
which was understandably, one of the most requested feature. If you have any feedback, bugs to report, feature
requests, etc, please open an issue here on GitHub. I will try to address them as soon as I can. I also monitor the
tag zip4j
on Stack Overflow.
About
Zip4j is the most comprehensive Java library for zip files or streams. As of this writing, it is the only Java library
which has support for zip encryption, apart from several other features. It tries to make handling zip files/streams
a lot more easier. No more clunky boiler plate code with input streams and output streams. As you can see in the usage
section below, working with zip files can now even be a single line of code, compared to this. I mean no offense
to the Java's built-in zip support. In fact, this library depends on Java's built-in zip code and it would have been
significantly more complicated challenging if I had to write compression logic as well. But lets be honest, working with zip
files or streams can be a lot of boiler plate code. The main goal of this library is to provide a simple API for all
usual actions of a zip file or streams by doing the heavy lifting within the library and not have developers worry about
having to deal with streams, etc. Apart from usability, another important goal of this library is to provide support for
as many zip features as possible, which brings me to:
Features
- Create, Add, Extract, Update, Remove files from a zip file
- Support for streams (ZipInputStream and ZipOutputStream)
- Read/Write password protected zip files and streams
- Support for both AES and zip standard encryption methods
- Support for Zip64 format
- Store (No Compression) and Deflate compression method
- Create or extract files from split zip files (Ex: z01, z02,...zip)
- Support for Unicode file names and comments in zip
- Progress Monitor - for integration into apps and user facing applications
Background
Zip4j was started by me (Srikanth Reddy Lingala) back in 2008/2009, when I realized the lack of support for majority of zip format features in Java. And also working with zip files was, as mentioned several times above, a lot of boiler plate code, having to deal with streams (worse still, it was back in the days when there was no try-with-resources in Java). There was also no comprehensive library which supports zip features. So, I decided to write one, and approximately after a year, the first version was out. The response was truly overwhelming, and I got a lot of support right from the next day of release. It was not put on GitHub as git/GitHub was not as popular as it is now. Code was hosted on my website, as, guess what, a zip file :). And unfortunately, after a year or two after the initial release, life got busy and I was not able to support Zip4j as much as I wanted to. But the overwhelming encouragement I got over the years made me start working on Zip4j once again, and makes me support Zip4j as much as I can.
Requirements
JDK 7 or later<sup>*</sup>
<sup>*</sup> Zip4j is written on JDK 8, as some of the features (NIO) that Zip4j supports requires features available only in JDK 8. However, considering the fact that Zip4j is widely used in Android, and to support older versions of Android, Zip4j supports JDK 7 as well. In cases where the feature/class from JDK 8 is missing, Zip4j falls back to the features available in JDK 7. In other words, when running on JDK 7, not all features will be supported.
Maven
<dependency>
<groupId>net.lingala.zip4j</groupId>
<artifactId>zip4j</artifactId>
<version>2.11.5</version>
</dependency>
Please check the latest version number on Maven Central.
Usage
Creating a zip file with single file in it / Adding single file to an existing zip
new ZipFile("filename.zip").addFile("filename.ext");
Or
new ZipFile("filename.zip").addFile(new File("filename.ext"));
Creating a zip file with multiple files / Adding multiple files to an existing zip
new ZipFile("filename.zip").addFiles(Arrays.asList(new File("first_file"), new File("second_file")));
Creating a zip file by adding a folder to it / Adding a folder to an existing zip
new ZipFile("filename.zip").addFolder(new File("/users/some_user/folder_to_add"));
Since v2.6, it is possible to exclude certain files when adding a folder to zip by using an ExcludeFileFilter
ExcludeFileFilter excludeFileFilter = filesToExclude::contains;
ZipParameters zipParameters = new ZipParameters();
zipParameters.setExcludeFileFilter(excludeFileFilter);
new ZipFile("filename.zip").addFolder(new File("/users/some_user/folder_to_add"), zipParameters);
Creating a zip file from stream / Adding a stream to an existing zip
new ZipFile("filename.zip").addStream(inputStream, new ZipParameters());
Passing in new ZipParameters()
, as in the above example, will make Zip4j use default zip parameters. Please look at
ZipParameters to see the default configuration.
Creating a zip file of compression method STORE / Adding entries to zip file of compression method STORE
By default Zip4j uses Deflate compression algorithm to compress files. However, if you would like to not use any compression (called STORE compression), you can do so as shown in the example below:
ZipParameters zipParameters = new ZipParameters();
zipParameters.setCompressionMethod(CompressionMethod.STORE);
new ZipFile("filename.zip").addFile("fileToAdd", zipParameters);
You can similarly pass in zip parameters to all the other examples to create a zip file of STORE compression.
Creating a password protected zip file / Adding files to an existing zip with password protection
AES encryption
ZipParameters zipParameters = new ZipParameters();
zipParameters.setEncryptFiles(true);
zipParameters.setEncryptionMethod(EncryptionMethod.AES);
// Below line is optional. AES 256 is used by default. You can override it to use AES 128. AES 192 is supported only for extracting.
zipParameters.setAesKeyStrength(AesKeyStrength.KEY_STRENGTH_256);
List<File> filesToAdd = Arrays.asList(
new File("somefile"),
new File("someotherfile")
);
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile("filename.zip", "password".toCharArray());
zipFile.addFiles(filesToAdd, zipParameters);
Zip standard encryption
Instead of AES, replace zipParameters.setEncryptionMethod(EncryptionMethod.AES);
with
zipParameters.setEncryptionMethod(EncryptionMethod.ZIP_STANDARD);
. You can omit the line to set AES key strength. As
the name suggests, this is only applicable for AES encryption.
In all the above examples, you can similarly pass in zip parameters with appropriate password configuration to create a password protected zip file.
Creating a split zip file
If you want to split the zip file over several files when the size exceeds a particular limit, you can do so like this:
List<File> filesToAdd = Arrays.asList(
new File("somefile"),
new File("someotherfile")
);
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile("filename.zip");
zipFile.createSplitZipFile(filesToAdd, new ZipParameters(), true, 10485760); // using 10MB in this example
Passing in new ZipParameters()
, as in the above example, will make Zip4j use default zip parameters. Please look at
ZipParameters to see the default configuration.
Zip file format specifies a minimum of 65536 bytes (64KB) as a minimum length for split files. Zip4j will throw an exception if anything less than this value is specified.
To create a split zip with password protection, pass in appropriate ZipParameters as shown in the example below:
ZipParameters zipParameters = new ZipParameters();
zipParameters.setEncryptFiles(true);
zipParameters.setEncryptionMethod(EncryptionMethod.AES);
List<File> filesToAdd = Arrays.asList(
new File("somefile"),
new File("someotherfile")
);
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile("filename.zip", "password".toCharArray());
zipFile.createSplitZipFile(filesToAdd, zipParameters, true, 10485760); // using 10MB in this example
Zip64 format
Zip64 is a zip feature which allows support for zip files when the size of the zip file exceeds the maximum that can be stored in 4 bytes (i.e., greater than 4,294,967,295 bytes). Traditionally, zip headers have a provision of 4 bytes to store for file sizes. But with growing file sizes compared to a few decades back, zip file format extended support of file sizes which extends 4 bytes by adding additional headers which uses 8 bytes for file sizes (compressed and uncompressed file sizes). This feature is known as Zip64.
Zip4j will automatically make a zip file with Zip64 format and add appropriate headers, when it detects the zip file to be crossing this file size limit. You do not have to explicitly specify any flag for Zip4j to use this feature.
Extracting all files from a zip
new ZipFile("filename.zip").extractAll("/destination_directory");
Extracting all files from a password protected zip
new ZipFile("filename.zip", "password".toCharArray()).extractAll("/destination_directory");
Extracting a single file from zip
new ZipFile("filename.zip").extractFile("fileNameInZip.txt", "/destination_directory");
Extracting a folder from zip (since v2.6.0)
new ZipFile("filename.zip").extractFile("folderNameInZip/", "/destination_directory");
Extracting a single file from zip which is password protected
new ZipFile("filename.zip", "password".toCharArray()).extractFile("fileNameInZip.txt", "/destination_directory");
Since v2.6.0: If the file name represents a directory, Zip4j will extract all files in the zip that are part of this directory.
Extracting a single file from zip and giving it a new file name
Below example will extract the file fileNameInZip.txt
from the zip file to the output directory /destination_directory
and will give the file the name newfileName.txt
. Without the third parameter of the new file name, the same name as the
file in the zip will be used, which in this case is fileNameInZip.txt
. If the file being extracted is a directory,
newFileName
parameter will be used as the directory name.
new ZipFile("filename.zip", "password".toCharArray()).extractFile("fileNameInZip.txt", "/destination_directory", "newfileName.txt");
Get an input stream for an entry in a zip file
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile("filename.zip");
FileHeader fileHeader = zipFile.getFileHeader("entry_name_in_zip.txt");
InputStream inputStream = zipFile.getInputStream(fileHeader);
You can now use this input stream to read content from it/write content to an output stream. Please note that the
entry/file name is relative to the directory it is in. If entry_name_in_zip.txt
is in a folder called "root_folder" in
the zip, then you have to use zipFile.getFileHeader("root_folder/entry_name_in_zip.txt");
.
Remove a file/entry from a zip file
new ZipFile("filename.zip").removeFile("fileNameInZipToRemove");
If fileNameInZipToRemove
represents a folder all the files and folders under this folder will be removed as well
(this is valid since v2.5.0 of Zip4j. All prior versions remove just the single entry even if it is a folder).
Please note that the file name is relative the root folder in zip. That is, if the file you want to remove exists in a folder called "folder1", which in-turn exists in a folder called "root-folder", removing this file from zip has to be done as below:
new ZipFile("filename.zip").removeFile("root-folder/folder1/fileNameInZipToRemove");
If you want to be sure that the file you want to remove exists in zip file or if you don't want to deal with file names
as string when using the removeFile
API, you can use the other overloaded method which takes in a FileHeader
:
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile("someZip.zip");
FileHeader fileHeader = zipFile.getFileHeader("fileNameInZipToRemove");
if (fileHeader == null) {
// file does not exist
}
zipFile.removeFile(fileHeader);
Since v2.5.0 of Zip4j, it is possible to remove multiple files and folders from a zip file. You can now pass in a list as shown in the code below:
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile("someZip.zip");
List<String> filesToRemove = Arrays.asList("file1.txt", "file2.txt", "some-folder/", "some-new-folder-1/somefile.pdf");
zipFile.removeFiles(filesToRemove);
The above code will remove file1.txt
, file2.txt
, all files and folders under some-folder
(including some-folder
)
and just the entry somefile.pdf
in folder some-new-folder-1
. All other files and folders are kept intact in the zip
file.
Rename entries in the zip file
There are three ways to rename an entry in a zip file with Zip4j. One way is to pass in a file header and the new file name:
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile("sample.zip");
FileHeader fileHeader = zipFile.getFileHeader("entry-to-be-changed.pdf");
zipFile.renameFile(fileHeader, "new-file-name.pdf");
Second way is to pass in just the file name to be changed (instead of the file header), and the new file name.
new ZipFile("filename.zip").renameFile("entry-to-be-changed.pdf", "new-file-name.pdf");
It is also possible to change multiple file names at once. In this case you have to use a map, with the key of the entry in the map being the entry to be changed, and the value of the map being the new file name:
Map<String, String> fileNamesMap = new HashMap<>();
fileNamesMap.put("firstFile.txt", "newFileFirst.txt");
fileNamesMap.put("secondFile.pdf", "newSecondFile.pdf");
fileNamesMap.put("some-folder/thirdFile.bin", "some-folder/newThirdFile.bin");
new ZipFile("filename.zip").renameFiles(fileNamesMap);
To modify an entry name which is inside a folder, the new file name should contain the complete parent path as well.
For example, if an entry by the name some-entry.pdf
is in the folder some-folder/some-sub-folder/
, to modify this
entry name to some-new-entry.pdf
:
new ZipFile("filename.zip").renameFile("some-folder/some-sub-folder/some-entry.pdf", "some-folder/some-sub-folder/new-entry.pdf");
If the parent path is missing, then the file will be put at the root of the zip file. In the below example, after
the file is renamed, some-new-entry.pdf
will exist at the root of the zip file instead of at some-folder/some-sub-folder/
:
new ZipFile("filename.zip").renameFile("some-folder/some-sub-folder/some-entry.pdf", "some-new-entry.pdf");
This also gives the flexibility to "move" the entry to a different folder. The below example will move the
some-entry.pdf
from some-folder/some-sub-folder/
to folder-to-be-moved-to/sub-folder/
and the file will also be
renamed to new-entry.pdf
. To just move the file, use the same file name instead of a new file name.
new ZipFile("filename.zip").renameFile("some-folder/some-sub-folder/some-entry.pdf", "folder-to-be-moved-to/sub-folder/new-entry.pdf");
If the entry being modified is a directory, all entries that are part of that directory will be renamed so that all of
them have the new folder name as parent. In zip format, all entry names under a directory will contain the full name as their file name.
For example if there is an entry by the name filename.txt
inside a directory directoryName
, the file name for the entry
will be directoryName/filename.txt
. And if the name of the directory has now been changed to newDirectoryName
, the
entry under it will also be changed to newDirectoryName/filename.txt
, so when the zip file is extracted,
filename.txt
will be under newDirectoryName
.
Zip file format does not allow modifying split zip files, and Zip4j will throw an exception if an attempt is made to rename files in a split zip file.
Merging split zip files into a single zip
This is the reverse of creating a split zip file, that is, this feature will merge a zip file which is split across several files into a single zip file:
new ZipFile("split_zip_file.zip").mergeSplitFiles(new File("merged_zip_file.zip"));
This method will throw an exception if the split zip file (in this case split_zip_file.zip
) is not a split zip file.
List all files in a zip
List<FileHeader> fileHeaders = new ZipFile("zipfile.zip").getFileHeaders();
fileHeaders.stream().forEach(fileHeader -> System.out.println(fileHeader.getFileName()));
You can get all other information from the FileHeader
object corresponding to each file/entry in the zip.
Check if a zip file is password protected
new ZipFile("encrypted_zip_file.zip").isEncrypted();
Check if a zip file is a split zip file
new ZipFile("split_zip_file.zip").isSplitArchive();
Set comment for a zip file
new ZipFile("some_zip_file.zip").setComment("Some comment");
Remove comment of a zip file
new ZipFile("some_zip_file.zip").setComment("");
Get comment of a zip file
new ZipFile("some_zip_file.zip").getComment();
Check if a zip file is valid
Note: This will only check for the validity of the headers and not the validity of each entry in the zip file.
new ZipFile("valid_zip_file.zip").isValidZipFile();
Working with streams
Adding entries with ZipOutputStream
import net.lingala.zip4j.io.outputstream.ZipOutputStream;
import net.lingala.zip4j.model.ZipParameters;
import net.lingala.zip4j.model.enums.AesKeyStrength;
import net.lingala.zip4j.model.enums.CompressionMethod;
import net.lingala.zip4j.model.enums.EncryptionMethod;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.util.List;
public class ZipOutputStreamExample {
public void zipOutputStreamExample(File outputZipFile, List<File> filesToAdd, char[] password,
CompressionMethod compressionMethod, boolean encrypt,
EncryptionMethod encryptionMethod, AesKeyStrength aesKeyStrength)
throws IOException {
ZipParameters zipParameters = buildZipParameters(compressionMethod, encrypt, encryptionMethod, aesKeyStrength);
byte[] buff = new byte[4096];
int readLen;
try(ZipOutputStream zos = initializeZipOutputStream(outputZipFile, encrypt, password)) {
for (File fileToAdd : filesToAdd) {
// Entry size has to be set if you want to add entries of STORE compression method (no compression)
// This is not required for deflate compression
if (zipParameters.getCompressionMethod() == CompressionMethod.STORE) {
zipParameters.setEntrySize(fileToAdd.length());
}
zipParameters.setFileNameInZip(fileToAdd.getName());
zos.putNextEntry(zipParameters);
try(InputStream inputStream = new FileInputStream(fileToAdd)) {
while ((readLen = inputStream.read(buff)) != -1) {
zos.write(buff, 0, readLen);
}
}
zos.closeEntry();
}
}
}
private ZipOutputStream initializeZipOutputStream(File outputZipFile, boolean encrypt, char[] password)
throws IOException {
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(outputZipFile);
if (encrypt) {
return new ZipOutputStream(fos, password);
}
return new ZipOutputStream(fos);
}
private ZipParameters buildZipParameters(CompressionMethod compressionMethod, boolean encrypt,
EncryptionMethod encryptionMethod, AesKeyStrength aesKeyStrength) {
ZipParameters zipParameters = new ZipParameters();
zipParameters.setCompressionMethod(compressionMethod);
zipParameters.setEncryptionMethod(encryptionMethod);
zipParameters.setAesKeyStrength(aesKeyStrength);
zipParameters.setEncryptFiles(encrypt);
return zipParameters;
}
}
Extract files with ZipInputStream
import net.lingala.zip4j.io.inputstream.ZipInputStream;
import net.lingala.zip4j.model.LocalFileHeader;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.FileOutputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.OutputStream;
public class ZipInputStreamExample {
public void extractWithZipInputStream(File zipFile, char[] password) throws IOException {
LocalFileHeader localFileHeader;
int readLen;
byte[] readBuffer = new byte[4096];
InputStream inputStream = new FileInputStream(zipFile);
try (ZipInputStream zipInputStream = new ZipInputStream(inputStream, password)) {
while ((localFileHeader = zipInputStream.getNextEntry()) != null) {
File extractedFile = new File(localFileHeader.getFileName());
try (OutputStream outputStream = new FileOutputStream(extractedFile)) {
while ((readLen = zipInputStream.read(readBuffer)) != -1) {
outputStream.write(readBuffer, 0, readLen);
}
}
}
}
}
}
Working with Progress Monitor
ProgressMonitor makes it easier for applications (especially user facing) to integrate Zip4j. It is useful to show
progress (example: updating a progress bar, displaying the current action, show file name being worked on, etc.). To use
ProgressMonitor, you have to set ZipFile.setRunInThread(true)
. This will make any actions being done on the zip file
to run in a background thread. You can then access ProgressMonitor Zipfile.getProgressMonitor()
and get details of the
current action being done along with the percentage work done, etc. Below is an example:
ZipFile zipFile = new ZipFile(generatedZipFile, PASSWORD);
ProgressMonitor progressMonitor = zipFile.getProgressMonitor();
zipFile.setRunInThread(true);
zipFile.addFolder(new File("/some/folder"));
while (!progressMonitor.getState().equals(ProgressMonitor.State.READY)) {
System.out.println("Percentage done: " + progressMonitor.getPercentDone());
System.out.println("Current file: " + progressMonitor.getFileName());
System.out.println("Current task: " + progressMonitor.getCurrentTask());
Thread.sleep(100);
}
if (progressMonitor.getResult().equals(ProgressMonitor.Result.SUCCESS)) {
System.out.println("Successfully added folder to zip");
} else if (progressMonitor.getResult().equals(ProgressMonitor.Result.ERROR)) {
System.out.println("Error occurred. Error message: " + progressMonitor.getException().getMessage());
} else if (progressMonitor.getResult().equals(ProgressMonitor.Result.CANCELLED)) {
System.out.println("Task cancelled");
}
Note that in the above example, addFolder()
will almost immediately return back the control to the caller. The client
code can then perform a loop until the state gets back to "Ready" as shown in the above example.
Similarly, ProgressMonitor can be used with other actions like, addFiles
, removeFiles
and extractFiles
.
Contribution
It is hard to find as much free time as I used to have when I first started Zip4j back in 2009. I would highly appreciate any support I can get for this project. You can fork this project, and send me pull requests for any bug fixes, issues mentioned here or new features. If you need any support in understanding the code or zip specification, just drop me a mail and I will help you as best as I can. (See FAQ for my email address.)
FAQ
-
Why do I have to pass in password as char array and not as a string?
-
How can I contact you?
-
Are unicode file names supported?
Yes, unicode file names (UTF-8) are supported as specified by the zip format specification. Zip4j will use UTF-8 file name and file comment encoding when creating a zip file. When extracting a zip file, Zip4j will only use UTF-8 encoding, only if the appropriate header flag is set as specified by zip file format specification. If this flag is not set, Zip4j will use CP437 encoding which only supports extended ASCII characters.
-
Where can I find zip file format specification?
-
Why are there so many changes in version 2.x compared to 1.x?
Because when version 1.x was written back in 2009, Zip4j was badly in need of a face-lift and code modernization. Also, my coding standards have improved over the years (or at least that's what I like to think). Although I am proud of the work I did with Zip4j back in 2009, some parts of the code make me feel like hiding my face in shame. One such example is the usage of
ArrayList
instead ofList
. API and code should look much neater now. And also, Zip4j now supports a minimum of JRE 8, as compared to JRE 5 with 1.x, which obviously will bring some nice features that I can make use of. (For example: no more explicitly closing the streams all over the code). If you still feel like something can be improved (and I am pretty sure that there are things to be improved), please let me know by opening an issue here or writing to me (my email address is in point #2 above). -
What are the licensing conditions for older releases of Zip4j?
All releases of Zip4j, from version 1.0, are licensed under Apache License 2.0