How do you get a Media Type (MIME type) from a file using Java? So far I've tried JMimeMagic & Mime-Util. The first gave me memory exceptions, the second doesn't close its streams properly.
How would you probe the file to determine its actual type (not merely based on the extension)?
Unfortunately,
mimeType = file.toURL().openConnection().getContentType();
does not work, since this use of URL leaves a file locked, so that, for example, it is undeletable.
However, you have this:
mimeType= URLConnection.guessContentTypeFromName(file.getName());
and also the following, which has the advantage of going beyond mere use of file extension, and takes a peek at content
InputStream is = new BufferedInputStream(new FileInputStream(file));
mimeType = URLConnection.guessContentTypeFromStream(is);
//...close stream
However, as suggested by the comment above, the built-in table of mime-types is quite limited, not including, for example, MSWord and PDF. So, if you want to generalize, you'll need to go beyond the built-in libraries, using, e.g., Mime-Util (which is a great library, using both file extension and content).
FileInputStream
into BufferedInputStream
is crucial part - otherwise guessContentTypeFromStream
returns null
(passed InputStream
instance should support marks)
URLConnection
has a very limited set of content types that it does recognizes. For example it is not able to detect application/pdf
.
guessContentTypeFromName()
uses default $JAVA_HOME/lib/content-types.properties
file. you can add your own extended file by changing system property System.setProperty("content.types.user.table","/lib/path/to/your/property/file");
With Apache Tika you need only three lines of code:
File file = new File("/path/to/file");
Tika tika = new Tika();
System.out.println(tika.detect(file));
If you have a groovy console, just paste and run this code to play with it:
@Grab('org.apache.tika:tika-core:1.14')
import org.apache.tika.Tika;
def tika = new Tika()
def file = new File("/path/to/file")
println tika.detect(file)
Keep in mind that its APIs are rich, it can parse "anything". As of tika-core 1.14, you have:
String detect(byte[] prefix)
String detect(byte[] prefix, String name)
String detect(File file)
String detect(InputStream stream)
String detect(InputStream stream, Metadata metadata)
String detect(InputStream stream, String name)
String detect(Path path)
String detect(String name)
String detect(URL url)
See the apidocs for more information.
new Tika().detect(file.toPath())
for the file's extension based detection rather than detection based on the file's content
new Tika().detect(file.getPath())
, which only uses the file extension
The JAF API is part of JDK 6. Look at javax.activation
package.
Most interesting classes are javax.activation.MimeType
- an actual MIME type holder - and javax.activation.MimetypesFileTypeMap
- class whose instance can resolve MIME type as String for a file:
String fileName = "/path/to/file";
MimetypesFileTypeMap mimeTypesMap = new MimetypesFileTypeMap();
// only by file name
String mimeType = mimeTypesMap.getContentType(fileName);
// or by actual File instance
File file = new File(fileName);
mimeType = mimeTypesMap.getContentType(file);
getContentType(File)
states: Returns the MIME type of the file object.The implementation in this class calls getContentType(f.getName())
.
MimetypesFileTypeMap.getDefaultFileTypeMap().getContentType(file)
application/octet-stream
is returned).
Apache Tika offers in tika-core a mime type detection based based on magic markers in the stream prefix. tika-core
does not fetch other dependencies, which makes it as lightweight as the currently unmaintained Mime Type Detection Utility.
Simple code example (Java 7), using the variables theInputStream
and theFileName
try (InputStream is = theInputStream;
BufferedInputStream bis = new BufferedInputStream(is);) {
AutoDetectParser parser = new AutoDetectParser();
Detector detector = parser.getDetector();
Metadata md = new Metadata();
md.add(Metadata.RESOURCE_NAME_KEY, theFileName);
MediaType mediaType = detector.detect(bis, md);
return mediaType.toString();
}
Please note that MediaType.detect(...)
cannot be used directly (TIKA-1120). More hints are provided at https://tika.apache.org/1.24/detection.html.
Metadata.RESOURCE_NAME_KEY
can be omitted (if you don't have any or cannot rely on original name), but in that case you will get wrong result in some cases (office documents for example).
If you're an Android developer, you can use a utility class android.webkit.MimeTypeMap
which maps MIME-types to file extensions and vice versa.
Following code snippet may help you.
private static String getMimeType(String fileUrl) {
String extension = MimeTypeMap.getFileExtensionFromUrl(fileUrl);
return MimeTypeMap.getSingleton().getMimeTypeFromExtension(extension);
}
From roseindia:
FileNameMap fileNameMap = URLConnection.getFileNameMap();
String mimeType = fileNameMap.getContentTypeFor("alert.gif");
If you are stuck with java 5-6 then this utility class from servoy open source product.
You only need this function
public static String getContentType(byte[] data, String name)
It probes the first bytes of the content and returns the content types based on that content and not by file extension.
I was just wondering how most people fetch a mime type from a file in Java?
I've published my SimpleMagic Java package which allows content-type (mime-type) determination from files and byte arrays. It is designed to read and run the Unix file(1) command magic files that are a part of most ~Unix OS configurations.
I tried Apache Tika but it is huge with tons of dependencies, URLConnection
doesn't use the bytes of the files, and MimetypesFileTypeMap
also just looks at files names.
With SimpleMagic you can do something like:
// create a magic utility using the internal magic file
ContentInfoUtil util = new ContentInfoUtil();
// if you want to use a different config file(s), you can load them by hand:
// ContentInfoUtil util = new ContentInfoUtil("/etc/magic");
...
ContentInfo info = util.findMatch("/tmp/upload.tmp");
// or
ContentInfo info = util.findMatch(inputStream);
// or
ContentInfo info = util.findMatch(contentByteArray);
// null if no match
if (info != null) {
String mimeType = info.getMimeType();
}
To chip in with my 5 cents:
TL,DR
I use MimetypesFileTypeMap and add any mime that is not there and I specifically need it, into mime.types file.
And now, the long read:
First of all, MIME types list is huge, see here: https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml
I like to use standard facilities provided by JDK first, and if that doesn't work, I'll go and look for something else.
Determine file type from file extension
Since 1.6, Java has MimetypesFileTypeMap, as pointed in one of the answers above, and it is the simplest way to determine mime type:
new MimetypesFileTypeMap().getContentType( fileName );
In its vanilla implementation this does not do much (i.e. it works for .html but it doesn't for .png). It is, however, super simple to add any content type you may need:
Create file named 'mime.types' in META-INF folder in your project Add a line for every mime type you need and default implementation doesn't provide (there are hundreds of mime types and list grows as time goes by).
Example entries for png and js files would be:
image/png png PNG
application/javascript js
For mime.types file format, see more details here: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/javax/activation/MimetypesFileTypeMap.html
Determine file type from file content
Since 1.7, Java has java.nio.file.spi.FileTypeDetector, which defines a standard API for determining a file type in implementation specific way.
To fetch mime type for a file, you would simply use Files and do this in your code:
Files.probeContentType(Paths.get("either file name or full path goes here"));
The API definition provides for facilities that support either for determining file mime type from file name or from file content (magic bytes). That is why probeContentType() method throws IOException, in case an implementation of this API uses Path provided to it to actually try to open the file associated with it.
Again, vanilla implementation of this (the one that comes with JDK) leaves a lot to be desired.
In some ideal world in a galaxy far, far away, all these libraries which try to solve this file-to-mime-type problem would simply implement java.nio.file.spi.FileTypeDetector, you would drop in the preferred implementing library's jar file into your classpath and that would be it.
In the real world, the one where you need TL,DR section, you should find the library with most stars next to it's name and use it. For this particular case, I don't need one (yet ;) ).
Simple and Best option retrieve the content mime type from the file location.
Use this imports
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Path;
Code
String type = Files.probeContentType(Path.of(imagePath));
I tried several ways to do it, including the first ones said by @Joshua Fox. But some don't recognize frequent mimetypes like for PDF files, and other could not be trustable with fake files (I tried with a RAR file with extension changed to TIF). The solution I found, as also is said by @Joshua Fox in a superficial way, is to use MimeUtil2, like this:
MimeUtil2 mimeUtil = new MimeUtil2();
mimeUtil.registerMimeDetector("eu.medsea.mimeutil.detector.MagicMimeMimeDetector");
String mimeType = MimeUtil2.getMostSpecificMimeType(mimeUtil.getMimeTypes(file)).toString();
This is the simplest way I found for doing this:
byte[] byteArray = ...
InputStream is = new BufferedInputStream(new ByteArrayInputStream(byteArray));
String mimeType = URLConnection.guessContentTypeFromStream(is);
Apache Tika.
<!-- https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/org.apache.tika/tika-parsers -->
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.tika</groupId>
<artifactId>tika-parsers</artifactId>
<version>1.24</version>
</dependency>
and Two line of code.
Tika tika=new Tika();
tika.detect(inputStream);
Screenshot below
https://i.stack.imgur.com/zGTrB.png
It is better to use two layer validation for files upload.
First you can check for the mimeType and validate it.
Second you should look to convert the first 4 bytes of your file to hexadecimal and then compare it with the magic numbers. Then it will be a really secure way to check for file validations.
You can do it with just one line: MimetypesFileTypeMap().getContentType(new File("filename.ext")). Look the complete test code (Java 7):
import java.io.File;
import javax.activation.MimetypesFileTypeMap;
public class MimeTest {
public static void main(String a[]){
System.out.println(new MimetypesFileTypeMap().getContentType(
new File("/path/filename.txt")));
}
}
This code produces the follow output: text/plain
If you are working with a Servlet and if the servlet context is available to you, you can use :
getServletContext().getMimeType( fileName );
getServletContext
?
I couldn't find anything to check for video/mp4
MIME type so I made my own solution. I happened to observe that Wikipedia was wrong and that the 00 00 00 18 66 74 79 70 69 73 6F 6D
file signature is not correct. the fourth byte (18
) and all 70
(excluded) after changes quite a lot amongst otherwise valid mp4
files.
This code is essentially a copy/paste of URLConnection.guessContentTypeFromStream
code but tailored to video/mp4
.
BufferedInputStream bis = new BufferedInputStream(new ByteArrayInputStream(content));
String mimeType = URLConnection.guessContentTypeFromStream(bis);
// Goes full barbaric and processes the bytes manually
if (mimeType == null){
// These ints converted in hex ar:
// 00 00 00 18 66 74 79 70 69 73 6F 6D
// which are the file signature (magic bytes) for .mp4 files
// from https://www.wikiwand.com/en/List_of_file_signatures
// just ctrl+f "mp4"
int[] mp4_sig = {0, 0, 0, 24, 102, 116, 121, 112};
bis.reset();
bis.mark(16);
int[] firstBytes = new int[8];
for (int i = 0; i < 8; i++) {
firstBytes[i] = bis.read();
}
// This byte doesn't matter for the file signature and changes
mp4_sig[3] = content[3];
bis.reset();
if (Arrays.equals(firstBytes, mp4_sig)){
mimeType = "video/mp4";
}
}
Tested successfully against 10 different .mp4
files.
EDIT: Here is a useful link (if it is still online) where you can find samples of many types. I don't own those videos, don't know who does either, but they're useful for testing the above code.
Actually, Apache Tika detector Tika.detect(File)
is the best option and more accurate than Files.probeContentType(path)
.
check this great quick reference which contains examples and code samples.
in spring MultipartFile file;
org.springframework.web.multipart.MultipartFile
file.getContentType();
A solution to detecting a file's Media Type1 has the following parts:
A list of file signatures (see Kessler's list, Wikipedia's list, and Space Maker's list)
A list of Media Types
A map of Media Types to file name extensions
Comparing file signatures against File, Path, or InputStream data sources
Please remember to give credit if you copy the code.
StreamMediaType.java
In the following code -1
means skip comparing the byte at that index; a -2
denotes end of file type signature. This detects binary formats, primarily images, and a few plain text format variations (HTML, SVG, XML). The code uses up to the first 11 "magic" bytes from the data source's header. Optimizations and improvements that shorten the logic are welcome.
import java.io.FileInputStream;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.util.LinkedHashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import static com.keenwrite.io.MediaType.*;
import static java.lang.System.arraycopy;
public class StreamMediaType {
private static final int FORMAT_LENGTH = 11;
private static final int END_OF_DATA = -2;
private static final Map<int[], MediaType> FORMAT = new LinkedHashMap<>();
static {
//@formatter:off
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x73, 0x76, 0x67, 0x20 ), IMAGE_SVG_XML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x89, 0x50, 0x4E, 0x47, 0x0D, 0x0A, 0x1A, 0x0A ), IMAGE_PNG );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0xFF, 0xD8, 0xFF, 0xE0 ), IMAGE_JPEG );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0xFF, 0xD8, 0xFF, 0xEE ), IMAGE_JPEG );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0xFF, 0xD8, 0xFF, 0xE1, -1, -1, 0x45, 0x78, 0x69, 0x66, 0x00 ), IMAGE_JPEG );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x49, 0x49, 0x2A, 0x00 ), IMAGE_TIFF );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x4D, 0x4D, 0x00, 0x2A ), IMAGE_TIFF );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x47, 0x49, 0x46, 0x38 ), IMAGE_GIF );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x8A, 0x4D, 0x4E, 0x47, 0x0D, 0x0A, 0x1A, 0x0A ), VIDEO_MNG );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x25, 0x50, 0x44, 0x46, 0x2D, 0x31, 0x2E ), APP_PDF );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x38, 0x42, 0x50, 0x53, 0x00, 0x01 ), IMAGE_PHOTOSHOP );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x25, 0x21, 0x50, 0x53, 0x2D, 0x41, 0x64, 0x6F, 0x62, 0x65, 0x2D ), APP_EPS );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x25, 0x21, 0x50, 0x53 ), APP_PS );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0xFF, 0xFB, 0x30 ), AUDIO_MP3 );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x49, 0x44, 0x33 ), AUDIO_MP3 );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x21 ), TEXT_HTML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x68, 0x74, 0x6D, 0x6C ), TEXT_HTML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x68, 0x65, 0x61, 0x64 ), TEXT_HTML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x62, 0x6F, 0x64, 0x79 ), TEXT_HTML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x48, 0x54, 0x4D, 0x4C ), TEXT_HTML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x48, 0x45, 0x41, 0x44 ), TEXT_HTML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x42, 0x4F, 0x44, 0x59 ), TEXT_HTML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x3C, 0x3F, 0x78, 0x6D, 0x6C, 0x20 ), TEXT_XML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0xFE, 0xFF, 0x00, 0x3C, 0x00, 0x3f, 0x00, 0x78 ), TEXT_XML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0xFF, 0xFE, 0x3C, 0x00, 0x3F, 0x00, 0x78, 0x00 ), TEXT_XML );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x42, 0x4D ), IMAGE_BMP );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x23, 0x64, 0x65, 0x66 ), IMAGE_X_BITMAP );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x21, 0x20, 0x58, 0x50, 0x4D, 0x32 ), IMAGE_X_PIXMAP );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x2E, 0x73, 0x6E, 0x64 ), AUDIO_BASIC );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x64, 0x6E, 0x73, 0x2E ), AUDIO_BASIC );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x52, 0x49, 0x46, 0x46 ), AUDIO_WAV );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x50, 0x4B ), APP_ZIP );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0x41, 0x43, -1, -1, -1, -1, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00 ), APP_ACAD );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0xCA, 0xFE, 0xBA, 0xBE ), APP_JAVA );
FORMAT.put( ints( 0xAC, 0xED ), APP_JAVA_OBJECT );
//@formatter:on
}
private StreamMediaType() {
}
public static MediaType getMediaType( final Path path ) throws IOException {
return getMediaType( path.toFile() );
}
public static MediaType getMediaType( final java.io.File file )
throws IOException {
try( final var fis = new FileInputStream( file ) ) {
return getMediaType( fis );
}
}
public static MediaType getMediaType( final InputStream is )
throws IOException {
final var input = new byte[ FORMAT_LENGTH ];
final var count = is.read( input, 0, FORMAT_LENGTH );
if( count > 1 ) {
final var available = new byte[ count ];
arraycopy( input, 0, available, 0, count );
return getMediaType( available );
}
return UNDEFINED;
}
public static MediaType getMediaType( final byte[] data ) {
assert data != null;
final var source = new int[]{
0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF};
for( int i = 0; i < data.length; i++ ) {
source[ i ] = data[ i ] & 0xFF;
}
for( final var key : FORMAT.keySet() ) {
int i = -1;
boolean matches = true;
while( ++i < FORMAT_LENGTH && key[ i ] != END_OF_DATA && matches ) {
matches = key[ i ] == source[ i ] || key[ i ] == -1;
}
if( matches ) {
return FORMAT.get( key );
}
}
return UNDEFINED;
}
private static int[] ints( final int... data ) {
final var magic = new int[ FORMAT_LENGTH ];
int i = -1;
while( ++i < data.length ) {
magic[ i ] = data[ i ];
}
while( i < FORMAT_LENGTH ) {
magic[ i++ ] = END_OF_DATA;
}
return magic;
}
}
MediaType.java
Define the file formats according to the IANA Media Type list. Notice that the file name extensions are mapped in MediaTypeExtension
. There's a dependency on Apache's FilenameUtils class for its getExtension
function.
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.nio.file.Path;
import static MediaType.TypeName.*;
import static MediaTypeExtension.getMediaType;
import static org.apache.commons.io.FilenameUtils.getExtension;
public enum MediaType {
APP_ACAD( APPLICATION, "acad" ),
APP_JAVA_OBJECT( APPLICATION, "x-java-serialized-object" ),
APP_JAVA( APPLICATION, "java" ),
APP_PS( APPLICATION, "postscript" ),
APP_EPS( APPLICATION, "eps" ),
APP_PDF( APPLICATION, "pdf" ),
APP_ZIP( APPLICATION, "zip" ),
FONT_OTF( "otf" ),
FONT_TTF( "ttf" ),
IMAGE_APNG( "apng" ),
IMAGE_ACES( "aces" ),
IMAGE_AVCI( "avci" ),
IMAGE_AVCS( "avcs" ),
IMAGE_BMP( "bmp" ),
IMAGE_CGM( "cgm" ),
IMAGE_DICOM_RLE( "dicom_rle" ),
IMAGE_EMF( "emf" ),
IMAGE_EXAMPLE( "example" ),
IMAGE_FITS( "fits" ),
IMAGE_G3FAX( "g3fax" ),
IMAGE_GIF( "gif" ),
IMAGE_HEIC( "heic" ),
IMAGE_HEIF( "heif" ),
IMAGE_HEJ2K( "hej2k" ),
IMAGE_HSJ2( "hsj2" ),
IMAGE_X_ICON( "x-icon" ),
IMAGE_JLS( "jls" ),
IMAGE_JP2( "jp2" ),
IMAGE_JPEG( "jpeg" ),
IMAGE_JPH( "jph" ),
IMAGE_JPHC( "jphc" ),
IMAGE_JPM( "jpm" ),
IMAGE_JPX( "jpx" ),
IMAGE_JXR( "jxr" ),
IMAGE_JXRA( "jxrA" ),
IMAGE_JXRS( "jxrS" ),
IMAGE_JXS( "jxs" ),
IMAGE_JXSC( "jxsc" ),
IMAGE_JXSI( "jxsi" ),
IMAGE_JXSS( "jxss" ),
IMAGE_KTX( "ktx" ),
IMAGE_KTX2( "ktx2" ),
IMAGE_NAPLPS( "naplps" ),
IMAGE_PNG( "png" ),
IMAGE_PHOTOSHOP( "photoshop" ),
IMAGE_SVG_XML( "svg+xml" ),
IMAGE_T38( "t38" ),
IMAGE_TIFF( "tiff" ),
IMAGE_WEBP( "webp" ),
IMAGE_WMF( "wmf" ),
IMAGE_X_BITMAP( "x-xbitmap" ),
IMAGE_X_PIXMAP( "x-xpixmap" ),
AUDIO_BASIC( AUDIO, "basic" ),
AUDIO_MP3( AUDIO, "mp3" ),
AUDIO_WAV( AUDIO, "x-wav" ),
VIDEO_MNG( VIDEO, "x-mng" ),
TEXT_HTML( TEXT, "html" ),
TEXT_MARKDOWN( TEXT, "markdown" ),
TEXT_PLAIN( TEXT, "plain" ),
TEXT_XHTML( TEXT, "xhtml+xml" ),
TEXT_XML( TEXT, "xml" ),
TEXT_YAML( TEXT, "yaml" ),
/*
* When all other lights go out.
*/
UNDEFINED( TypeName.UNDEFINED, "undefined" );
public enum TypeName {
APPLICATION,
AUDIO,
IMAGE,
TEXT,
UNDEFINED,
VIDEO
}
private final String mMediaType;
private final TypeName mTypeName;
private final String mSubtype;
MediaType( final String subtype ) {
this( IMAGE, subtype );
}
MediaType( final TypeName typeName, final String subtype ) {
mTypeName = typeName;
mSubtype = subtype;
mMediaType = typeName.toString().toLowerCase() + '/' + subtype;
}
public static MediaType valueFrom( final File file ) {
assert file != null;
return fromFilename( file.getName() );
}
public static MediaType fromFilename( final String filename ) {
assert filename != null;
return getMediaType( getExtension( filename ) );
}
public static MediaType valueFrom( final Path path ) {
assert path != null;
return valueFrom( path.toFile() );
}
public static MediaType valueFrom( String contentType ) {
if( contentType == null || contentType.isBlank() ) {
return UNDEFINED;
}
var i = contentType.indexOf( ';' );
contentType = contentType.substring(
0, i == -1 ? contentType.length() : i );
i = contentType.indexOf( '/' );
i = i == -1 ? contentType.length() : i;
final var type = contentType.substring( 0, i );
final var subtype = contentType.substring( i + 1 );
return valueFrom( type, subtype );
}
public static MediaType valueFrom(
final String type, final String subtype ) {
assert type != null;
assert subtype != null;
for( final var mediaType : values() ) {
if( mediaType.equals( type, subtype ) ) {
return mediaType;
}
}
return UNDEFINED;
}
public boolean equals( final String type, final String subtype ) {
assert type != null;
assert subtype != null;
return mTypeName.name().equalsIgnoreCase( type ) &&
mSubtype.equalsIgnoreCase( subtype );
}
public boolean isType( final TypeName typeName ) {
return mTypeName == typeName;
}
public String getSubtype() {
return mSubtype;
}
@Override
public String toString() {
return mMediaType;
}
}
MediaTypeExtension.java
Last piece of the puzzle is a map of MediaType
s to their known and common/popular file name extensions. This allows bidirectional lookup based on file name extensions.
import static MediaType.*;
import static java.util.List.of;
public enum MediaTypeExtension {
MEDIA_APP_ACAD( APP_ACAD, of( "dwg" ) ),
MEDIA_APP_PDF( APP_PDF ),
MEDIA_APP_PS( APP_PS, of( "ps" ) ),
MEDIA_APP_EPS( APP_EPS ),
MEDIA_APP_ZIP( APP_ZIP ),
MEDIA_AUDIO_MP3( AUDIO_MP3 ),
MEDIA_AUDIO_BASIC( AUDIO_BASIC, of( "au" ) ),
MEDIA_AUDIO_WAV( AUDIO_WAV, of( "wav" ) ),
MEDIA_FONT_OTF( FONT_OTF ),
MEDIA_FONT_TTF( FONT_TTF ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_APNG( IMAGE_APNG ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_BMP( IMAGE_BMP ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_GIF( IMAGE_GIF ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_JPEG( IMAGE_JPEG,
of( "jpg", "jpe", "jpeg", "jfif", "pjpeg", "pjp" ) ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_PNG( IMAGE_PNG ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_PSD( IMAGE_PHOTOSHOP, of( "psd" ) ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_SVG( IMAGE_SVG_XML, of( "svg" ) ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_TIFF( IMAGE_TIFF, of( "tiff", "tif" ) ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_WEBP( IMAGE_WEBP ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_X_BITMAP( IMAGE_X_BITMAP, of( "xbm" ) ),
MEDIA_IMAGE_X_PIXMAP( IMAGE_X_PIXMAP, of( "xpm" ) ),
MEDIA_VIDEO_MNG( VIDEO_MNG, of( "mng" ) ),
MEDIA_TEXT_MARKDOWN( TEXT_MARKDOWN, of(
"md", "markdown", "mdown", "mdtxt", "mdtext", "mdwn", "mkd", "mkdown",
"mkdn" ) ),
MEDIA_TEXT_PLAIN( TEXT_PLAIN, of( "txt", "asc", "ascii", "text", "utxt" ) ),
MEDIA_TEXT_R_MARKDOWN( TEXT_R_MARKDOWN, of( "Rmd" ) ),
MEDIA_TEXT_R_XML( TEXT_R_XML, of( "Rxml" ) ),
MEDIA_TEXT_XHTML( TEXT_XHTML, of( "xhtml" ) ),
MEDIA_TEXT_XML( TEXT_XML ),
MEDIA_TEXT_YAML( TEXT_YAML, of( "yaml", "yml" ) ),
MEDIA_UNDEFINED( UNDEFINED, of( "undefined" ) );
private final MediaType mMediaType;
private final List<String> mExtensions;
MediaTypeExtension( final MediaType mediaType ) {
this( mediaType, of( mediaType.getSubtype() ) );
}
MediaTypeExtension(
final MediaType mediaType, final List<String> extensions ) {
assert mediaType != null;
assert extensions != null;
assert !extensions.isEmpty();
mMediaType = mediaType;
mExtensions = extensions;
}
public String getExtension() {
return mExtensions.get( 0 );
}
public static MediaTypeExtension valueFrom( final MediaType mediaType ) {
for( final var type : values() ) {
if( type.isMediaType( mediaType ) ) {
return type;
}
}
return MEDIA_UNDEFINED;
}
boolean isMediaType( final MediaType mediaType ) {
return mMediaType == mediaType;
}
static MediaType getMediaType( final String extension ) {
final var sanitized = sanitize( extension );
for( final var mediaType : MediaTypeExtension.values() ) {
if( mediaType.isType( sanitized ) ) {
return mediaType.getMediaType();
}
}
return UNDEFINED;
}
private boolean isType( final String sanitized ) {
for( final var extension : mExtensions ) {
if( extension.equalsIgnoreCase( sanitized ) ) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
private static String sanitize( final String extension ) {
return extension == null ? "" : extension.toLowerCase();
}
private MediaType getMediaType() {
return mMediaType;
}
}
Usages:
// EXAMPLE -- Detect media type
//
final File image = new File( "filename.jpg" );
final MediaType mt = StreamMediaType.getMediaType( image );
// Tricky! The JPG could be a PNG in disguise.
if( mt.isType( MediaType.TypeName.IMAGE ) ) {
if( mt == MediaType.IMAGE_PNG ) {
// Nice try! Sneaky sneak.
}
}
// EXAMPLE -- Get typical media type file name extension
//
final String ext = MediaTypeExtension.valueFrom( MediaType.IMAGE_SVG_XML ).getExtension();
// EXAMPLE -- Get media type from HTTP request
//
final var url = new URL( "https://localhost/path/file.ext" );
final var conn = (HttpURLConnection) url.openConnection();
final var contentType = conn.getContentType();
MediaType mediaType = valueFrom( contentType );
// Fall back to stream detection probe
if( mediaType == UNDEFINED ) {
mediaType = StreamMediaType.getMediaType( conn.getInputStream() );
}
conn.disconnect();
You get the idea.
Short library review:
Apache Tika -- 600kb bloat, needs multiple lines to configure, and multiple JAR files.
jMimeMagic -- Unfinished, needs multiple lines to configure.
MimeUtil2 -- Fairly large, didn't work out-of-the-box.
FileTypeDetector -- Bundled with JDK, buggier than a mountain pine beetle infested forest.
Files.probeContentType -- Detection is platform-specific and considered unreliable (source).
MimetypesFileTypeMap -- Bundled with activation.jar, uses file name extension.
Sample audio, video, and image files for testing:
http://mirrors.standaloneinstaller.com/video-sample/
https://www.w3.org/People/mimasa/test/imgformat/
1 "MIME type" is a deprecated term.
if you work on linux OS ,there is a command line file --mimetype
:
String mimetype(file){
//1. run cmd
Object cmd=Runtime.getRuntime().exec("file --mime-type "+file);
//2 get output of cmd , then
//3. parse mimetype
if(output){return output.split(":")[1].trim(); }
return "";
}
Then
mimetype("/home/nyapp.war") // 'application/zip'
mimetype("/var/www/ggg/au.mp3") // 'audio/mp3'
After trying various other libraries I settled with mime-util.
<groupId>eu.medsea.mimeutil</groupId>
<artifactId>mime-util</artifactId>
<version>2.1.3</version>
</dependency>
File file = new File("D:/test.tif");
MimeUtil.registerMimeDetector("eu.medsea.mimeutil.detector.MagicMimeMimeDetector");
Collection<?> mimeTypes = MimeUtil.getMimeTypes(file);
System.out.println(mimeTypes);
public String getFileContentType(String fileName) {
String fileType = "Undetermined";
final File file = new File(fileName);
try
{
fileType = Files.probeContentType(file.toPath());
}
catch (IOException ioException)
{
System.out.println(
"ERROR: Unable to determine file type for " + fileName
+ " due to exception " + ioException);
}
return fileType;
}
File file = new File(PropertiesReader.FILE_PATH);
MimetypesFileTypeMap fileTypeMap = new MimetypesFileTypeMap();
String mimeType = fileTypeMap.getContentType(file);
URLConnection uconnection = file.toURL().openConnection();
mimeType = uconnection.getContentType();
Check the magic bytes of the stream or file:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/65667558/3225638
It uses pure Java, but requires you to define an enum
of the types you want to detect.
If you want a reliable (ie. consistent) way of mapping file extensions to mime-types, here is what I use:
It includes a bundled mime types database and basically inverts the logic of javax.activation's MimetypesFileTypeMap class by using the database to initialize the "programmatic" entries. That way the library-defined types always have precedence over what may be defined in unbundled resources.
I did it with following code.
import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.net.HttpURLConnection;
import java.net.URL;
public class MimeFileType {
public static void main(String args[]){
try{
URL url = new URL ("https://www.url.com.pdf");
HttpURLConnection connection = (HttpURLConnection) url.openConnection();
connection.setRequestMethod("GET");
connection.setDoOutput(true);
InputStream content = (InputStream)connection.getInputStream();
connection.getHeaderField("Content-Type");
System.out.println("Content-Type "+ connection.getHeaderField("Content-Type"));
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader (new InputStreamReader(content));
}catch (Exception e){
}
}
}
Success story sharing
null
out for.xml
,.png
, and.xhtml
files. I don't know if I'm just doing something horribly wrong, but that seems rather terrible.