In order to determine which method is appropriate you
need to understand the limitations of each method. The
bytea data type is not well suited for storing very
large amounts of binary data. While a column of type
bytea can hold up to 1 GB of binary data, it would
require a huge amount of memory (RAM) to
process such a large value. The Large Object method for
storing binary data is better suited to storing very large values,
but it has its own limitations. Specifically deleting a row
that contains a Large Object does not delete the Large Object.
Deleting the Large Object is a separate operation that needs to
be performed. Large Objects also have some security
issues since anyone connected to the database case view
and/or modify any Large Object, even if they don't have
permissions to view/update the row containing the Large Object.
Example 5-4. Binary Data Examples
For example, suppose you have a table containing the file name of
an image and you also want to store the image in a bytea
column:
CREATE TABLE images (imgname text, img bytea);
To insert an image, you would use:
File file = new File("myimage.gif");
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(file);
PreparedStatement ps = conn.prepareStatement("INSERT INTO images VALUES (?, ?)");
ps.setString(1, file.getName());
ps.setBinaryStream(2, fis, file.length());
ps.executeUpdate();
ps.close();
fis.close();
Here, setBinaryStream() transfers a set number
of bytes from a stream into the column of type bytea.
This also could have been done using the setBytes()
method if the contents of the image was already in a
byte[].
Retrieving an image is even easier. (We use
PreparedStatement here, but the
Statement class can equally be used.)
PreparedStatement ps = con.prepareStatement("SELECT img FROM images WHERE imgname=?");
ps.setString(1, "myimage.gif");
ResultSet rs = ps.executeQuery();
if (rs != null) {
while(rs.next()) {
byte[] imgBytes = rs.getBytes(1);
// use the stream in some way here
}
rs.close();
}
ps.close();
Here the binary data was retrieved as an
byte[]. You could have used a
InputStream object instead.
Alternatively you could be storing a very large file and want to use
the LargeObject API to
store the file:
CREATE TABLE imagesLO (imgname text, imgOID OID);
To insert an image, you would use:
// All LargeObject API calls must be within a transaction
conn.setAutoCommit(false);
// Get the Large Object Manager to perform operations with
LargeObjectManager lobj = ((org.postgresql.PGConnection)conn).getLargeObjectAPI();
//create a new large object
int oid = lobj.create(LargeObjectManager.READ | LargeObjectManager.WRITE);
//open the large object for write
LargeObject obj = lobj.open(oid, LargeObjectManager.WRITE);
// Now open the file
File file = new File("myimage.gif");
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(file);
// copy the data from the file to the large object
byte buf[] = new byte[2048];
int s, tl = 0;
while ((s = fis.read(buf, 0, 2048)) > 0)
{
obj.write(buf, 0, s);
tl += s;
}
// Close the large object
obj.close();
//Now insert the row into imagesLO
PreparedStatement ps = conn.prepareStatement("INSERT INTO imagesLO VALUES (?, ?)");
ps.setString(1, file.getName());
ps.setInt(2, oid);
ps.executeUpdate();
ps.close();
fis.close();
Retrieving the image from the Large Object:
// All LargeObject API calls must be within a transaction
conn.setAutoCommit(false);
// Get the Large Object Manager to perform operations with
LargeObjectManager lobj = ((org.postgresql.PGConnection)conn).getLargeObjectAPI();
PreparedStatement ps = con.prepareStatement("SELECT imgOID FROM imagesLO WHERE imgname=?");
ps.setString(1, "myimage.gif");
ResultSet rs = ps.executeQuery();
if (rs != null) {
while(rs.next()) {
//open the large object for reading
int oid = rs.getInt(1);
LargeObject obj = lobj.open(oid, LargeObjectManager.READ);
//read the data
byte buf[] = new byte[obj.size()];
obj.read(buf, 0, obj.size());
//do something with the data read here
// Close the object
obj.close();
}
rs.close();
}
ps.close();