I have a blob in my database table. If I select 10 rows of the table (each row containing 1 blob), it takes 300 milliseconds. However, if I select 15 rows, it takes 20 seconds. I don't understand what is going on. The file that is selected is an image of 1 MB.
public void find() throws SQLException, IOException {
ResultSet rs = stm.executeQuery();
while (rs.next()) {
FileOutputStream output = new FileOutputStream(new File(
"C:\\Users\\test\\test.jpg"));
InputStream input = rs.getBinaryStream("photo");
byte[] buffer = new byte[8192];
int count = 0;
while ((count = input.read(buffer)) > 0) {
output.write(buffer, 0, count);
}
}
}
I honestly don't know why such small difference takes up so much time. Any help is greatly appreciated.
Edit for extra notes:
- Yes, the overwriting of the same image is intentional. (sorry for not pointing that out)
- Using rs.getBlob("photo").getBinaryStream() has still the same effect.
- The execution time of the method find() is being benchmarked via JMH. The piece of code above remains the same.
- The exact same code and SQL is running for a 'contact' table that for the first test has 100 rows (of which 10 are selected) and the other 150 rows (of which 15 are selected).
- The blob is inside the contact table.
The SQL:
String query = "SELECT * FROM contact c INNER JOIN contact_address ca ON c.id=ca.contact_id INNER JOIN groups_contact gc ON gc.contact_id=c.id INNER JOIN groups gr WHERE ca.country=? AND gr.name=? GROUP by c.id";
stm = conn.prepareStatement(query);
stm.setString(1, "NL");
stm.setString(2, "Friends");
stm.addBatch();
Update:
(measuring method is modified please see the above)
Selecting 10 rows: 239 ms.
Selecting 15 rows: 26378 ms.
Selecting 25 rows: 34888 ms.
Selecting 50 rows: 73267 ms.
Selecting 75 rows: 81885 ms.
Selecting 100 rows: 106528 ms.
Creations of table:
String createUserTable = "CREATE TABLE User (id INTEGER not NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, email VARCHAR(255), password VARCHAR(255), PRIMARY KEY (id))";
String createGroupTable = "CREATE TABLE Groups (id INTEGER not NULL AUTO_INCREMENT , name VARCHAR(255), user_id INTEGER not NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id), FOREIGN KEY (user_id) REFERENCES User(id))";
String createContactTable = "CREATE TABLE Contact (id INTEGER not NULL AUTO_INCREMENT , firstname VARCHAR(255), lastname VARCHAR(255), note VARCHAR(255), photo MEDIUMBLOB, user_id INTEGER, PRIMARY KEY (id), FOREIGN KEY (user_id) REFERENCES User(id))";
String createGroupContactTable = "CREATE TABLE Groups_Contact (id INTEGER not NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, contact_id INTEGER not NULL, group_id INTEGER not NULL, PRIMARY KEY (id), FOREIGN KEY (contact_id) REFERENCES Contact(id), FOREIGN KEY (group_id) REFERENCES Groups(id))";
String createContactAddressTable = "CREATE TABLE Contact_Address (id INTEGER not NULL AUTO_INCREMENT , street VARCHAR(255), number INTEGER, zipcode VARCHAR(255), city VARCHAR(255), country VARCHAR(255), addresstype VARCHAR(255), contact_id INTEGER not null, PRIMARY KEY (id), FOREIGN KEY (contact_id) REFERENCES Contact(id))";
String createContactPhoneTable = "CREATE TABLE Contact_Phone (id INTEGER not NULL AUTO_INCREMENT , type VARCHAR(255), number VARCHAR(255), contact_id INTEGER not null, PRIMARY KEY (id), FOREIGN KEY (contact_id) REFERENCES Contact(id))";
String createContactEmailTable = "CREATE TABLE Contact_Email (id INTEGER not NULL AUTO_INCREMENT , type VARCHAR(255), email VARCHAR(255), contact_id INTEGER not null, PRIMARY KEY (id), FOREIGN KEY (contact_id) REFERENCES Contact(id))";
while ((count = in.read(buffer)) > 0) { out.write(buffer, 0, count); }
You should also use a larger buffer, say 8192.