I'm learning web-centric programming by writing myself a blog, using PHP with a MySQL database backend. This should replace my current (Drupal based) blog.
I've decided that a post
should contain some data: id
, userID
, title
, content
, time-posted
. That makes a nice schema for a database table. I'm having issues deciding how I want to organize the storage of content
, though.
I could either:
- Use a file-based system. The database table
content
would then be a URL to a locally-located file, which I'd then read, format, and display. - Store the entire contents of the post in
content
, ie put it into the database.
If I went with (1), searching the contents of posts would be slightly problematic - I'd be limited to metadata searching, or I'd have to read the contents of each file when searching (although I don't know how much of a problem that'd be - grep -ir "string" .
isn't too slow...). However, images (if any) would be referenced by a URL, so referencing content
would at least be an internally consistant methodology, and I'd be easily able to reuse the content, as text files are ridiculously easy to work with, compared to an SQL database file.
Going with (2), though, I could use a longtext
. The content
would then need to be sanitised before I tried to put it into the tuple, and I'm limited by size (although, it's unlikely that I'd write a 4GB blog post ;). Searching would be easy.
I don't (currently) see which way would be (a) easier to implement, (b) easier to live with.
Which way should I go / how is this normally done? Any further pros / cons for either (1) or (2) would be appreciated.