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So I'm using an app that stores images heavily in the DB. What's your outlook on this? I'm more of a type to store the location in the filesystem, than store it directly in the DB.

What do you think are the pros/cons?

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52 Answers

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vote up 1 vote down

Im my experience I had to manage both situations: images stored in database and images on the file system with path stored in db.

The first solution, images in database, is somewhat "cleaner" as your data access layer will have to deal only with database objects; but this is good only when you have to deal with low numbers.

Obviously database access performance when you deal with binary large objects is degrading, and the database dimensions will grow a lot, causing again performance loss... and normally database space is much more expensive than file system space.

On the other hand having large binary objects stored in file system will cause you to have backup plans that have to consider both database and file system, and this can be an issue for some systems.

Another reason to go for file system is when you have to share your images data (or sounds, video, whatever) with third party access: in this days I'm developing a web app that uses images that have to be accessed from "outside" my web farm in such a way that a database access to retrieve binary data is simply impossible. So sometimes there are also desing considerations that will drive you to a choice.

Consider also, when making this choice, if you have to deal with permission and authentication when accessing binary objects: these requisites normally can be solved in an easier way when data are stored in db.

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vote up 4 vote down

If you're not on SQL Server 2008 and you have some solid reasons for putting specific image files in the database, then you could take the "both" approach and use the file system as a temporary cache and use the database as the master repository.

For example, your business logic can check if an image file exists on disc before serving it up, retrieving from the database when necessary. This buys you the capability of multiple web servers and fewer sync issues.

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vote up -1 vote down

I prefer to store image paths in the DB and images on the filesystem (with rsync between servers to keep everything reasonably current).

However, some of the content-management-system stuff I do needs the images in the CMS for several reasons- visibility control (so the asset is held back until the press release goes out), versioning, reformatting (some CMS's will dynamically resize for thumbnails )and ease of use for linking the images into the WYSIWYG pages.

So the rule of thumb for me is to always stash application stuff on the filesystem, unless it's CMS driven.

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I would go with the file system approach. No need to create or maintain a DB with images, it will save you some major headaches in the long run.

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It depends on the number of images you are going to store and also their sizes. I have used databases to store images in the past and my experience has been fairly good.

IMO, Pros of using database to store images are,

A. You don't need FS structure to hold your images
B. Database indexes perform better than FS trees when more number of items are to be stored
C. Smartly tuned database perform good job at caching the query results
D. Backups are simple. It also works well if you have replication set up and content is delivered from a server near to user. In such cases, explicit synchronization is not required.

If your images are going to be small (say < 64k) and the storage engine of your db supports inline (in record) BLOBs, it improves performance further as no indirection is required (Locality of reference is achieved).

Storing images may be a bad idea when you are dealing with small number of huge sized images. Another problem with storing images in db is that, metadata like creation, modification dates must handled by your application.

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In my current application, I'm doing both. When the user identifies an image to attach to a record, I use ImageMagick to resize it to an appropriate size for display on screen (about 300x300 for my application) and store that in the database for ease of access, but then also copy the user's original file to a network share so that it's available for applications that require higher resolution (like printing).

(There are a couple other factors involved as well: Navision will only display BMPs, so when I resize it I also convert to BMP for storage, and the database is replicated to remote sites where it's useful to be able to display the image. Printing is only done at the head office, so I don't need to replicate the original file.)

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vote up 0 vote down

In my little application I have at least a million files weighing in at about 200GB at last count. All the files are sitting in an XFS file system mounted on a linux server over iscsi. The paths are stored in the database. use some kind of intelligent naming convention for your file paths and file names.

IMHO, use the file system for what it was meant to do - store files. Databases generally do not offer you any advantage over a standard file system in storing binary data.

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vote up 5 vote down

Here's an interesting white paper on the topic.

http://research.microsoft.com/research/pubs/view.aspx?msr_tr_id=MSR-TR-2006-45

The answer is "It depends." Certainly it would depend upon the database server and its approach to blob storage. It also depends on the type of data being stored in blobs, as well as how that data is to be accessed.

Smaller sized files can be efficiently stored and delivered using the database as the storage mechanism. Larger files would probably be best stored using the file system, especially if they will be modified/updated often. (blob fragmentation becomes an issue in regards to performance.)

Here's an additional point to keep in mind. One of the reasons supporting the use of a database to store the blobs is ACID compliance. However, the approach that the testers used in the white paper, (Bulk Logged option of SQL Server,) which doubled SQL Server throughput, effectively changed the 'D' in ACID to a 'd,' as the blob data was not logged with the initial writes for the transaction. Therefore, if full ACID compliance is an important requirement for your system, halve the SQL Server throughput figures for database writes when comparing file I/O to database blob I/O.

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Images on a file store are the best bet, and supplement this with storing the meta data in a database. From a web server perspective, the fast way to serve stuff up is to point to it directly. If it's in the database - ala Sharepoint - you have the overhead of ADO.Net to pull it out, stream it, etc.

Documentum - while bloated and complicated - has it right in that the files are out on the share and available for you to determine how to store them - disk on the server, SAN, NAS, whatever. The Documentum strategy is to store the files a tree structure by encoding the folders and file names according to their primary key in the DB. The DB becomes the resource for knowing what files are what and for enforcing security. For high volume systems this type of approach is a good way to go.

Also consider this when dealing with metadata: should you ever need to update the attributes of your meta data corpus, the DB is your friend as you can quickly perform the updates with SQL. With other tagging systems you do not have the easy data manipulation tools at hand

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vote up 5 vote down

We have implemented a document imaging system that stores all it's images in SQL2005 blob fields. There are several hundred GB at the moment and we are seeing excellent response times and little or no performance degradation. In addition, fr regulatory compliance, we have a middleware layer that archives newly posted documents to an optical jukebox system which exposes them as a standard NTFS file system.

We've been very pleased with the results, particularly with respect to:

  1. Ease of Replication and Backup
  2. Ability to easily implement a document versioning system
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vote up 0 vote down

If you are planning a public facing web site then you should not go with either option. Your should use a Content Delivery Network (CDN). There are price, scalability and speed advantages to a CDN when delivering a large amount of static content over the internet.

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Something nobody has mentioned is that the DB guarantees atomic actions, transactional integrity and deals with concurrency. Even referentially integrity is out of the window with a filesystem - so how do you know your file names are really still correct?

If you have your images in a file-system and someone is reading the file as you're writing a new version or even deleting the file - what happens?

We use blobs because they're easier to manage (backup, replication, transfer) too. They work well for us.

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I have recently created a PHP/MySQL app which stores PDFs/Word files in a MySQL table (as big as 40MB per file so far).

Pros:

  • Uploaded files are replicated to backup server along with everything else, no separate backup strategy is needed (peace of mind).
  • Setting up the web server is slightly simpler because I don't need to have an uploads/ folder and tell all my applications where it is.
  • I get to use transactions for edits to improve data integrity - I don't have to worry about orphaned and missing files

Cons:

  • mysqldump now takes a looooong time because there is 500MB of file data in one of the tables.
  • Overall not very memory/cpu efficient when compared to filesystem

I'd call my implementation a success, it takes care of backup requirements and simplifies the layout of the project. The performance is fine for the 20-30 people who use the app.

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I would go with the file system approach, primarily due to its better flexibility. Consider that if the number of images gets huge, one database may not be able to handle it. With file system, you can simple add more file servers, assuming that you're using NFS or kind.

Another advantage the file system approach has is to be able to do some fancy stuffs, such as you can use Amazon S3 as the primary storage (save the url in the database instead of file path). In case of outages happen to S3, you fall back to your file server (may be another database entry containing the file path). Some voodoo to apply to Apache or whatever web server you're using.

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vote up -1 vote down

I'm wondering if CouchDB might be a good pick for storing images in an efficient manner. With is HTTP/REST interface it would be very simple for integrating with a web-site...

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vote up 8 vote down

In places where you MUST guarantee referential integrity and ACID compliance, storing images in the database is required.

You cannot transactionaly guarantee that the image and the meta-data about that image stored in the database refer to the same file. In other words, it is impossible to guarantee that the file on the filesystem is only ever altered at the same time and in the same transaction as the metadata.

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vote up 0 vote down

Database for data

Filesystem for files

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vote up 3 vote down

The problem with storing only filepaths to images in a database is that the database's integrity can no longer be forced.

If the actual image pointed to by the filepath becomes unavailable, the database unwittingly has an integrity error.

Given that the images are the actual data being sought after, and that they can be managed easier (the images won't suddenly disappear) in one integrated database rather than having to interface with some kind of filesystem (if the filesystem is independently accessed, the images MIGHT suddenly "disappear"), I'd go for storing them directly as a BLOB or such.

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vote up 1 vote down

Storing an image in the database still means that the image data ends up somewhere in the file system but obscured so that you cannot access it directly.

+ves:

  • database integrity
  • its easy to manage since you don't have to worry about keeping the filesystem in sync when an image is added or deleted

-ves:

  • performance penalty -- a database lookup is usually slower that a filesystem lookup
  • you cannot edit the image directly (crop, resize)

Both methods are common and practiced. Have a look at the advantages and disadvantages. Either way, you'll have to think about how to overcome the disadvantages. Storing in database usually means tweaking database parameters and implement some kind of caching. Using filesystem requires you to find some way of keeping filesystem+database in sync.

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vote up 4 vote down

Assumption: Application is web enabled/web based

I'm surprised no one has really mentioned this ... delegate it out to others who are specialists -> use a 3rd party image/file hosting provider.

Store your files on a paid online service like

Another StackOverflow threads talking about this here.

This thread explains why you should use a 3rd party hosting provider.

It's so worth it. They store it efficiently. No bandwith getting uploaded from your servers to client requests, etc.

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vote up 0 vote down

I'd almost never store them in the DB. The best approach is usually to store your images in a path controlled by a central configuration variable and name the images according to the DB table and primary key (if possible). This gives you the following advantages:

  • Move your images to another partition or server just by updating the global config.
  • Find the record matching the image by searching on its primary key.
  • Your images are accessable to processing tools like imagemagick.
  • In web-apps your images can be handled by your webserver directly (saving processing).
  • CMS tools and web languages like Coldfusion can handle uploading natively.
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I have worked with many digital storage systems and they all store digital objects on the file system. They tend to use a branch approach, so there will be an archive tree on the file system, often starting with year of entry e.g. 2009, subdirectory will be month e.g. 8 for August, next directory will be day e.g. 11 and sometimes they will use hour as well, the file will then be named with the records persistent ID. Using BLOBS has its advantages and I have heard of it being used often in the IT parts of the chemical industry for storing thousands or millions of photographs and diagrams. It can provide more granular security, a single method of backup, potentially better data integrity and improved inter media searching, Oracle has many features for this within the package they used to call Intermedia (I think it is called something else now). The file system can also have granular security provided through a system such as XACML or another XML type security object. See D Space of Fedora Object Store for examples.

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