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I have a varbinary(max) field in Microsoft SQL Server which contains an image.

When running "SELECT IMAGE FROM TABLE", I get a result which looks like "0x07FD30...."

When using go to retrieve the data, I get the same hex string which is stored as a []byte:

type Person struct {
    PersonID string
    Image    []byte
} 

I connect to the database and do:

rows.Scan(&person.PersonID, &person.Image)

And then print the result as hex, it's the same:

fmt.Printf("%#x", p.Image)

Result:

0x07fd30...

My question is, how do I turn this back into an image?

I've tried writing the raw bytes to a file:

ioutil.WriteFile("./tempfile.png", p.Image, 0644)

I've tried using the image library to decode it, which just errors with an unidentified kind:

image.Decode(bytes.NewReader(p.Image))

And also tried png.Encode too.

Any thoughts or pointers in the right direction greatly appreciated.

Many thanks in advance.

16
  • "I've tried writing the raw bytes to a file" - what happened? "And also tried png.Encode too." - hopefully you tried to decode, not encode, but again, what happened? And what is your end goal? When you say "turn this back into an image", what does that mean? If the bytes are encoded image data, it already is an image, what are you trying to do with it?
    – Adrian
    Sep 20, 2018 at 14:12
  • Thanks. Yes, that's what I thought -- I assumed that the data I received from SQL would just be encoded image data. The file wasn't an image unfortunately. My end goal is to save the images elsewhere as part of a process we have. I suppose the question is, is my assumption correct? Or am I incorrect to take the data into a []byte and just write it out?
    – Darren
    Sep 20, 2018 at 14:18
  • If you take a file, read all of its bytes, store them in a database, read all the bytes back out, and write them to a file, you've effectively just copied the file. If the original was a valid image, the copy will be a valid image.
    – Adrian
    Sep 20, 2018 at 14:22
  • Yes, exactly. That's my assumption too, but clearly I'm wrong as it doesn't appear to be working. Based on that, one would have to assume that the original data isn't a straight image. If it helps, the image is placed there by Microsoft Dynamics.
    – Darren
    Sep 20, 2018 at 14:25
  • "it doesn't appear to be working" meaning what? Can you clarify the points from my original comment? It's not clear what issues you're actually running into here.
    – Adrian
    Sep 20, 2018 at 14:26

2 Answers 2

1

Darren was correct about the first 7 bytes always get added to the image files by AX, that is 07FD3097F90000. Unfortunately, it seems that AX also adds other information to the end of the binary file. I haven't figured out the exact pattern of the that but typically if the uploaded image is .png, AX just adds FF to the end, otherwise it makes tons of changes to the file.

In your case, if you are just interested in one specific image stored in SQL server, take a look at the binary file and see if it's ended with FF. If yes, strip off the extra bytes and then convert it to base64 to display it.

var data="0xFFD8FFE000104A464946....d";

var bytes = [];

for(var i=2; i< data.length-1; i+=2){
    bytes.push(parseInt(data.substr(i, 2), 16));
}
//str contains the base64 form of the image
var str = btoa(String.fromCharCode.apply(String, bytes));
0

Writing the raw bytes to a file with ioutil.WriteFile("./tempfile.png", p.Image, 0644) does seem to be the correct process. However, for whatever reason, Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 seems to add an extra 7 bytes to the beginning of the file when saving it to the database with their BinData class. So, using ioutil.WriteFile(s, p.Image[7:], 0644) works. I'd like to understand what those 7 bytes are and what they're for, but that's for another day. Thanks.

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