12

Let's say I want to avoid using bind variables in JDBC and run SQL using "ad-hoc" statements, e.g:

connection.createStatement().executeQuery("SELECT ...");

Is there any convention / JDBC escape syntax to inline BLOB data types? I know that H2 has this syntax:

INSERT INTO lob_table VALUES (X'01FF');

But that's not a standard. Any general solutions? Note, I'm interested in a general approach. I know that this can turn out to be terribly inefficient.

4
  • 1
    If it's a Text field and not Image most DBMS's will accept a string. If you want to get non-text info in there you could shift it to hex, expensive though that. Feb 16, 2012 at 22:58
  • @TonyHopkinson: I have no knowledge of the data's semantics, so I have to assume it's actually binary data. So you're saying that most DB's do accept hex strings?
    – Lukas Eder
    Feb 16, 2012 at 23:04
  • In Text blob, yes. Image, I have no idea, never tried to do it. Hmmm perhaps Convert(VarBinary(),"SomeString" might be a goer as well, as a sudden thought Feb 17, 2012 at 11:00
  • @TonyHopkinson: That seems to be SQL Server-specific. Nice to know how it works, but generally for this question it's out of scope. I'm just looking for BLOB / BINARY data types
    – Lukas Eder
    Feb 17, 2012 at 11:12

3 Answers 3

28

There probably isn't a JDBC escape syntax, so I searched around a bit and found and successfully tested the following:

  • SQL Server, Sybase ASE, Sybase SQL Anywhere

    INSERT INTO lob_table VALUES (0x01FF);
    
  • DB2

    -- Use a blob constructor. This is not needed for VARCHAR FOR BIT DATA types
    INSERT INTO lob_table VALUES (blob(X'01FF'));
    
  • Derby, H2, HSQLDB, Ingres, MySQL, SQLite

    INSERT INTO lob_table VALUES (X'01FF');
    
  • Oracle

    -- As mentioned by a_horse_with_no_name, keep in mind the relatively low
    -- limitation of Oracle's VARCHAR types to hold only 4000 bytes!
    INSERT INTO lob_table VALUES (hextoraw('01FF'));
    
  • Postgres

    -- There is also hex encoding as of Postgres 9.0
    -- The explicit cast is important, though
    INSERT INTO lob_table VALUES (E'\\001\\377'::bytea);
    

    See A.H.'s answer for more details about Postgres' hex encoding

  • SQL Standard

    -- SQL actually defines binary literals as such 
    -- (as implemented by DB2, Derby, H2, HSQLDB, Ingres, MySQL, SQLite):
    <binary string literal> ::=
      X <quote> [ <space>... ] 
      [ { <hexit> [ <space>... ] <hexit> [ <space>... ] }... ] <quote>
    
    <hexit> ::=
      <digit> | A | B | C | D | E | F | a | b | c | d | e | f
    
8
  • 2
    Very good compilation. Note that Oracle's has a limit of 4000 characters for character literals which also applies for the hextoraw() function. That limits the max. size of the blob that you can create like that.
    – user330315
    Feb 17, 2012 at 7:22
  • 1
    @eckes: Yes this works as documented above and is implemented this way in jOOQ. In what context did you try this (i.e. what's the full statement)?
    – Lukas Eder
    Aug 10, 2013 at 9:42
  • 2
    @LukasEder Yes you are right, INSERT INTO tBlob(cID, cBlob) VALUE ("1",CAST(X'010203' AS BLOB)) actually works with Derby. My problems seems to be Flyway related. BTW: without the cast it does not work, it returns: ERROR 42821: Columns of type 'BLOB' cannot hold values of type 'CHAR () FOR BIT DATA'. which is expected according to the Derby spec.
    – eckes
    Aug 11, 2013 at 0:06
  • 1
    @eckes: "BTW: without the cast it does not work": Yes that might be true. Derby is very picky with data types...
    – Lukas Eder
    Aug 11, 2013 at 7:54
  • 1
    Note of the obvious: At least in MySQL, BLOBs are a specific type of string. So where useful, "normal" string literals also work as BLOB literals: INSERT INTO lob_table VALUES ('abc')
    – tanius
    Nov 9, 2015 at 0:15
4

I'd like to add some PostgreSQL specific stuff to Lukas' answer:

The shortest and most easiest solution would be (since PostgreSQL 9.0 at least):

insert into lob_table (data) values( E'\\x0102030405FF' )

without any cast (if the column is already a bytea one) and only one \\x mark right at the beginning. This is the "hex format" documented in the section Binary Data Types.

Regarding the X'01FF' syntax: According to the string constant documentation PostgreSQL does support it - for bit strings. And it seems, that there is no standard conversion from bit to bytea.

3
  • Nice, thanks for the addition. I don't know what I did wrong, but in my Postgres instance (9.0), the hex variant didn't seem to work when running select E'\\x01FF'. But maybe I was missing some detail
    – Lukas Eder
    Feb 17, 2012 at 8:23
  • Does is work now? I tested on 9.1. My guess: You used E'\\x01\\xFF' which indeed does not work :-)
    – A.H.
    Feb 17, 2012 at 8:27
  • It actually works. It's just my nonsensical hex code 01FF which has no useful correspondance in utf-8, which is why it was still escaped in the output. DUH! ;-)
    – Lukas Eder
    Feb 17, 2012 at 8:48
2
public String binaryLiteral(Connection con, byte[] bytes) {
    String databaseName = con.getMetaData().getDatabaseProductName();
    String binary = DatatypeConverter.printHexBinary(bytes);
    switch (databaseName) {
        case "Microsoft SQL Server":
        case "Sybase Anywhere": case "ASE": case "Adaptive Server Enterprise": // Sybase
            return "CONVERT(VARBINARY(MAX), '0x" + binary + "', 1)";
        case "Oracle":
            if (binary.length() <= 4000) {
                return "HEXTORAW('" + binary + "')";
            } else {
                // https://stackoverflow.com/questions/18116634/oracle-10-using-hextoraw-to-fill-in-blob-data/62162036#62162036
                return "CONCAT_RAWS(RAWS(" +
                        Streams.stream(Splitter.fixedLength(4000).split(binary))
                                .map(chunk -> "HEXTORAW('" + chunk + "')")
                                .collect(Collectors.joining(",")) +
                        "))";
            }
        case "PostgreSQL":
            return "E'\\\\x" + binary + "'";
        case "H2":
        // the following list is mostly untested
        case "HSQL Database Engine":
        case "Apache Derby":
        case "Ingres":
        case "MySQL":
        case "MariaDB":
        case "SQLite":
        case "Informix Dynamic Server":
        case "DB2":
        case "Firebird":
        default: // SQL Standard
            return "X'" + binary + "'";
    }

The source for CONCAT_RAWS and RAWS is given in Oracle 10: Using HEXTORAW to fill in blob data.

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