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I have a table:

CREATE TABLE public."Persons"
(
    id_persons serial NOT NULL,
    name_persons varchar(50) NOT NULL,
    telephone_persons varchar(14) NOT NULL,
    email_persons varchar(100),
    address_persons integer NOT NULL,
    photo_persons oid,
    login_persons varchar(20) NOT NULL,
    password_persons varchar(32) NOT NULL,
    type_persons public."PersonTypes" NOT NULL DEFAULT 'Client',
    CONSTRAINT "Persons_pkey" PRIMARY KEY (id_persons),
    CONSTRAINT "Persons-email_ukey" UNIQUE (email_persons),
    CONSTRAINT "Persons-login_ukey" UNIQUE (login_persons)
);

On my local pc I have a photo.gif file and I need send this file to the photo_persons column in Person table.

I want to do this through a stored procedure and using the cursor.callproc() psycopg2 method.

I need a few examples of stored procedure and psycopg2 examples to get this.

1 Answer 1

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The oid you need to pass is the oid of the large object itself, not of a function.

Assuming some connection object conn:

conn = psycopg2.connect(...)

Large objects can be created and populated in a few ways, e.g.:

# Open for writing in binary mode. No oid is passed, so a new object
# will be created.
new_lob = conn.lobject(mode="wb")

# Stash the newly allocated oid.
new_oid = new_lob.oid

# Put some data in the object.
new_lob.write(b"some data")

# And close it out.
new_lob.close()

Alternatively, to create and populate a large object from a file local to where the code is running, you could do something like:

# Open for writing in binary mode. No oid is passed, so a new object
# will be created. psycopg2 will take care of loading the contents
# of the file named "somefile.ext".
new_lob = conn.lobject(mode="wb", new_file="somefile.ext")

# Stash the newly allocated oid.
new_oid = new_lob.oid

# And close it out.
new_lob.close()

To load data from a previously created large object, pass in the oid to lobject, e.g.:

# Open the object identified by new_oid in binary reading mode.
loaded_lob = conn.lobject(oid=new_oid, mode="rb")

# Load all of its data.
loaded_lob.read() == b"some data"

If you use the second approach to creating the object, i.e. by passing in the filename, you can then pass the generated oid to your function that then stores that identifier in your table. And note that you likely want to do both of those steps - creating the large object and creating the table entry - in the same transaction.

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  • But I have a postgresql store procedure for save data in a table called Person. This function expected receive many parameters, one of then is a oid type called photo. What must I pass to the photo parameter when I to call the store procedure with cursor.callproc()? It would be a lobject object? eg. cur.callproc(par1, par2,...., any_lobject) ? Jul 25, 2016 at 15:46
  • If the photo parameter is supposed to be the oid of an existing lobject then you pass in the oid like in the example above, e.g. new_lob.oid. Jul 25, 2016 at 15:56
  • In this case, the binary file must be beforehand stored in the database, it's correct? But in my case, the image file is on the local PC and needs to be sent to the database through stored procedure. Jul 25, 2016 at 16:53
  • Can you please update your question to describe your function, database schema, and intended workflow? The original question was focused specifically on passing oids around, which it has become clear is too narrow to address what you're actually having trouble with. Jul 25, 2016 at 17:00
  • 1
    Technically you could call .write to iteratively put new chunks of data, which is useful if you're streaming bytes. But if you already have the file saved somewhere you can just pass the filename to .lobject to have psycopg2 populate the object from there. That object allocation and population should happen outside of the stored procedure, which should just take the lobject oid. I've updated the answer with these details. Jul 25, 2016 at 18:05

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