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I'm building a site, and have just started getting into developing the backend.

The point of my site will be to display images to a visitor. For development purposes, I'd like to test everything first before going live.

I'd like to know what the best way of storing these images is. I've just finished setting up my Wamp server, and added a new db with phpMyAdmin. I found that I can store each image directly in the mySQL database as a BLOB data type. But is this the best way to go?

Thank you!

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4 Answers 4

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This is most certainly not the way to go. You will then need to keep the blob in memory in PHP before sending it to the browser.

A better approach would be to store the images as files in the filesystem and just store the filename in your database. that way, you can offload the entire image serving to the web server and never involve PHP in the HTTP requests for the file.

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Storing files into database has two main advantages:

  1. Transaction safety. If the user edits his profile (pic & birth date), then either both get saved or neither in case of a rollback / error.

  2. Just one backup point. It will not happen to you to forget to backup the directory containing user avatars.

However, because of many pitfalls, I don't recommend it, especially not using PHP & MySQL. MySQL doesn't support streaming, so in case of a big file, you're going to use up all your ram.

The filesystem is undoubtfully the fastest and most natural way way. It has the least overhead and is the least resource-hungry.

Read:

Storing a file in a database as opposed to the file system?

Storing Documents as Blobs in a Database - Any disadvantages?

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You can store them in DB then easily manipulate image. For example you can take original image from DB and create several cache images (on disk) with different sizes (using imagick), and show them in website. If u are using DB you should use lazy loading when taking images (load content only if you need it) else mysql will crash your server. :)

You can make a dir /cache/pictures/$id_$width_$height.jpg ,and store them there. And creating new image only if $id_$width_$height is not found.

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I, personally, wouldn't recommend storing the files in the database itself. I would store references to locations of the files so that it could be scaling in the future if necessary via mirrors, etc.

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