The documentation at www.postgresql.org talks about Large Objects. Large
Objects in postgres are not like other data types. They are like files
identified by an OID number instead of a file pointer. Postgres has a set of
functions that more or less mirror C file IO functions. Instead of a file
pointer, you use the OID of the large object with these functions. When you
use the function to create a large object, it returns an OID that you use
from then on to work with it. If you read the docs, an OID is a hidden field
in every record in all tables and is created automatically by the database.
Just about every data item created in the database gets an OID number that
identifies it.
If you are working with JDBC, it has javadoc documentation. I have it on my
website:
http://localhost/~reaster/pg_jdbc/
http://localhost/~reaster/pg_jdbc/org/postgresql/largeobject/LargeObjectManager.html
The LargeObjectManager has the functions needed to get started. Notice how
the functions take an int OID. A LargeObject has a function getOID() so you
can get it when you need to. To construct a PGBlob object, you need this
OID. Postgres doesn't actually have SQL BLOB or CLOB datatypes. The postgres
JDBC PBblob just implements the JDBC blob interface but it uses the postgres
large object functions internally. I guess you can try to make your code
more portable if you create PGblobs and use that interface in your code.
When the real BLOB datatype is available, maybe less will have to be changed
in your code that way.
On Tuesday 23 January 2001 13:56, David Wall wrote:
> I'm new to Postgresql and am trying to figure out how I'd store
> Serializable objects, byte arrays and potentially large binary objects.
> JDBC has APIs for getObject(), getBytes() and getBlob(), but how do I
> define those attributes inside a table? I don't see the typical BYTE or
> BINARY or BLOB types.
>
> I know that 7.0.3 still suffers from the 8K row limit, so I'd hope that the
> JDBC library would automatically handle this for me, if I define some small
> objects as byte arrays, and larger objects are blobs. I saw somewhere a
> type BYTEA (byte array?), but I can't find it in the documentation to know
> if this is a real type, one of the user defined types that's a common
> extension, etc.
>
> Anybody handle these issues yet?
>
> Thanks,
> David
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