Hi Taco,
Fom the little I understand, part of the problem is the underlying issue of what the DBMS does in terms of diskspace management. Traditionally records were made up of lots of small elements like numbers, dates, and strings, and the space management routines were designed with this in mind. Once you start adding blobs and large text fields it is difficult, if not impossible, for a DMBS to keep the data elements for each record together in one place so that they can all be read in one disk 'read'.
Now, I did say 'traditionally'. Maybe things have moved on with DBMSs so that they can cleverly manage the impact of blobs, and lets face it the speed of servers now is such that the issue may not be worth considering. I haven't really kept up... But my gut feeling would be that for a busy website with lots of pages and images and lots of hits you wouldn't want your images in the database unless you had a *very* good reason to do so.
HTH
Brett B)
Taco Fleur wrote:
I have always read that storing images/binary data in the db is bad - I always believed it, but is it really bad?
Did it maybe get a bad reputation because it is a complicated subject? Was it true for Access and pre MS SQL 2000 only?
Has anyone done any benchmarking to see how much slower it is to retrieve the image from the db instead of the filesystem?
Are there any other disadvantages in storing it in the db? - Slower than the filesystem ?
What are the advantages? - Full-text searches on the documents - Central repository - More secure - etc.
---
You are currently subscribed to cfaussie as: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Aussie Macromedia Developers: http://lists.daemon.com.au/
Register now for the 3rd National Conference on Tourism Futures, being held in Townsville, North Queensland 4-7 August - www.tq.com.au/tfconf
-- Brett Payne-Rhodes Eaglehawk Computing t: +61 (0)8 9371-0471 f: +61 (0)8 9371-0470 m: +61 (0)414 371 047 e: [EMAIL PROTECTED] w: www.ehc.net.au
--- You are currently subscribed to cfaussie as: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Aussie Macromedia Developers: http://lists.daemon.com.au/
