On May 22, 2013, at 11:20 , Pavan Sudheendra <[email protected]> wrote:
> Sorry Jan. I was wrong. Not to worry! :) Jan -- > > > On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 2:43 PM, Jan Lehnardt <[email protected]> wrote: > >> >> >> On 22.05.2013, at 10:52, Pavan Sudheendra <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> You can store the files (MP3) in a folder on the server, and the path to >>> the file in your database. >> >> >> >>> You can also save MP3's as binary data, but it >>> is very inefficient and really not a good idea. >> >> The second part of this sentence is a false statement. >> >> Storing music as binary data is fairly efficient in CouchDB. >> >> The conventional wisdom of "don't store binaries in your database" comes >> from traditional setups where the binary data would live in the database, >> would get marshalled over the client protocol to the application server >> from where it is handed to the web server for delivery, passing the border >> of kernel-land to user-land a few times. That *is* inefficient and >> discouraged. CouchDB streams binary data to the HTTP socket with just two >> such context switches and goes straight to HTTP where you can stream it >> efficiently to a client, a proxy or a CDN for delivery. >> >> But yes, this question should be moved to user@. >> >> Best, >> Jan >> -- >> >> >>> >>> Retrieve the song's path using its name or id and then do whatever you >> have >>> to do.. >>> This is just one way of doing it. >>> I'm sure many of the developers here have a better solution. >>> >>> >>> On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 1:53 PM, Rana Bunnni <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> Hi all, >>>> I would like to create a database that can store music. >>>> How can I save music in couchDB ? >>>> and how can i retrieve a specific music from the database ? >>>> >>>> Greetings >>>> /RB >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> -- >>> Regards- >>> Pavan >> > > > > -- > Regards- > Pavan
