Reading and Writing Binary Data with Oracle

Problem

You need to read and write binary data from and to an Oracle database.

Solution

Use the techniques shown in the following example.

The sample code contains two event handlers:

Read Button.Click

Clears the controls on the form and builds a SQL statement to get the record for the specified ID from the Oracle table TBL0912. A connection is created and a command is built using the SQL statement and executed to build a DataReader . The BLOB is retrieved from the DataReader and displayed in the PictureBox on the form. The CLOB and NCLOB values are retrieved from the DataReader and displayed in text boxes on the form.

Write Button.Click

Gets the ID from the TextBox on the form. A BLOB is retrieved from a user -specified file and loaded into a Byte array. An Oracle DataAdapter is created and a new table is created using the FillSchema( ) command. A CommandBuilder is created from the DataAdapter . A new row is created where the BLOB value is set from the file specified by the user and the CLOB , and NCLOB values are set from the text boxes on the form. The new row is added to the table and the data updated back to the source.

The C# code is shown in Example 9-15.

Example 9-15. File: ReadWriteBinaryDataFromOracleForm.cs

// Namespaces, variables, and constants
using System;
using System.Configuration;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using System.Text;
using System.IO;

using System.Data;
using System.Data.OracleClient;

private OpenFileDialog ofd;

private const String TABLENAME = "TBL0912";

private const String ID_FIELD = "ID";
private const String BLOBFIELD_FIELD = "BLOBFIELD";
private const String CLOBFIELD_FIELD = "CLOBFIELD";
private const String NCLOBFIELD_FIELD = "NCLOBFIELD";

// . . . 

private void readButton_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
 // Clear the controls.
 blobPictureBox.Image = null;
 clobTextBox.Clear( );
 nclobTextBox.Clear( );

 String sqlText = "SELECT * FROM " + TABLENAME + " WHERE ID = " +
 idTextBox.Text;

 // Create the connection and command.
 OracleConnection conn = new OracleConnection(
 ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings["Oracle_ConnectString"]);
 OracleCommand cmd = new OracleCommand(sqlText, conn);
 conn.Open( );
 
 // Create the DataReader.
 OracleDataReader dr = cmd.ExecuteReader( );
 // Iterate over the collection of rows in the DataReader.
 if(dr.Read( ))
 {
 // Retrieve the BLOB into a stream.
 Byte[] blob = null;
 if(!dr.IsDBNull(1))
 blob = (Byte[])dr.GetOracleLob(1).Value;
 MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream(blob);
 // Display the BLOB in the PictureBox.
 blobPictureBox.Image = Image.FromStream(ms);
 ms.Close( );

 // Get the CLOB.
 if(!dr.IsDBNull(2))
 clobTextBox.Text = dr.GetOracleLob(2).Value.ToString( );

 // Get the NCLOB.
 if(!dr.IsDBNull(3))
 nclobTextBox.Text = dr.GetOracleLob(3).Value.ToString( );
 }
 else
 {
 MessageBox.Show("No record found.", "Access Oracle LOB Data",
 MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Exclamation);
 }

 dr.Close( );
 conn.Close( );
}

private void writeButton_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
 // Get the user-supplied ID.
 int id;
 try
 {
 id = Convert.ToInt32(idTextBox.Text);
 }
 catch(System.Exception ex)
 {
 MessageBox.Show(ex.Message, "Access Oracle LOB Data",
 MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Exclamation);
 return;
 }

 // Save the BLOB, CLOB, and NCLOB.
 if (ofd.ShowDialog( ) == DialogResult.OK)
 {
 // Get a BLOB from a user-specified file.
 FileStream fs = new FileStream(ofd.FileName,
 FileMode.OpenOrCreate, FileAccess.Read);
 Byte[] blob = new Byte[fs.Length];
 fs.Read(blob, 0, blob.Length);
 fs.Close( );

 // Create a DataAdapter and table.
 OracleDataAdapter da = new OracleDataAdapter("SELECT * FROM " +
 TABLENAME,
 ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings["Oracle_ConnectString"]);
 DataTable table = new DataTable( );
 // Just get the schema.
 da.FillSchema(table, SchemaType.Source);
 OracleCommandBuilder cb = new OracleCommandBuilder(da);

 // Create a row containing the new BLOB, CLOB, and NCLOB data.
 DataRow row = table.NewRow( );
 row[ID_FIELD] = id;
 row[BLOBFIELD_FIELD] = blob;
 if(clobTextBox.TextLength > 0)
 row[CLOBFIELD_FIELD] = clobTextBox.Text;
 if(nclobTextBox.TextLength > 0)
 row[NCLOBFIELD_FIELD] = nclobTextBox.Text;
 // Add the row to the table.
 table.Rows.Add(row);

 // Update the Oracle database using the DataAdapter.
 try
 {
 da.Update(table);
 }
 catch(System.Exception ex)
 {
 MessageBox.Show(ex.Message, "Access Oracle LOB Data",
 MessageBoxButtons.OK,
 MessageBoxIcon.Exclamation);
 return;
 }

 MessageBox.Show("Record successfully created.",
 "Access Oracle LOB Data", MessageBoxButtons.OK,
 MessageBoxIcon.Information);
 }
}

Discussion

The GetOracleLob( ) typed accessor method of the OracleDataReader gets the value of the specified column as an OracleLob object representing a Large Object Binary (LOB) data type stored on an Oracle server. An Oracle LOB can be one of three types as described in Table 9-4.

Table 9-4. Oracle LOB data type

Data Type

Description

Blob

Oracle data type containing binary data with a maximum size of 4 GB. This data type maps to a Byte array.

Clob

Oracle data type containing character data based on the default character set of the server with a maximum size of 4 GB. This data type maps to a String .

NClob

Oracle data type containing character data based on the national character set of the server with a maximum size of 4 GB. This data type maps to a String .

The Oracle .NET data provider handles CLOB and NCLOB data as Unicode. Each character is therefore two bytes long.

See Recipe 9.12 for a general discussion about reading and writing BLOB data from and to a data source.

Connecting to Data

Retrieving and Managing Data

Searching and Analyzing Data

Adding and Modifying Data

Copying and Transferring Data

Maintaining Database Integrity

Binding Data to .NET User Interfaces

Working with XML

Optimizing .NET Data Access

Enumerating and Maintaining Database Objects

Appendix A. Converting from C# to VB Syntax



ADO. NET Cookbook
ADO.NET 3.5 Cookbook (Cookbooks (OReilly))
ISBN: 0596101406
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2002
Pages: 222
Authors: Bill Hamilton

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