I'm building an asp.net MVC application where users can attach a picture to their profile, but also in other areas of the system like a messaging gadget on the dashboard that displays recent messages etc.
When the user uploads these I am wondering whether it would be better to store them in the database or on disk.
Database advantages
Easy to backup the entire database and keep profile content/images with associated profile/user tables
when I build web services later down the track, they can just pull all the profile related data from one spot(the database)
Filesystem advantages
loading files from disk is probably faster
any other advantages?
Where do other sites store this sort of information? Am I right to be a little concerned about database performance for something like this?
Maybe there would be a way to cache images pulled out from the database for a period of time?
Alternatively, what about the idea of storing these images in the database, but shadow copying them to disk so the web server can load them from there? This would seem to give both the backup and convenience of a Db, whilst giving the speed advantages of files on disk.
Infrastructure in question
Summary
Reading around on a lot of related threads here on SO, many people are now trending towards the SQL Server Filestream type. From what I could gather however (I may be wrong), there isn't much benefit when the files are quite small. Filestreaming however looks to greatly improve performance when files are multiple MB's or larger.
As my profile pictures tend to sit around ~5kb I decided to just leave them stored in a filestore in the database as varbinary(max).
In ASP.NET MVC I did see a bit of a performance issue returning FileContentResults for images pulled out of the database like this. So I ended up caching the file on disk when it is read if the location to this file is not found in my application cache.
So I guess I went for a hybrid;
At any point I can delete the cache folder on disk, and as the images are re-requested they will be re-copied on first hit and served from the cache there after.
Actually, your data store lookup with the database may actually be faster, depending on the number of images you have, unless you are using a highly optimized filesystem engine. Databases are designed for fast lookups and use a lot more interesting techniques than a file system does.
ReiserFS (obsolete) is really awesome for lookups. ZFS, XFS, and NTFS all have fantastic hashing algorithms. Linux ext4 looks promising too.
The hit on the system is not going to be any different in terms of block reads. The question is: what is faster, a query lookup that returns the filename (maybe a hash?), which in turn is accessed using a separate open, file send, close? Or just dumping the blob out?
There are several things to consider, including network hit, processing hit, distributability, etc. If you store stuff in the database, then you can move it. Then again, if you store images on a content delivery service, that may be way faster, since you are not doing any network hits on yourself.
Think about it, and remember a bit of benchmarking never hurt anybody :-) So, test it out with your typical dataset size and take into account things like simultaneous queries, etc.