From the Spring JDBC documentation, I know how to insert a blob using JdbcTemplate
final File blobIn = new File("spring2004.jpg");
final InputStream blobIs = new FileInputStream(blobIn);
jdbcTemplate.execute(
"INSERT INTO lob_table (id, a_blob) VALUES (?, ?)",
new AbstractLobCreatingPreparedStatementCallback(lobhandler) {
protected void setValues(PreparedStatement ps, LobCreator lobCreator)
throws SQLException {
ps.setLong(1, 1L);
lobCreator.setBlobAsBinaryStream(ps, 2, blobIs, (int)blobIn.length());
}
}
);
blobIs.close();
And also how to retrieve the generated key of a newly inserted row:
KeyHolder keyHolder = new GeneratedKeyHolder();
jdbcTemplate.update(
new PreparedStatementCreator() {
public PreparedStatement createPreparedStatement(Connection connection) throws SQLException {
PreparedStatement ps =
connection.prepareStatement(INSERT_SQL, new String[] {"id"});
ps.setString(1, name);
return ps;
}
},
keyHolder);
// keyHolder.getKey() now contains the generated key
Is there a way I could combine the two?
I came here looking for the same answer, but wasn’t satisfied with what was accepted. So I did a little digging around and came up with this solution that I’ve tested in Oracle 10g and Spring 3.0
this also requires the following abstract class, based in part on Spring’s AbstractLobCreatingPreparedStatementCallback
Also, the table you create in Oracle should have an auto-incremented column for the id using a sequence and trigger. The trigger is necessary because otherwise you’d have to use Spring’s NamedParameterJdbcOperations (to do the sequence.nextval in your SQL) which doesn’t seem to have support for KeyHolder (which I use to retrieve the auto-gen id). See this blog post (not my blog) for more info: http://www.lifeaftercoffee.com/2006/02/17/how-to-create-auto-increment-columns-in-oracle/