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Home/ Questions/Q 130011
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T05:52:50+00:00 2026-05-11T05:52:50+00:00

The platform isn’t really as important as the theory. For the record, it is

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The platform isn’t really as important as the theory. For the record, it is ASP.NET (C# on 3.5 SP1), SQL Server 2005. For the sake of argument, I have unlimited space (filesystem and database) and unlimited bandwidth.

I am working on a project that would allow multiple users to upload their own images which could be managed by that user and viewed by all users. I am trying to determine what the best storage mechanism is. My line of thought is that I would want to avoid storing them in the database directly, although I could see storing information about the images.

What I am seeing is that the user would upload the image. The server would create a unique name for the image, store it to the filesystem, and store the relational data about that image in the database (i.e. when it was uploaded, the association to the user, reference to a caption, etc.). Having these on disk is one step towards being able to move to a CDN in the future.

Has anyone used an approach like this or could recommend a different approach? Should there be some sort of a folder structure, such as a folder for each user to help file access times?

Any feedback would be appreciated!

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  1. 2026-05-11T05:52:51+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 5:52 am

    I think you already are on the right track as far as the recommended practice is concerned: Store data about the uploaded file in the database such as the filesystem location, filename, attributes, caption etc, but store the actual file in a designated folder specified explicitly for this purpose.

    This approach also allows you to check uploaded files for format restrictions and scan it for viruses before finalizing the upload process.

    Storing binary content such as images in the database is definitely not recommended and this opinion seems to be pretty widespread.

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