LOBs are a PITA in all databases, as well as in JDBC. Handling them correctly takes a couple of lines of code, and you can be sure that you’ll get it wrong eventually. Because you have to think of a couple of things:

Foremost, LOBs are heavy resources that need special lifecycle management. Once you’ve allocated a LOB, you better “free” it as well to decrease the pressure on your GC. This article shows more about why you need to free lobs

The time when you allocate and free a lob is crucial. It might have a longer life span than any of your ResultSet , PreparedStatement , or Connection / transaction. Each database manages such life spans individually, and you might have to read up the specifications in edge cases

, , or / transaction. Each database manages such life spans individually, and you might have to read up the specifications in edge cases While you may use String instead of Clob , or byte[] instead of Blob for small to medium size LOBs, this may not always be the case, and may even lead to some nasty errors, like Oracle’s dreaded ORA-01461: can bind a LONG value only for insert into a LONG column

So, if you’re working on a low level using JDBC (instead of abstracting JDBC via Hibernate or jOOQ), you better write a small utility that takes care of proper LOB handling.

We’ve recently re-discovered our own utility that we’re using for jOOQ integration testing, at least in some databases, and thought this might be very useful to a couple of our readers who operate directly with JDBC. Consider the following class:

public class LOB implements AutoCloseable { private final Connection connection; private final List<Blob> blobs; private final List<Clob> clobs; public LOB(Connection connection) { this.connection = connection; this.blobs = new ArrayList<>(); this.clobs = new ArrayList<>(); } public final Blob blob(byte[] bytes) throws SQLException { Blob blob; // You may write more robust dialect // detection here if (connection.getMetaData() .getDatabaseProductName() .toLowerCase() .contains("oracle")) { blob = BLOB.createTemporary(connection, false, BLOB.DURATION_SESSION); } else { blob = connection.createBlob(); } blob.setBytes(1, bytes); blobs.add(blob); return blob; } public final Clob clob(String string) throws SQLException { Clob clob; if (connection.getMetaData() .getDatabaseProductName() .toLowerCase() .contains("oracle")) { clob = CLOB.createTemporary(connection, false, CLOB.DURATION_SESSION); } else { clob = connection.createClob(); } clob.setString(1, string); clobs.add(clob); return clob; } @Override public final void close() throws Exception { blobs.forEach(JDBCUtils::safeFree); clobs.forEach(JDBCUtils::safeFree); } }

This simple class has some nice treats:

It’s AutoCloseable , so you can free your lobs with the try-with-resources statement

, so you can free your lobs with the try-with-resources statement It abstracts over the creation of LOBs across SQL dialects. No need to remember the Oracle way

To use this class, simply write something like the following:

try ( LOB lob = new LOB(connection); PreparedStatement stmt = connection.prepareStatement( "insert into lobs (id, lob) values (?, ?)") ) { stmt.setInt(1, 1); stmt.setClob(2, lob.clob("abc")); stmt.executeUpdate(); }

That’s it! No need to keep references to the lob, safely freeing it if it’s not null, correctly recovering from exceptions, etc. Just put the LOB container in the try-with-resources statement, along with the PreparedStatement and done.