Обсуждение: bytea and character encoding when inserting escaped literals
Hi, I've searched the archives a fair amount on this topic, but have not found quite the answer / explanation I'm looking for. I attribute this to my eternal confusion over character encoding issues in all environments, so I apologize in advance for what might be a stupid question. :) I'mm running Postgresql 8.3.1 on WinXP. I have a UTF8 database into which I'm trying to execute a series of INSERT INTO DDL statements. One of the columns in the table I'm inserting into is a BYTEA column, intended to hold the bytes that are the representation of a (small) image.[1] I had thought -- apparently erroneously -- that because this is not a text based column, that I could send any string of bytes (octets) via my INSERT statement to populate values in this column. I'm using escaped string literals with hexadecimal representation so my INSERTs look something like: INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\x15\x1C\x2F\x00\x02...', ...) ; As you might be able to guess, I'm getting the error: ERROR: Invalid byte sequence for encoding "UTF8": 0x00 (I get the error whether I attempt this via JDBC or via the command-line client with client encoding set to UTF8 or WIN1252.) Again, I was surprised by this error since I thought from the documentation at [2] that the server would only expect to be dealing in a sequence of octets here, without any character-encoding constraints implied by the DB's encoding. What is the actual cause of this error, and how do I workaround it? Do I need to pretend that my data is Unicode character data and specify the UTF8 octets for that character data in my E'...' literal? thanks in advance for any help! Lee PS [3] [1] Actually, this DDL has been converted from that for a different DB that uses LONGVARBINARY for this. BYTEA was my best guess for the Postgresql equivalent. [2] http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/datatype-binary.html [3] I also was confused as to why 0x00 would be an invalid UTF8 byte sequence. On its own, as I understand it, 0x00 is a fine UTF8 byte sequence (representing Unicode codepoint 0). And when I (from the command line) try to insert other invalid UTF8 sequences -- such as INSERT INTO foo VALUES (E'\xC0\x80') I get an error that mentions the full byte sequence as invalid: "invalid byte sequence for encoding "UTF8": 0xc080". So this further confuses me. :-)
Hi Lee, On 05.05.2008, at 17:07, Lee Feigenbaum wrote: > INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\x15\x1C\x2F\x00\x02...', ...) ; try escaping the backslashes: INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\\x15\\x1C\\x2F\\x00\\x02...', ...) ; Jan
Asche wrote: > Hi Lee, > > On 05.05.2008, at 17:07, Lee Feigenbaum wrote: >> INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\x15\x1C\x2F\x00\x02...', ...) ; > > try escaping the backslashes: > > INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\\x15\\x1C\\x2F\\x00\\x02...', ...) ; Hi Jan, Thanks for the suggestion. I should have mentioned in my original message that as per your suggestion and the suggestion in the documentation, I have tried escaping the backslashes. When I do this, I get the error: ERROR: invalid input syntax for type bytea I tried also doing INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\\x15\\x1C\\x2F\\x00\\x02...'::bytea, ...) ; but get the same errors. Lee
Hi Lee, > Thanks for the suggestion. I should have mentioned in my original > message that as per your suggestion and the suggestion in the > documentation, I have tried escaping the backslashes. When I do > this, I get the error: > > ERROR: invalid input syntax for type bytea > > I tried also doing > > INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\\x15\\x1C\\x2F\\x00\ > \x02...'::bytea, ...) ; > > but get the same errors. I think i see another problem with your query. You should convert to three-digit octal (something like \\001\\002...) not \\x01 (hex?). Jan
I'm thinking that the answer is in the literal interpretation of the error message, i.e. it doesn't like the specific byte 0x00, i.e. the null byte. According to the docs (4.1.2.1. String Constants): "The character with the code zero cannot be in a string constant." The reason may be that these are handled by C under the hood, so that sequence would terminate the string and there shouldn't be anything following it. So the question then becomes, how to insert binary data this way? I'm not sure about that off-hand. -- Andy On May 5, 2008, at 11:07 AM, Lee Feigenbaum wrote: > I had thought -- apparently erroneously -- that because this is not > a text based column, that I could send any string of bytes (octets) > via my INSERT statement to populate values in this column. I'm > using escaped string literals with hexadecimal representation so my > INSERTs look something like: > > INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\x15\x1C\x2F\x00\x02...', ...) ; > > As you might be able to guess, I'm getting the error: > > ERROR: Invalid byte sequence for encoding "UTF8": 0x00 > > (I get the error whether I attempt this via JDBC or via the command- > line client with client encoding set to UTF8 or WIN1252.) > > Again, I was surprised by this error since I thought from the > documentation at [2] that the server would only expect to be > dealing in a sequence of octets here, without any character- > encoding constraints implied by the DB's encoding. > > What is the actual cause of this error, and how do I workaround it? > Do I need to pretend that my data is Unicode character data and > specify the UTF8 octets for that character data in my E'...' literal? > > thanks in advance for any help! > > Lee > > PS [3] > > [1] Actually, this DDL has been converted from that for a different > DB that uses LONGVARBINARY for this. BYTEA was my best guess for > the Postgresql equivalent. > > [2] http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/interactive/datatype- > binary.html > > [3] I also was confused as to why 0x00 would be an invalid UTF8 > byte sequence. On its own, as I understand it, 0x00 is a fine UTF8 > byte sequence (representing Unicode codepoint 0). And when I (from > the command line) try to insert other invalid UTF8 sequences -- > such as INSERT INTO foo VALUES (E'\xC0\x80') I get an error that > mentions the full byte sequence as invalid: "invalid byte sequence > for encoding "UTF8": 0xc080". So this further confuses me. :-) > > -- > Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@postgresql.org) > To make changes to your subscription: > http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general
Asche wrote: > Hi Lee, > >> Thanks for the suggestion. I should have mentioned in my original >> message that as per your suggestion and the suggestion in the >> documentation, I have tried escaping the backslashes. When I do this, >> I get the error: >> >> ERROR: invalid input syntax for type bytea >> >> I tried also doing >> >> INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., >> E'\\x15\\x1C\\x2F\\x00\\x02...'::bytea, ...) ; >> >> but get the same errors. > > I think i see another problem with your query. You should convert to > three-digit octal (something like \\001\\002...) not \\x01 (hex?). Hi Jan, Thanks, I think I finally see what's happening here (and understand the docs) - the bytea type has its own string-serialization (escape format) _separate_ from postgresql's normal string literal escaping. So while E'\xC0' is postgresql serialization of a string containing whatever character maps from 0xC0 in the current encoding, that byte cannot directly go into a bytea. Instead, I need to have a doubly-escaped octal (specifically) string so that the first escape generates a string like \000\001\002 which the bytea processor (somewhere) then re-parses as a sequence of bytes. Would be nice if the bytea parser understood hex representation too, but beggars can't be choosers :) thanks for the help, Lee > > Jan > >
Lee Feigenbaum <lee@thefigtrees.net> writes: > Would be nice if the bytea parser understood hex representation too, but > beggars can't be choosers :) decode() might help you: select decode('1200AB', 'hex'); decode -------------- \022\000\253 (1 row) regards, tom lane
On 05/05/2008 16:07, Lee Feigenbaum wrote: > INSERT INTO myTable VALUES (..., E'\x15\x1C\x2F\x00\x02...', ...) ; As I understand it, the octets need to be entered as their octal representation - have a look at table 8-7 at http://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.3/static/datatype-binary.html. HTH, Ray. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Raymond O'Donnell, Director of Music, Galway Cathedral, Ireland rod@iol.ie Galway Cathedral Recitals: http://www.galwaycathedral.org/recitals ------------------------------------------------------------------