111
votes

I have an offline web application using appcaching. I need to provide it about 10MB - 20MB of data that it will save (client-side) consisting mainly of PNG image files. The operation is as follows:

  1. Web application downloads and installs in appcache (uses manifest)
  2. Web app requests from server PNG data files (how? - see alternatives below)
  3. Occasionally web app resyncs with server, and does small partial updates/deletes/additions to PNG database
  4. FYI: Server is a JSON REST server, that can place files in wwwroot for pickup

Here is my current analysis of client-based "databases" that handle binary blob storage

SEE UPDATE at Bottom

  • AppCache (via manifest add all the PNG and then update on demand)

    • CON: any change of a PNG database item will mean complete download of all items in manifest (Really bad news!)
  • WebStorage

  • PhoneGap & SQLLite

    • CON: Sponsor will reject it as a native app requiring certification
  • ZIP file

    • Server creates a zip file, places it in wwwroot, and notifies client
    • user has to manually unzip (At least that is how I see it) and save to client file system
    • Web app uses FileSystem API to reference files
    • CON: ZIP might be too large (zip64?), long time to create
    • CON: Not sure if FileSystem API can always read out of the sandbox (I think so)
  • USB or SD card (back to the stone age....)

    • The user will be local to the server before going offline
    • So we could have him insert a SD card, let the server fill it with PNG files
    • Then the user will plug it into the laptop, tablet
    • Web app will use FileSystem API to read the files
    • CON: Not sure if FileSystem API can always read out of the sandbox (I think so)
  • WebSQL

    • CON: w3c has abandoned it (pretty bad)
    • I might consider a Javascript wrapper that uses IndexedDB and WebSQL as a fall-back
  • FileSystem API

  • IndexedDB

  • LawnChair JavaScript wrapper http://brian.io/lawnchair/

    • PRO: very clean wrapper for IndexedDB, WebSQL or whatever database you have (think polyfill)
    • CON: cannot store binary blobs, only data:uri (base64 encoding) (probably fatal flaw due to cost of de-encoding)
  • IndexedDB JQUERY polyFill https://github.com/axemclion/jquery-indexeddb

    • Parashuram has writtent a nice JQUERY wrapper for the raw IndexedDB interface
    • PRO: greatly simplifies using IndexedDB, I was hoping to add a shim/polyfill for Chrome FileSystemAPI
    • CON: It should handle blobs, but I was unable to get it to work
  • idb.filesystem.js http://ericbidelman.tumblr.com/post/21649963613/idb-filesystem-js-bringing-the-html5-filesystem-api

    • Eric Bidelman @ Google has written a well tested PolyFill the FileSystem API that uses Indexed DB as a fall back
    • PRO: FileSystem API is well suited for storing blobs
    • PRO: works great on FireFox and Chrome
      • PRO: great for synchronizing with cloud based CouchDB
    • CON: no clear why, but it is not working on IE10
  • PouchDB JavaScript Library http://pouchdb.com/

    • great for syncing a CouchDB with a local DB (uses either WebSQL or IndexedDB (not my problem though)
    • CON: NO CONS, PouchDB now supports binary blobs for all recent browsers (IE, Chrome, Firefox, Chrome on mobile, etc.) as well as many older browsers. That was not the case when I first did this post.

NOTE: to see a data:uri encoding of PNG I created an example at: http://jsbin.com/ivefak/1/edit

Desired/Usefull/Uneeded Features

  • No native (EXE, PhoneGap, ObjectiveC, etc) app on client (pure web application)
  • Only needs to run on latest Chrome, FireFox, IE10 for laptops
  • Strongly want same solution for Android Tablet (IOS would be nice too) but only need one browser to work (FF, Chrome, etc.)
  • Fast initial DB population
  • REQUIREMENT: Very fast retrieval of images by web application from storage (DB, file)
  • Not meant for consumers. We can restrict browsers, and ask user to do special setup & tasks, but let's minimize that

IndexedDB Implementations

  • There is an excellent article on how IE,FF,and Chrome internally implement this at: http://www.aaron-powell.com/web/indexeddb-storage
  • In short:
    • IE uses the same database format as Exchange and Active Directory for IndexedDB
    • Firefox is using SQLite so are kind of implementing a NoSQL database in to SQL database
    • Chrome (and WebKit) are using a Key/ Value store which has heritage in BigTable

My Current Results

  • I chose to use an IndexedDB approach (and polyfill with FileSystemAPI for Chrome until they ship blob support)
  • For fetching the tiles, I had a dilemna since the JQUERY folks are kvetching about adding this to AJAX
  • I went with XHR2-Lib by Phil Parsons, which is very much like JQUERY .ajax() https://github.com/p-m-p/xhr2-lib
  • Performance for 100MB downloads (IE10 4s, Chrome 6s, FireFox 7s).
  • I could not get any of the IndexedDB wrappers to work for blobs (lawnchair, PouchDB, jquery-indexeddb, etc.)
  • I rolled my own wrapper, and performance is (IE10 2s, Chrome 3s, FireFox 10s)
  • With FF, I assume we are seeing the performance issue of using a relational DB (sqllite) for a non-sql storage
  • NOTE, Chrome has outstanding debug tools (developer tab, resources) for inspecting the state of the IndexedDB.

FINAL Results posted below as answer

Update

PouchDB now supports binary blobs for all recent browsers (IE, Chrome, Firefox, Chrome on mobile, etc.) as well as many older browsers. That was not the case when I first did this post.

4
webstorage doesnt support json but strings , so you can base64 encode your imagez and serve them back as dataurls.mpm
Ok, but probably not optimal (or within quota) for 20MB of imagery, that actually are slippy map tiles, that need to be fetched & displayed rapidly by a LEAFLET map application as you zoom and pan.Dr.YSG
The research you've done is quite helpful.Bogdan Kulynych
my point is you dont need to deal with binary blobs if you are using png images.mpm
You are right, would you mind if I update the document to reflect your input?Dr.YSG

4 Answers

26
votes

Results Offline blob cache for PNG slippy maps

Testing

  • 171 PNG files (total of 3.2MB)
  • Platforms tested: Chrome v24, FireFox 18, IE 10
  • Should also work with Chrome & FF for Android

Fetch from web server

  • using XHR2 (supported on almost all browsers) for blob download from web server
  • I went with XHR2-Lib by Phil Parsons, which is very much like JQUERY .ajax()

Storage

Display

  • I am using Leaflet http://leafletjs.com/ to show the map tiles
  • I used the functional tile layer plugin by Ishmael Smyrnow for fetching the tile layer from the DB
  • I compared the DB-based tiles layer with a purely local (localhost://) storage
  • There is no noticeable difference in performance! between using IndexedDB and local files!

Results

  • Chrome: Fetch (6.551s), Store (8.247s), Total Elapsed Time: (13.714s)
  • FireFox: Fetch (0.422s), Store (31.519s), Total Elapsed Time: (32.836s)
  • IE 10: Fetch (0.668s), Store: (0.896s), Total Elapsed Time: (3.758s)
4
votes

For your requirements I suggest that developing a new polyfill based on two others: FileSystem API to IndexedDB and IndexedDB to WebSQL — is the best option.

The former one will enable support for storing blobs in Chrome (FileSystem API) and Firefox (IndexedDB), while the latter should provide the support for Android and iOS (WebSQL). What is needed is just making these polyfills work together, and I suppose it's not hard.

NB: Since I couldn't find any information on the web about this, you should test if storing blobs using the WebSQL polyfill will work on iOS and Android. It looks like it should work though:

var sql = ["CREATE TABLE", idbModules.util.quote(storeName), "(key BLOB", createOptions.autoIncrement ? ", inc INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT" : "PRIMARY KEY", ", value BLOB)"].join(" ")

Source

2
votes

I have map caching examples(open example, discover regions and zooms, switch offline and discovered regions will availaible).

There are map.js - map layer for offline tiles, storage.js - storage implementation based on IndexedDb and WebSQL (but this just test implementation with poor performance).

  • For site files (html, css, js and etc.) I prefer use application cache.
  • For storage I prefer use Indexed DB (support blob), Web SQL (only base64), FileWriter (support blob, but only chrome). Frankly storage is big issue for this. You need the fastest key value solution that will mix them all. I think is good decision to use exist solution.
  • For fetching I used canvas with CORS. But I thinking about WebWorkers and XHR2 and this can be better instead canvas because canvas have some troubles with CORS in different browsers and other (for example this title was stored bad in opera).

Additional information about sizes for 2 billion city (Minsk):

  • Zoom - 9, tiles - 2, size - 52 kb, with previous - 52 kb;
  • Zoom - 10, tiles - 3, size - 72 kb, with previous - 124 kb;
  • Zoom - 11, tiles - 7, size - 204 kb, with previous - 328 kb;
  • Zoom - 12, tiles - 17, size - 348 kb, with previous - 676 kb;
  • Zoom - 13, tiles - 48, size - 820 kb, with previous - 1.5 mb;
  • Zoom - 14, tiles - 158, size - 2.2 mb, with previous - 3.7 mb;
  • Zoom - 15, tiles - 586, size - 5.5 mb, with previous - 9.3 mb;
  • Zoom - 16, tiles - 2264, size - 15 mb, with previous - 24.3 mb;
1
votes

A few years back (not exactly the stone age), I was using a signed java applet that would query its server for syncing/updating requirements, download appropriate files from the server and save them on the user's filesystem (not a database). That solution might work for you, although you will need someone to write the applet and sign it. For database solutions, such an applet can use the jdbc available for most databases using localhost on a suitable port (e.g., 3306 for MySQL). I believe the applet tag is deprecated in Html5 but it still works. No experience on Android tablets, so can't comment on that part.