3 Overview of Storing and Managing JSON Data
This overview describes data types for JSON columns and ensuring that JSON columns contain well-formed JSON data.
Data Types for JSON Columns
You
can store JSON data in Oracle Database using columns whose data types are
JSON
, VARCHAR2
, CLOB
, or
BLOB
. Whichever type you use, you can manipulate JSON data as
you would manipulate any other data of those types. Storing JSON data using standard
data types allows all features of Oracle Database, such as advanced replication, to
work with tables containing JSON documents.
Oracle recommends that
you use JSON
data type, which stores JSON data in a native binary
format.
If you instead use one of the other types, the choice of which one to use is typically motivated by the size of the JSON documents you need to manage:
-
Use
VARCHAR2(4000)
if you are sure that your largest JSON documents do not exceed 4000 bytes (or characters)Foot 1Foot 1.If you use Oracle Exadata then choosing
VARCHAR2(4000)
can improve performance by allowing the execution of some JSON operations to be pushed down to Exadata storage cells, for improved performance. -
Use
VARCHAR2(32767)
if you know that some of your JSON documents are larger than 4000 bytes (or characters) and you are sure than none of the documents exceeds 32767 bytes (or characters)Foot 1.With
VARCHAR2(32767)
, the first roughly 3.5K bytes (or characters) of a document is stored in line, as part of the table row. This means that the added cost of usingVARCHAR2(32767)
instead ofVARCHAR2(4000)
applies only to those documents that are larger than about 3.5K. If most of your documents are smaller than this then you will likely notice little performance difference from usingVARCHAR2(4000)
.If you use Oracle Exadata then push-down is enabled for any documents that are stored in line.
-
Use
BLOB
(binary large object) orCLOB
(character large object) storage if you know that you have some JSON documents that are larger than 32767 bytes (or characters)Foot 1.
Ensure That JSON Columns Contain Well-Formed JSON Data
If you use
JSON
data type to store your JSON data (recommended) then the
data is guaranteed to be well-formed JSON data — you cannot store it
otherwise.
If you do not use JSON
data
type to store your JSON data then you can use SQL/JSON condition is
json
to check whether or not some JSON data is well formed. In this
case Oracle strongly recommends that you apply an is json
check
constraint to any JSON column, unless you expect some rows to contain something
other than well-formed JSON data.
The overhead of parsing JSON is such that evaluating the condition should not have a significant impact on insert and update performance, and omitting the constraint means you cannot use the simple dot-notation syntax to query the JSON data.
What constitutes well-formed JSON data is a gray area. In practice, it
is common for JSON data to have some characteristics that do not strictly follow the
standard definition. You can control which syntax you require a given column of JSON
data to conform to: the standard definition (strict syntax) or a JavaScript-like
syntax found in common practice (lax syntax). The default SQL/JSON syntax for Oracle
Database is lax. Which kind of syntax is used is controlled by condition
is json
. Applying an is json
check constraint
to a JSON column thus enables the use of lax JSON syntax, by default.
Related Topics
Parent topic: Store and Manage JSON Data
Footnote Legend
Footnote 1: Whether the limit is expressed in bytes or characters is determined by session parameterNLS_LENGTH_SEMANTICS
.