There's no maximum length I'm aware of... so you should probably go for a maximum sensible length. Something like 256 should be adequate for anything sensible, IMO. 128 may well be fine, but if you have a deep namespace hierarchy and a long outer class name and a long nested class name, I guess it's possible that a real type name would go over 128...
Are you definitely okay with just the type name without assembly information? If you need to be able to get the type using Type.GetType(string)
you will need assembly information unless it's in the currently executing assembly or mscorlib. Obviously that adds a considerable length to the string involved...
EDIT: As noted in your comment, if you use a constructed generic type, the names could get long very quickly. So whereas typeof(List<>).FullName
is quite short, typeof(List<string>).FullName
is not.
If you're going to be storing constructed generic types, it's probably worth giving a pretty large limit. Still, I'd hope that something like 4096 should be enough in most cases :)