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I need to store a url in a MySQL table. What's the best practice for defining a field that will hold a URL with an undetermined length?

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7 Answers

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VARCHAR(512) (or similar) should be sufficient. However, since you don't really know the maximum length of the URLs in question, I might just go direct to TEXT. The danger with this is of course loss of efficiency due to CLOBs being far slower than a simple string datatype like VARCHAR.

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vote up 1 vote down

varchar(max) for SQLServer2005

varchar(65535) for MySQL 5.0.3 and later

This will allocate storage as need and shouldn't affect performance.

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In your snippet, is max a magic ANSI SQL specifier to grow the VARCHAR size as necessary, or is it just a meta-variable for the sake of example? – Daniel Spiewak Oct 20 '08 at 19:33
It's a SQL2005 syntax. Editing . . . – TrickyNixon Oct 20 '08 at 19:36
In MySQL you most likely can't have a varchar that large unless it is the only column in the table. – carson Oct 20 '08 at 19:41
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Most browsers will let you put very large amounts of data in a URL and thus lots of things end up creating very large URLs so if you are talking about anything more than the domain part of a URL you will need to use a TEXT column since the VARCHAR/CHAR are limited.

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vote up 1 vote down

I don't know about other browsers, but IE7 has a 2083 character limit for HTTP GET operations. Unless any other browsers have lower limits, I don't see why you'd need any more characters than 2083.

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Most web servers have a URL length limit (which is why there is an error code for "URI too long"), meaning there is a practical upper size. Find the default length limit for the most popular web servers, and use the largest of them as the field's maximum size; it should be more than enough.

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vote up 14 vote down
  1. Lowest common denominator max URL length among popular web browsers: 2,083 (Internet Explorer)

  2. http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/char.html
    Values in VARCHAR columns are variable-length strings. The length can be specified as a value from 0 to 255 before MySQL 5.0.3, and 0 to 65,535 in 5.0.3 and later versions. The effective maximum length of a VARCHAR in MySQL 5.0.3 and later is subject to the maximum row size (65,535 bytes, which is shared among all columns) and the character set used.

  3. So ...
    < MySQL 5.0.3 use TEXT
    or
    >= MySQL 5.0.3 use VARCHAR(2083)

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vote up 0 vote down

See the below URL for the size limits of the popular browsers and web servers. http://www.boutell.com/newfaq/misc/urllength.html

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