14

In my web application, I have a text area whose user-filled contents are ultimately persisted to the db with Hibernate. I have been running into an issue that when the user input is beyond a certain length, the persistence fails. Is there a way to indicate through Hibernate Annotations or in the configuration that this particular field should support longer strings, and that the database column type should reflect this?

Here's the exception that I'm getting:

Caused by: java.sql.BatchUpdateException: Data truncation: Data too long for column 'introText' at row 1
    at com.mysql.jdbc.PreparedStatement.executeBatchSerially(PreparedStatement.java:2007)
    at com.mysql.jdbc.PreparedStatement.executeBatch(PreparedStatement.java:1443)
    at org.hibernate.jdbc.BatchingBatcher.doExecuteBatch(BatchingBatcher.java:70)
    at org.hibernate.jdbc.AbstractBatcher.executeBatch(AbstractBatcher.java:268)
    ... 41 more
4
  • why do you say it fails? does it truncate the string silently on the backend or do you get an error message? If you tell hibernate that it is string type it will try to save everything. Jan 21, 2010 at 20:38
  • The user content is set in a String object. An exception is thrown during persistence.
    – mshafrir
    Jan 21, 2010 at 20:39
  • could you put the exception in your post? :) and perhaps the snippet from your current mapping. Jan 21, 2010 at 20:41
  • Arthur, thanks for following up. I will post the exception as soon as I can.
    – mshafrir
    Jan 21, 2010 at 20:47

4 Answers 4

29

You could use the length parameter on the annotation, like so:

@Column(length=1000)

or you could change the column type to something like text if your database supports it, like so:

@Column(columnDefinition="text")

If you are using hbm2ddl update, and the column will be created to use that type instead (database specific).

4
  • 2
    just to complement, here the length needed to be an int, and therefore @Column(length=1000)
    – Thomas
    Nov 5, 2012 at 13:00
  • 2
    For our project we like to have the psql-database use the VARCHAR type for some columns without a specified size. For this we use: @Column(columnDefinition="VARCHAR")
    – mahler
    Nov 6, 2012 at 16:17
  • Especially since in PostgreSQL "varchar" is the same as "text". stackoverflow.com/questions/4848964/…
    – tgharold
    Nov 21, 2012 at 23:20
  • I tried this but getting error. help please stackoverflow.com/questions/25094410/… Aug 2, 2014 at 12:30
6

I had a similar issue that I solved by assigning the hibernate "text" type to the property:

@Type(type="text")
4

For long strings or other large object types there is a special @Lob annotation that should solve your persistence problems, especially if you let Hibernate generate your database schema automatically. Therefore your entity code will look like this:

import javax.persistence.Lob;
...
@Lob
private String introText;

I've checked out the automatic schema generation with Hibernate and @Lob annotated String and in MariaDB I've got a column of type LONGTEXT which has a maximum length of 4,294,967,295 characters (~4 GB of data).


Be aware that if your application.properties has the following Hibernate configuration spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto=update, then Hibernate does not automatically change your current column type to LONGTEXT. You will therefore have to update the column type either manually with SQL tools of your choice or (not safe solution, to use only if you work with temporary test data and could easily restore it) drop the database and let Hibernate recreate it from scratch.

0

ok that is a DB error actually.

Data too long for column 'introText'

check the introText column in your DB and it is probably a varchar that is just limited in size. You will need to change the storage type to something larger so it won't truncate your text.

If you think that isn't it you will have to show your mapping and schema.

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