736

I am using the autocomplete feature of jQuery. When I try to retrieve the list of more then 17000 records (each won't have more than 10 char length), it's exceeding the length and throws the error:

Exception information:
Exception type: InvalidOperationException
Exception message: Error during serialization or deserialization using the JSON JavaScriptSerializer. The length of the string exceeds the value set on the maxJsonLength property.

Can I set an unlimited length for maxJsonLength in web.config? If not, what is the maximum length I can set?

1
  • 1
    Something to mention which may be pretty obvious so please excuse me if you've already thought if it; the Json string also includes the curly brackets around each record, the quotation marks around each field name [and value], as well as the field name and value. So it may be useful to set the field name as a single character and also make sure that if the value is not a string, that you set the field type correctly so it doesn't contain quotation marks. Commented May 3, 2016 at 9:25

30 Answers 30

802

NOTE: this answer applies only to Web services, if you are returning JSON from a Controller method, make sure you read this SO answer below as well: https://stackoverflow.com/a/7207539/1246870


The MaxJsonLength property cannot be unlimited, is an integer property that defaults to 102400 (100k).

You can set the MaxJsonLength property on your web.config:

<configuration> 
   <system.web.extensions>
       <scripting>
           <webServices>
               <jsonSerialization maxJsonLength="50000000"/>
           </webServices>
       </scripting>
   </system.web.extensions>
</configuration> 
13
  • 168
    It is an integer so the max value you can set is: 2147483644 Commented Sep 9, 2010 at 10:43
  • 65
    @despart: You mean 2 147 483 647.
    – Dercsár
    Commented Jul 28, 2011 at 11:27
  • 8
    @kmcc049, IMO the values aren't wrong because if you look at the question, the OP is not asking "what's the default value of maxJsonLength?" (BTW, the second most voted answer is answering this, wrong question), he's trying to set this property to "unlimited", but since is an Integer, the maximum value possible is 2147483647 as @depsart and @Descár point out. Commented Sep 23, 2011 at 14:49
  • 13
    Great but note @David Murdoch's answer below if you're having this problem when using MVC's return Json() or something Commented Mar 13, 2012 at 8:55
  • 3
    @ Dercsár: whats the point? 2147483644 is the biggest integer perfectly divisible by 1024. Commented Jun 27, 2012 at 10:34
518

If you are using MVC 4, be sure to check out this answer as well.


If you are still receiving the error:

  • after setting the maxJsonLength property to its maximum value in web.config
  • and you know that your data's length is less than this value
  • and you are not utilizing a web service method for the JavaScript serialization

your problem is is likely that:

The value of the MaxJsonLength property applies only to the internal JavaScriptSerializer instance that is used by the asynchronous communication layer to invoke Web services methods. (MSDN: ScriptingJsonSerializationSection.MaxJsonLength Property)

Basically, the "internal" JavaScriptSerializer respects the value of maxJsonLength when called from a web method; direct use of a JavaScriptSerializer (or use via an MVC action-method/Controller) does not respect the maxJsonLength property, at least not from the systemWebExtensions.scripting.webServices.jsonSerialization section of web.config. In particular, the Controller.Json() method does not respect the configuration setting!

As a workaround, you can do the following within your Controller (or anywhere really):

var serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();

// For simplicity just use Int32's max value.
// You could always read the value from the config section mentioned above.
serializer.MaxJsonLength = Int32.MaxValue;

var resultData = new { Value = "foo", Text = "var" };
var result = new ContentResult{
    Content = serializer.Serialize(resultData),
    ContentType = "application/json"
};
return result;

This answer is my interpretation of this asp.net forum answer.

4
  • 2
    Wow, seems like an oversight on Microsoft's part to not make the Json() method respect the web.config settings for serialization length. Thanks for the answer this worked like a charm!
    – Chris Lees
    Commented Aug 14, 2012 at 15:05
  • 4
    How about Deserialization? I met this error at action's model binding.
    – guogangj
    Commented May 17, 2017 at 11:45
  • Was banging my head on the wall all this time because I was trying the web.config option. Since I was working on webservice only one liner helped me which is assigning the Int32.Maxvalue to the JavascriptSerializer(). Thanks a lot Commented Jul 12, 2018 at 8:41
  • 2
    I have problem with return Json(data) too. But workaround is simpler: var jsonResult = Json(res); jsonResult.MaxJsonLength = int.MaxValue; return jsonResult;
    – VikciaR
    Commented Oct 15, 2019 at 15:35
386

In MVC 4 you can do:

protected override JsonResult Json(object data, string contentType, System.Text.Encoding contentEncoding, JsonRequestBehavior behavior)
{
    return new JsonResult()
    {
        Data = data,
        ContentType = contentType,
        ContentEncoding = contentEncoding,
        JsonRequestBehavior = behavior,
        MaxJsonLength = Int32.MaxValue
    };
}

in your controller.

Addition:

For anyone puzzled by the parameters you need to specify, a call could look like this:

Json(
    new {
        field1 = true,
        field2 = "value"
        },
    "application/json",
    Encoding.UTF8,
    JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet
);
14
  • 6
    I can confirm that the above works like a charm in MVC 4, thank you fanisch.
    – Beyers
    Commented Jan 11, 2013 at 10:42
  • 10
    I can confirm as well. Putting this code inside a base controller is definitely the cleanest approach proposed.
    – parliament
    Commented Mar 5, 2013 at 9:13
  • 19
    This also works by just adding "MaxJsonLength = Int32.MaxValue" to the individual action result. In case the change is not desired controller or project wide.
    – Hypnovirus
    Commented Apr 18, 2013 at 2:57
  • 4
    This is the best answer. The MaxJsonLength can be configured per controller.
    – liang
    Commented Sep 7, 2014 at 10:32
  • 3
    WARNING: this solution disables the compression (if requested) of the response. Add this filter on your action: stackoverflow.com/questions/3802107/… Commented Dec 22, 2015 at 14:55
72

if you are still getting error after web.config setting like following:

<configuration> 
   <system.web.extensions>
       <scripting>
           <webServices>
               <jsonSerialization maxJsonLength="50000000"/>
           </webServices>
       </scripting>
   </system.web.extensions>
</configuration> 

    

I solved it by following:

   public ActionResult/JsonResult getData()
   {
      var jsonResult = Json(superlargedata, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);
      jsonResult.MaxJsonLength = int.MaxValue;
      return jsonResult;
    }

I hope this should help.

2
  • 4
    Setting the maxJsonLength in the web.config is unnesseary, setting the jsonResult.MaxJsonLength should suffice (at least it did for me (MVC5))
    – hormberg
    Commented May 18, 2018 at 7:45
  • Woow its working Thanks. Commented Nov 8, 2021 at 5:34
65

You can configure the max length for json requests in your web.config file:

<configuration>
    <system.web.extensions>
        <scripting>
            <webServices>
                <jsonSerialization maxJsonLength="....">
                </jsonSerialization>
            </webServices>
        </scripting>
    </system.web.extensions>
</configuration>

The default value for maxJsonLength is 102400. For more details, see this MSDN page: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb763183.aspx

2
  • 1
    What is the stored value in this integer representing? Is this some sort of count of character? I guess what I am asking is, why an integer is being used? Thanks!
    – eaglei22
    Commented Mar 20, 2017 at 12:21
  • @eaglei22 the number represents how many bytes can be used for the maxJsonLength. As M4N mentioned, 102400 is the default (100KB).
    – Jacobalo
    Commented Jul 11, 2017 at 12:25
45

I was having this problem in ASP.NET Web Forms. It was completely ignoring the web.config file settings so I did this:

        JavaScriptSerializer serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();

        serializer.MaxJsonLength = Int32.MaxValue; 

        return serializer.Serialize(response);

Of course overall this is terrible practice. If you are sending this much data in a web service call you should look at a different approach.

3
  • Please describe where we should put this code... @Flea Commented Nov 14, 2016 at 12:05
  • @KorayDurudogan - I put this in the Ajax method that was returning the response, so in my controller. Hope that helps!
    – Flea
    Commented Nov 15, 2016 at 19:42
  • @Flea I would like to send it back in chunks, but I have to figure out how to do that first! Lol. Here is a link to the question if you would like to contribute: stackoverflow.com/questions/42935876/…
    – eaglei22
    Commented Mar 23, 2017 at 16:42
37
+50

I followed vestigal's answer and got to this solution:

When I needed to post a large json to an action in a controller, I would get the famous "Error during deserialization using the JSON JavaScriptSerializer. The length of the string exceeds the value set on the maxJsonLength property.\r\nParameter name: input value provider".

What I did is create a new ValueProviderFactory, LargeJsonValueProviderFactory, and set the MaxJsonLength = Int32.MaxValue in the GetDeserializedObject method

public sealed class LargeJsonValueProviderFactory : ValueProviderFactory
{
private static void AddToBackingStore(LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.EntryLimitedDictionary backingStore, string prefix, object value)
{
    IDictionary<string, object> dictionary = value as IDictionary<string, object>;
    if (dictionary != null)
    {
        foreach (KeyValuePair<string, object> keyValuePair in (IEnumerable<KeyValuePair<string, object>>) dictionary)
            LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.AddToBackingStore(backingStore, LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.MakePropertyKey(prefix, keyValuePair.Key), keyValuePair.Value);
    }
    else
    {
        IList list = value as IList;
        if (list != null)
        {
            for (int index = 0; index < list.Count; ++index)
                LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.AddToBackingStore(backingStore, LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.MakeArrayKey(prefix, index), list[index]);
        }
        else
            backingStore.Add(prefix, value);
    }
}

private static object GetDeserializedObject(ControllerContext controllerContext)
{
    if (!controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.ContentType.StartsWith("application/json", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase))
        return (object) null;
    string end = new StreamReader(controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.InputStream).ReadToEnd();
    if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(end))
        return (object) null;

    var serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer {MaxJsonLength = Int32.MaxValue};

    return serializer.DeserializeObject(end);
}

/// <summary>Returns a JSON value-provider object for the specified controller context.</summary>
/// <returns>A JSON value-provider object for the specified controller context.</returns>
/// <param name="controllerContext">The controller context.</param>
public override IValueProvider GetValueProvider(ControllerContext controllerContext)
{
    if (controllerContext == null)
        throw new ArgumentNullException("controllerContext");
    object deserializedObject = LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.GetDeserializedObject(controllerContext);
    if (deserializedObject == null)
        return (IValueProvider) null;
    Dictionary<string, object> dictionary = new Dictionary<string, object>((IEqualityComparer<string>) StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase);
    LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.AddToBackingStore(new LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.EntryLimitedDictionary((IDictionary<string, object>) dictionary), string.Empty, deserializedObject);
    return (IValueProvider) new DictionaryValueProvider<object>((IDictionary<string, object>) dictionary, CultureInfo.CurrentCulture);
}

private static string MakeArrayKey(string prefix, int index)
{
    return prefix + "[" + index.ToString((IFormatProvider) CultureInfo.InvariantCulture) + "]";
}

private static string MakePropertyKey(string prefix, string propertyName)
{
    if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(prefix))
        return prefix + "." + propertyName;
    return propertyName;
}

private class EntryLimitedDictionary
{
    private static int _maximumDepth = LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.EntryLimitedDictionary.GetMaximumDepth();
    private readonly IDictionary<string, object> _innerDictionary;
    private int _itemCount;

    public EntryLimitedDictionary(IDictionary<string, object> innerDictionary)
    {
        this._innerDictionary = innerDictionary;
    }

    public void Add(string key, object value)
    {
        if (++this._itemCount > LargeJsonValueProviderFactory.EntryLimitedDictionary._maximumDepth)
            throw new InvalidOperationException("JsonValueProviderFactory_RequestTooLarge");
        this._innerDictionary.Add(key, value);
    }

    private static int GetMaximumDepth()
    {
        NameValueCollection appSettings = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings;
        if (appSettings != null)
        {
            string[] values = appSettings.GetValues("aspnet:MaxJsonDeserializerMembers");
            int result;
            if (values != null && values.Length > 0 && int.TryParse(values[0], out result))
                return result;
        }
        return 1000;
     }
  }
}

Then, in the Application_Start method from Global.asax.cs, replace the ValueProviderFactory with the new one:

protected void Application_Start()
{
    ...

    //Add LargeJsonValueProviderFactory
    ValueProviderFactory jsonFactory = null;
    foreach (var factory in ValueProviderFactories.Factories)
    {
        if (factory.GetType().FullName == "System.Web.Mvc.JsonValueProviderFactory")
        {
            jsonFactory = factory;
            break;
        }
    }

    if (jsonFactory != null)
    {
        ValueProviderFactories.Factories.Remove(jsonFactory);
    }

    var largeJsonValueProviderFactory = new LargeJsonValueProviderFactory();
    ValueProviderFactories.Factories.Add(largeJsonValueProviderFactory);
}
3
  • 3
    I did every thing i can, only your answer saved my day, this should have been accepted answer Commented Aug 5, 2018 at 14:54
  • With this code we are able to override MVC controller max json Deserializetion limit of 4 mb, but is there a way to override web-api controller max json Deserializetion limit Commented Aug 6, 2018 at 4:05
  • This code is not quite correct! There can occure errors, because the new LargeJsonValueProviderFactory() is added at the wrong position. See this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/68581357
    – jdstaerk
    Commented May 29 at 9:57
24

I fixed it.

//your Json data here
string json_object="........";
JavaScriptSerializer jsJson = new JavaScriptSerializer();
jsJson.MaxJsonLength = 2147483644;
MyClass obj = jsJson.Deserialize<MyClass>(json_object);

It works very well.

1
  • jsJson.MaxJsonLength = 2147483644; worked for me in a windows forms application Commented Oct 2, 2020 at 15:04
17

if, after implementing the above addition into your web.config, you get an “Unrecognized configuration section system.web.extensions.” error then try adding this to your web.config in the <ConfigSections> section:

            <sectionGroup name="system.web.extensions" type="System.Web.Extensions">
              <sectionGroup name="scripting" type="System.Web.Extensions">
                    <sectionGroup name="webServices" type="System.Web.Extensions">
                          <section name="jsonSerialization" type="System.Web.Extensions"/>
                    </sectionGroup>
              </sectionGroup>
        </sectionGroup>
3
  • 4
    I was having this problem. However, this answer did not work for me. Instead of adding the <sectionGroup> element described here, I just moved the whole newly added <system.web.extensions> block to the very end of my web.config... right before </configuration>. Then it worked. Commented Nov 2, 2012 at 15:09
  • This helped, but in my situation I needed to change your fourth line to <section name="jsonSerialization" type="System.Web.Configuration.ScriptingJsonSerializationSection, System.Web.Extensions, Version=3.5.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31BF3856AD364E35" requirePermission="false" allowDefinition="Everywhere"/>, as seen on this page: forums.asp.net/t/1446510.aspx/1
    – Nathan
    Commented Jun 25, 2013 at 13:54
  • @ClearCloud8 Get that comment spread across this page immediately. Commented Jan 25, 2016 at 0:04
17

Simply set MaxJsonLength proprty in MVC's Action method

JsonResult json= Json(classObject, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);
json.MaxJsonLength = int.MaxValue;
return json;
13

you can write this line into Controller

json.MaxJsonLength = 2147483644;

you can also write this line into web.config

<configuration>
  <system.web.extensions>
    <scripting>
        <webServices>
            <jsonSerialization maxJsonLength="2147483647">
            </jsonSerialization>
        </webServices>
    </scripting>
  </system.web.extensions>

`

To be on the safe side, use both.

1
  • you are missing a slash 2147483647"/>
    – Jashvita
    Commented Feb 9, 2023 at 16:01
13

Fix for ASP.NET MVC if you want to fix it only for particular action that is causing the problem then change this code:

public JsonResult GetBigJson()
{
    var someBigObject = GetBigObject();
    return Json(someBigObject);
}

to this:

public JsonResult GetBigJson()
{
    var someBigObject = GetBigObject();
    return new JsonResult()
    {
        Data = someBigObject,
        JsonRequestBehavior = JsonRequestBehavior.DenyGet,
        MaxJsonLength = int.MaxValue
    };
}

And the functionality should be same, you can just return bigger JSON as response.


Explanation based on ASP.NET MVC source code: you can check what Controller.Json method does in ASP.NET MVC source code

protected internal JsonResult Json(object data)
{
    return Json(data, null /* contentType */, null /* contentEncoding */, JsonRequestBehavior.DenyGet);
}

It is calling other Controller.Json method:

protected internal virtual JsonResult Json(object data, string contentType, Encoding contentEncoding, JsonRequestBehavior behavior)
{
    return new JsonResult
    {
        Data = data,
        ContentType = contentType,
        ContentEncoding = contentEncoding,
        JsonRequestBehavior = behavior
    };
}

where passed contentType and contentEncoding object are null. So basically calling return Json(object) in controller is equivalent to calling return new JsonResult { Data = object, JsonRequestBehavior = sonRequestBehavior.DenyGet }. You can use second form and parameterize JsonResult.

So what happens when you set MaxJsonLength property (by default it's null)? It's passed down to JavaScriptSerializer.MaxJsonLength property and then JavaScriptSerializer.Serialize method is called :

JavaScriptSerializer serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
if (MaxJsonLength.HasValue)
{
    serializer.MaxJsonLength = MaxJsonLength.Value;
}

if (RecursionLimit.HasValue)
{
    serializer.RecursionLimit = RecursionLimit.Value;
}

response.Write(serializer.Serialize(Data));

And when you don't set MaxJsonLenght property of serializer then it takes default value which is just 2MB.

1
  • Thx! the first option save some time =D Commented Nov 4, 2020 at 21:53
10

If you are getting this error from the MiniProfiler in MVC then you can increase the value by setting the property MiniProfiler.Settings.MaxJsonResponseSize to the desired value. By default, this tool seems to ignore the value set in config.

MiniProfiler.Settings.MaxJsonResponseSize = 104857600;

Courtesy mvc-mini-profiler.

10

I suggest setting it to Int32.MaxValue.

JavaScriptSerializer serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
serializer.MaxJsonLength = Int32.MaxValue;
0
9

How about some attribute magic?

[AttributeUsage(AttributeTargets.Class | AttributeTargets.Method, Inherited = true, AllowMultiple = false)]
public class MaxJsonSizeAttribute : ActionFilterAttribute
{
    // Default: 10 MB worth of one byte chars
    private int maxLength = 10 * 1024 * 1024;

    public int MaxLength
    {
        set
        {
            if (value < 0) throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException("value", "Value must be at least 0.");

            maxLength = value;
        }
        get { return maxLength; }
    }

    public override void OnActionExecuted(ActionExecutedContext filterContext)
    {
        JsonResult json = filterContext.Result as JsonResult;
        if (json != null)
        {
            if (maxLength == 0)
            {
                json.MaxJsonLength = int.MaxValue;
            }
            else
            {
                json.MaxJsonLength = maxLength;
            }
        }
    }
}

Then you could either apply it globally using the global filter configuration or controller/action-wise.

2
  • Great answer. Nice use of custom attributes. Wondering if there is a specific (technical) reason that you set the default to 10 MB worth of one byte chars instead of the Max (int.MaxValue)?
    – Josh
    Commented Jan 22, 2019 at 21:41
  • @Josh No, there wasn't any special reason for that.
    – Balázs
    Commented Jan 23, 2019 at 7:51
5

If you are encountering this sort of issue in View, you can use below method to resolve that. Here Iused Newtonsoft package .

@using Newtonsoft.Json
<script type="text/javascript">
    var partData = @Html.Raw(JsonConvert.SerializeObject(ViewBag.Part));
</script>
0
5

Alternative ASP.NET MVC 5 Fix:

(Mine is similar to MFCs answer above with a few small changes)

I wasn't ready to change to Json.NET just yet and in my case the error was occurring during the request. Best approach in my scenario was modifying the actual JsonValueProviderFactory which applies the fix to the global project and can be done by editing the global.cs file as such.

JsonValueProviderConfig.Config(ValueProviderFactories.Factories);

add a web.config entry:

<add key="aspnet:MaxJsonLength" value="20971520" />

and then create the two following classes

public class JsonValueProviderConfig
{
    public static void Config(ValueProviderFactoryCollection factories)
    {
        var jsonProviderFactory = factories.OfType<JsonValueProviderFactory>().Single();
        factories.Remove(jsonProviderFactory);
        factories.Add(new CustomJsonValueProviderFactory());
    }
}

This is basically an exact copy of the default implementation found in System.Web.Mvc but with the addition of a configurable web.config appsetting value aspnet:MaxJsonLength.

public class CustomJsonValueProviderFactory : ValueProviderFactory
{

    /// <summary>Returns a JSON value-provider object for the specified controller context.</summary>
    /// <returns>A JSON value-provider object for the specified controller context.</returns>
    /// <param name="controllerContext">The controller context.</param>
    public override IValueProvider GetValueProvider(ControllerContext controllerContext)
    {
        if (controllerContext == null)
            throw new ArgumentNullException("controllerContext");

        object deserializedObject = CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.GetDeserializedObject(controllerContext);
        if (deserializedObject == null)
            return null;

        Dictionary<string, object> strs = new Dictionary<string, object>(StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase);
        CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.AddToBackingStore(new CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.EntryLimitedDictionary(strs), string.Empty, deserializedObject);

        return new DictionaryValueProvider<object>(strs, CultureInfo.CurrentCulture);
    }

    private static object GetDeserializedObject(ControllerContext controllerContext)
    {
        if (!controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.ContentType.StartsWith("application/json", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase))
            return null;

        string fullStreamString = (new StreamReader(controllerContext.HttpContext.Request.InputStream)).ReadToEnd();
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(fullStreamString))
            return null;

        var serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer()
        {
            MaxJsonLength = CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.GetMaxJsonLength()
        };
        return serializer.DeserializeObject(fullStreamString);
    }

    private static void AddToBackingStore(EntryLimitedDictionary backingStore, string prefix, object value)
    {
        IDictionary<string, object> strs = value as IDictionary<string, object>;
        if (strs != null)
        {
            foreach (KeyValuePair<string, object> keyValuePair in strs)
                CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.AddToBackingStore(backingStore, CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.MakePropertyKey(prefix, keyValuePair.Key), keyValuePair.Value);

            return;
        }

        IList lists = value as IList;
        if (lists == null)
        {
            backingStore.Add(prefix, value);
            return;
        }

        for (int i = 0; i < lists.Count; i++)
        {
            CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.AddToBackingStore(backingStore, CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.MakeArrayKey(prefix, i), lists[i]);
        }
    }

    private class EntryLimitedDictionary
    {
        private static int _maximumDepth;

        private readonly IDictionary<string, object> _innerDictionary;

        private int _itemCount;

        static EntryLimitedDictionary()
        {
            _maximumDepth = CustomJsonValueProviderFactory.GetMaximumDepth();
        }

        public EntryLimitedDictionary(IDictionary<string, object> innerDictionary)
        {
            this._innerDictionary = innerDictionary;
        }

        public void Add(string key, object value)
        {
            int num = this._itemCount + 1;
            this._itemCount = num;
            if (num > _maximumDepth)
            {
                throw new InvalidOperationException("The length of the string exceeds the value set on the maxJsonLength property.");
            }
            this._innerDictionary.Add(key, value);
        }
    }

    private static string MakeArrayKey(string prefix, int index)
    {
        return string.Concat(prefix, "[", index.ToString(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture), "]");
    }

    private static string MakePropertyKey(string prefix, string propertyName)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(prefix))
        {
            return propertyName;
        }
        return string.Concat(prefix, ".", propertyName);
    }

    private static int GetMaximumDepth()
    {
        int num;
        NameValueCollection appSettings = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings;
        if (appSettings != null)
        {
            string[] values = appSettings.GetValues("aspnet:MaxJsonDeserializerMembers");
            if (values != null && values.Length != 0 && int.TryParse(values[0], out num))
            {
                return num;
            }
        }
        return 1000;
    }

    private static int GetMaxJsonLength()
    {
        int num;
        NameValueCollection appSettings = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings;
        if (appSettings != null)
        {
            string[] values = appSettings.GetValues("aspnet:MaxJsonLength");
            if (values != null && values.Length != 0 && int.TryParse(values[0], out num))
            {
                return num;
            }
        }
        return 1000;
    }
}
0
4

For those who are having issues with in MVC3 with JSON that's automatically being deserialized for a model binder and is too large, here is a solution.

  1. Copy the code for the JsonValueProviderFactory class from the MVC3 source code into a new class.
  2. Add a line to change the maximum JSON length before the object is deserialized.
  3. Replace the JsonValueProviderFactory class with your new, modified class.

Thanks to http://blog.naver.com/techshare/100145191355 and https://gist.github.com/DalSoft/1588818 for pointing me in the right direction for how to do this. The last link on the first site contains full source code for the solution.

4

The question really is whether you really need to return 17k records? How are you planning to handle all the data in the browser? The users are not going to scroll through 17000 rows anyway.

A better approach is to retrieve only a "top few" records and load more as required.

3
  • 1
    The default list from json will give 17k records. But the autocomplete feature will list only the records that matches the characters that the user types, thus it wont need to scroll the list more. SO what i need is to set unlimited length for maxJsonLength which can serialize the 17k data.
    – Prasad
    Commented Jul 20, 2009 at 6:53
  • 6
    You could use a combination of server and client side filtering. It could be hard to filter all the data on the client side, not to mention the network latency.
    – Chetan S
    Commented Jul 20, 2009 at 7:17
  • 1
    Having arrived at this same issue a while back, I chose to implement an "onsearch" handler for the autocomplete, and have the web service call pass the "search" text and do a Top10 query using the search criteria as a filter. This meant more individual ajax requests, that just getting the full list on page load, but it also meant that all the requests/responses were much smaller.
    – Mike U
    Commented Dec 11, 2015 at 21:21
3

You can set it in the config as others have said, or you can set in on an individual instance of the serializer like:

var js = new JavaScriptSerializer() { MaxJsonLength = int.MaxValue };
3
 JsonResult result = Json(r);
 result.MaxJsonLength = Int32.MaxValue;
 result.JsonRequestBehavior = JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet;
 return result;
0
2

It appears that there is no "unlimited" value. The default is 2097152 characters, which is equivalent to 4 MB of Unicode string data.

As as already been observed, 17,000 records are hard to use well in the browser. If you are presenting an aggregate view it may be much more efficient to do the aggregation on the server and transfer only a summary in the browser. For example, consider a file system brower, we only see the top of the tree, then emit further requestes as we drill down. The number of records returned in each request is comparatively small. A tree view presentation can work well for large result sets.

1
  • 3
    rather bizarrely the default in code (new JavaScriptSerializer()).MaxJsonLength is 2097152 bytes but the web service ResponseFormatJson is the 102400 bytes unless explicitly set.
    – rob
    Commented Jul 24, 2014 at 9:56
2

Just ran into this. I'm getting over 6,000 records. Just decided I'd just do some paging. As in, I accept a page number in my MVC JsonResult endpoint, which is defaulted to 0 so it's not necessary, like so:

public JsonResult MyObjects(int pageNumber = 0)

Then instead of saying:

return Json(_repository.MyObjects.ToList(), JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);

I say:

return Json(_repository.MyObjects.OrderBy(obj => obj.ID).Skip(1000 * pageNumber).Take(1000).ToList(), JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);

It's very simple. Then, in JavaScript, instead of this:

function myAJAXCallback(items) {
    // Do stuff here
}

I instead say:

var pageNumber = 0;
function myAJAXCallback(items) {
    if(items.length == 1000)
        // Call same endpoint but add this to the end: '?pageNumber=' + ++pageNumber
    }
    // Do stuff here
}

And append your records to whatever you were doing with them in the first place. Or just wait until all the calls finish and cobble the results together.

2

I solved the problem adding this code:

String confString = HttpContext.Current.Request.ApplicationPath.ToString();
Configuration conf = WebConfigurationManager.OpenWebConfiguration(confString);
ScriptingJsonSerializationSection section = (ScriptingJsonSerializationSection)conf.GetSection("system.web.extensions/scripting/webServices/jsonSerialization");
section.MaxJsonLength = 6553600;
conf.Save();
1
  • This seems like a hackish solution but interesting approach regardless. I found it useful thanks! For me in apsnet mvc 5 controller I had to remove 'Current' from the namespace. I made a couple adjustments: string confString = HttpContext.Request.ApplicationPath.ToString(); var conf = System.Web.Configuration.WebConfigurationManager.OpenWebConfiguration(confString); var section = (System.Web.Configuration.ScriptingJsonSerializationSection)conf.GetSection("system.web.extensions/scripting/webServices/jsonSerialization"); section.MaxJsonLength = int.MaxValue; conf.Save();
    – ooXei1sh
    Commented Mar 19, 2016 at 22:54
2

We don't need any server side changes. you can fix this only modify by web.config file This helped for me. try this out

<appSettings>
 <add key="aspnet:MaxJsonDeserializerMembers" value="2147483647" />
<add key="aspnet:UpdatePanelMaxScriptLength" value="2147483647" />
</appSettings>  

and   

<system.web.extensions>
<scripting>
  <webServices>
    <jsonSerialization maxJsonLength="2147483647"/>
  </webServices>
</scripting>

1

Solution for WebForms UpdatePanel:

Add a setting to Web.config:

<configuration>
  <appSettings>
    <add key="aspnet:UpdatePanelMaxScriptLength" value="2147483647" />
  </appSettings>
</configuration>

https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/981884

ScriptRegistrationManager class contains following code:

// Serialize the attributes to JSON and write them out
JavaScriptSerializer serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();

// Dev10# 877767 - Allow configurable UpdatePanel script block length
// The default is JavaScriptSerializer.DefaultMaxJsonLength
if (AppSettings.UpdatePanelMaxScriptLength > 0) {
    serializer.MaxJsonLength = AppSettings.UpdatePanelMaxScriptLength;
}  

string attrText = serializer.Serialize(attrs);
1

i use this and it worked for Kendo grid read request.

{ 
  //something
   var result = XResult.ToList().ToDataSourceResult(request);
   var rs = Json(result, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);
   rs.MaxJsonLength = int.MaxValue;
   return rs;
}
0

use lib\Newtonsoft.Json.dll

public string serializeObj(dynamic json) {        
    return JsonConvert.SerializeObject(json);
}
0

Even with the maxJsonLength="2147483647", I kept getting an error.

I’ve solved the problem next way, maybe it’ll help you. Instead of serializing an full array

return new JavaScriptSerializer().Serialize( ...full.array.here... )

I serializing each element of array

string[] arrayWithSerializedItems = ...;
return "[" + string.Join("," + arrayWithSerializedItems) + "]";
-5

You do not need to do with web.config You can use short property during catch value of the passing list For example declare a model like

public class BookModel
    {
        public decimal id { get; set; }  // 1 

        public string BN { get; set; } // 2 Book Name

        public string BC { get; set; } // 3 Bar Code Number

        public string BE { get; set; } // 4 Edition Name

        public string BAL { get; set; } // 5 Academic Level

        public string BCAT { get; set; } // 6 Category
}

here i use short proporties like BC =barcode BE=book edition and so on

1
  • This won't help if the bulk of the data is in the property values
    – Window
    Commented May 31, 2018 at 21:44

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