The function DATALENGTH(ColumnName) will help. It returns the length
of data in bytes.
Query -
SELECT COLUMN_NAME, DATALENGTH(COLUMN_NAME) as DataSize
from information_schema.columns where table_name = 'MyTableName'
This works, but I don't know if there are any pitfalls in this approach.
Max size of one row of a table -
SELECT SUM(DataSize) AS MaxRowSize
FROM
(
SELECT COLUMN_NAME, DATALENGTH(COLUMN_NAME) as DataSize
from information_schema.columns where table_name = 'shop'
) AS SCHEM
Max size of the data set you are interested in -
DECLARE @maxRowSize int
SET @maxRowSize =
(
SELECT SUM(DataSize) AS MaxRowSize
FROM
(
SELECT COLUMN_NAME, DATALENGTH(COLUMN_NAME) as DataSize
from information_schema.columns
where table_name = 'shop' -- enter table name only, do NOT enter the schema
) AS SCHEM
)
SELECT COUNT(Id) as NumOfRows,
@maxRowSize as MaxRowBytes,
COUNT(id) * @maxRowSize as MaxQueryBytes
FROM Shop -- Enter schema name if needed
Shop table schema information -
COLUMN_NAME DataSize
id 4
date 8
sales 10
Sample test with AdventureWorks2008R2 Database -
Save the results of a query to a text file. See the size of text file. If it is approximately equal to the value returned by my query, then I think we should be
good to go.
select *
from person.Person
where FirstName = 'crystal'
-- Records = 22
File: Size = 15.2KB
Query: 6116 bytes
Result - Does not work for this table ! :(
Test 2 -
Table salaries -
[id] [int], [name] [varchar](50), [salary] [decimal](18, 2)
Table -
id name salary
1 azamat bagatov 100.50
2 borat 25.00
3 coci buchek 200.50
File: Size = 65 bytes
Query: Size = 72 bytes.
Result - Great success ???
information_schema.columns