53

Is the following correct?

 change_column :tablename, :fieldname, :limit => null

6 Answers 6

111

If you previously specified a limit in a migration and want to just remove the limit, you can just do this:

change_column :users, :column, :string, :limit => 255

255 is the standard length for a string column, and rails will just wipe out the limit that you previously specified.

Updated:

While this works in a number of Rails versions, you would probably be better suited to use nil like in Giuseppe's answer.

change_column :users, :column, :string, :limit => nil

That means the only thing you were doing wrong was using null instead of nil.

35

Here's what happened to me.

I realized that a string field I had in a table was not sufficient to hold its content, so I generated a migration that contained:

def self.up
  change_column :articles, :author_list, :text
end

After running the migration, however, the schema had:

create_table "articles", :force => true do |t|
  t.string   "title"
  t.text     "author_list", :limit => 255
end

Which was not OK. So then I "redid" the migration as follows:

def self.up
  # careful, it's "nil", not "null"
  change_column :articles, :author_list, :text, :limit => nil
end

This time, the limit was gone in schema.rb:

create_table "articles", :force => true do |t|
  t.string   "title"
  t.text     "author_list"
end
1
  • For me I needed rake db:migrate:reset to really change the limit, and one should be careful about that command, cause it's drops the database.
    – p1100i
    Nov 8, 2012 at 17:07
3

Change the column type to :text. It does not have a limit.

change_column :tablename, :fieldname, :text, :limit => nil
1
  • 1
    this is incorrect... if you simply change from :string to :text, rake db:migrate will leave the limit in place, which will mess things up when you try to do heroku rake db:schema:load
    – jpw
    Feb 2, 2011 at 22:40
0

Strings without limit is not something most databases support: you have to specify size in varchar(SIZE) definition.
Although you could try, I would personally go with :limit => BIG_ENOUGH_NUMBER. You may also consider using CLOB type for very big texts.

0

To make it db-driver-independent one should write smth like this:

add_column :tablename, :fieldname_tmp, :text
Tablename.reset_column_information
Tablename.update_all("fieldname_tmp = fieldname")
remove_column :tablename, :fieldname
rename_column :tablename, :fieldname_tmp, :fieldname
0

I was the same boat today, trying to remove a limit I'd added to a text field and it wouldn't take. Tried several migrations.

Rails 4.2.7.1 Ruby 2.3.1p112

In the end, the only thing that worked was specifying a limit of 255. Trying to adjust to anything else wouldn't work for me.

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