Maximum length of a query

Started by Unknown Userabout 23 years ago3 messagesgeneral
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#1Unknown User
unknown@unknown.user

What is the maximum length of a query nowadays? Back in 1998, it was 8192
bytes, but I just executed on via libpq at 16304 bytes. I have need to
(at least temporarily) support extra-long queries.

Thanks,
--
Matthew Vanecek
perl -e 'print $i=pack(c5,(41*2),sqrt(7056),(unpack(c,H)-2),oct(115),10);'
********************************************************************************
For 93 million miles, there is nothing between the sun and my shadow except me.
I'm always getting in the way of something...

#2Tom Lane
tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us
In reply to: Unknown User (#1)
Re: Maximum length of a query

"Matthew V." <deusmech@yahoo.com> writes:

What is the maximum length of a query nowadays? Back in 1998, it was 8192
bytes,

That was a long time ago ;-). There has been no hard-wired upper limit
for several releases now.

[ It's rather amusing to watch MySQL's crashme test trying to discover
our maximum query length. At least on my machine, the Perl process
running crashme hits the kernel's per-process memory limit and dies,
while the backend it's talking to is still comfortably under the limit.
I wonder whether MySQL regards that as a test failure ... ]

regards, tom lane

#3Jan Wieck
JanWieck@Yahoo.com
In reply to: Unknown User (#1)
Re: Maximum length of a query

Tom Lane wrote:

"Matthew V." <deusmech@yahoo.com> writes:

What is the maximum length of a query nowadays? Back in 1998, it was 8192
bytes,

That was a long time ago ;-). There has been no hard-wired upper limit
for several releases now.

[ It's rather amusing to watch MySQL's crashme test trying to discover
our maximum query length. At least on my machine, the Perl process
running crashme hits the kernel's per-process memory limit and dies,
while the backend it's talking to is still comfortably under the limit.
I wonder whether MySQL regards that as a test failure ... ]

Well, it's our fault anyway. You cannot have a hardcoded limit in one
release and then, all of the sudden, out of nowhere go unlimited ... one
can claim that we crash crashme on purpose! OTOH, isn't that what the
name asks for?

I have to apologize at this point ... I did the same with TOAST ...
going unlimited without fair warning. Fortunately crashme never tested
for a maximum content length ;-)

Jan

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