If you try to create a TEXT column on a table, and give it a default value in MySQL, you get an error (on Windows at least). I cannot see any reason why a text column should not have a default value. No explanation is given by the MySQL documentation. It seems illogical to me (and somewhat frustrating, as I want a default value!). Anybody know why this is not allowed?
Windows MySQL v5 throws an error but Linux and other versions only raise a warning. This needs to be fixed. WTF?
Also see an attempt to fix this as bug #19498 in the MySQL Bugtracker:
Bryce Nesbitt on April 4 2008 4:36pm:
On MS Windows the "no DEFAULT" rule is an error, while on other platforms it is often a warning. While not a bug, it's possible to get trapped by this if you write code on a lenient platform, and later run it on a strict platform:
Personally, I do view this as a bug. Searching for "BLOB/TEXT column can't have a default value" returns about 2,940 results on Google. Most of them are reports of incompatibilities when trying to install DB scripts that worked on one system but not others.
I am running into the same problem now on a webapp I'm modifying for one of my clients, originally deployed on Linux MySQL v5.0.83-log. I'm running Windows MySQL v5.1.41. Even trying to use the latest version of phpMyAdmin to extract the database, it doesn't report a default for the text column in question. Yet, when I try running an insert on Windows (that works fine on the Linux deployment) I receive an error of no default on ABC column. I try to recreate the table locally with the obvious default (based on a select of unique values for that column) and end up receiving the oh-so-useful BLOB/TEXT column can't have a default value.
Again, not maintaining basic compatability across platforms is unacceptable and is a bug.
How to disable strict mode in MySQL 5 (Windows):
Edit /my.ini and look for line
sql-mode="STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION"
Replace it with
sql_mode='MYSQL40'
Restart the MySQL service (assuming that it is mysql5)
net stop mysql5
net start mysql5
If you have root/admin access you might be able to execute
mysql_query("SET ##global.sql_mode='MYSQL40'");
Without any deep knowledge of the mySQL engine, I'd say this sounds like a memory saving strategy. I assume the reason is behind this paragraph from the docs:
Each BLOB or TEXT value is represented internally by a separately allocated object. This is in contrast to all other data types, for which storage is allocated once per column when the table is opened.
It seems like pre-filling these column types would lead to memory usage and performance penalties.
As the main question:
Anybody know why this is not allowed?
is still not answered, I did a quick search and found a relatively new addition from a MySQL developer at MySQL Bugs:
[17 Mar 2017 15:11] Ståle Deraas
Posted by developer:
This is indeed a valid feature request, and at first glance it might seem trivial to add. But TEXT/BLOBS values are not stored directly in the record buffer used for reading/updating tables. So it is a bit more complex to assign default values for them.
This is no definite answer, but at least a starting point for the why question.
In the mean time, I'll just code around it and either make the column nullable or explicitly assign a (default '') value for each insert from the application code...
"Support for DEFAULT in TEXT/BLOB columns"
is a
feature request in the MySQL Bugtracker (Bug #21532).
I see I'm not the only one who would like to put a default value in a TEXT column.
I think this feature should be supported in a later version of MySQL.
This can't be fixed in the version 5.0 of MySQL,
because apparently it would cause incompatibility and dataloss if anyone tried to transfer a database back and forth between the (current) databases that don't support that feature and any databases that did support that feature.
You can get the same effect as a default value by using a trigger
create table my_text
(
abc text
);
delimiter //
create trigger mytext_trigger before insert on my_text
for each row
begin
if (NEW.abc is null ) then
set NEW.abc = 'default text';
end if;
end
//
delimiter ;
Support for using expression as default values was added to MySQL 8.0.13, released 2018-10-22, and works for TEXT, JSON, BLOB and GEOMETRY.
You still cannot write :
create table foo(bar text default 'baz')
But you can now write:
create table foo(bar text default ('baz'))
Which achieve the same thing.
I normally run sites on Linux, but I also develop on a local Windows machine. I've run into this problem many times and just fixed the tables when I encountered the problems. I installed an app yesterday to help someone out and of course ran into the problem again. So, I decided it was time to figure out what was going on - and found this thread. I really don't like the idea of changing the sql_mode of the server to an earlier mode (by default), so I came up with a simple (me thinks) solution.
This solution would of course require developers to wrap their table creation scripts to compensate for the MySQL issue running on Windows. You'll see similar concepts in dump files. One BIG caveat is that this could/will cause problems if partitioning is used.
// Store the current sql_mode
mysql_query("set #orig_mode = ##global.sql_mode");
// Set sql_mode to one that won't trigger errors...
mysql_query('set ##global.sql_mode = "MYSQL40"');
/**
* Do table creations here...
*/
// Change it back to original sql_mode
mysql_query('set ##global.sql_mode = #orig_mode');
That's about it.
For Ubuntu 16.04:
How to disable strict mode in MySQL 5.7:
Edit file /etc/mysql/mysql.conf.d/mysqld.cnf
If below line exists in mysql.cnf
sql-mode="STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION"
Then Replace it with
sql_mode='MYSQL40'
Otherwise
Just add below line in mysqld.cnf
sql_mode='MYSQL40'
This resolved problem.
This is a very old question but still it doesn't seems to have been answered properly. And, my this answer isn't actual answer to the question - "WHY can't a text column have a default value", but as it isn't possible to write long text in comment, and as my comment could help someone to prevent the error, here it is as a separate answer:
Some are saying that the error is occurring because of OS - Windows-Linux; but this isn't directly related to OS. (However, there may be differences in default settings of MySQL within different installers for different OSes, I am not sure.)
The main reason is the flag STRICT_TRANS_TABLES for sql_mode setting. if a value is not specified in INSERT statement for TEXT datatype column and if the flag exist in the sql_mode setting then MySQL is reporting an error; and if the flag doesn't exist then MySQL is only reporting a warning and inserts the record.
So, to prevent this error, one can remove the STRICT_TRANS_TABLES from sql_mode setting of MySQL. (He my need to reset the mode to the previous value if it can affect other operations on the database.)
According to the documentation of SQL mode in MySQL ...
For STRICT_TRANS_TABLES, MySQL converts an invalid value to the closest valid value for the column and inserts the adjusted value. If a value is missing, MySQL inserts the implicit default value for the column data type. In either case, MySQL generates a warning rather than an error and continues processing the statement. Implicit defaults are described in Section 11.6, “Data Type Default Values”.
... and documentation of Data Type Default Values ...
The BLOB, TEXT, GEOMETRY, and JSON data types cannot be assigned a default value.
... TEXT column can not have a default value, but if STRICT_TRANS_TABLES is removed from sql_mode then MySQL inserts empty string '' if no value is specified for TEXT column in INSERT statement.
Related
My PHP/mySQL backend hosted on an external site has been running fine since 2014. Recently, it started throwing up "field has no default value" errors.
I checked the config and found STRICT_TRANS_TABLES, which gives these errors for fields with no default in some cases.
My question is whether or not it is safe for me to remove this config value. It's mySQL 5.5.5-10.3.12-MariaDB.
Alternatively I could give everything default values, but I don't know which of these solutions is more likely to cause the existing codebase to stop working properly.
I encourage use of strict mode in MySQL because if you disable strict mode, you risk causing some unwanted effects, such as:
If you insert a value to a column where it can't fit, the value is silently truncated. Like inserting a long string into a shorter varchar column, or inserting a big integer into an INT column. This leads you to potentially have bogus values in your database. I prefer these cases to be errors, to prevent such bogus values.
Non-strict mode allows nonsensical dates, like 0000-00-00. There is no such date in the calendar. I'd rather this value not be allowed. If I need to symbolize an absence of a value, I'll use NULL.
Will these cases affect your app? There's no way I or anyone else on Stack Overflow can predict that. You need to test it yourself.
Under mysql variables sql mode STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION has been removed. My server gets auto updated and the Value
STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION returns.
Under Update Preferences Daily Updates has been set to Never Update, Operating System Package update is set to Never Update.
The server (phpmyadmin) gets updated regularly, and shows:
ERROR No 1364 "Field 'coloumn_name' doesn't have a default value"
My server is from Godaddy
Kindly help..
This is a bit odd because the person (or software) that handles your updates should have updated the table structure for you, but it appears to be a pretty easy fix. phpMyAdmin has an optional database that enables advanced features. It sounds like that database structure wasn't updated when the rest of the phpMyAdmin code was updated.
Your situation is a bit odd in that the column_name column hasn't been changed since at least 2009, which basically means whatever version you were running must have been quite outdated.
In the sql folder (or a different folder if your current phpMyAdmin is still quite old, such as scripts or maybe examples), there are various .sql files which can help with updating your installation. You may wish to run create_tables.sql, but that won't always upgrade existing tables so, again depending on the versions involved, you may be better of dropping the table outright and running that script to create them. I don't see anything in the two current upgrade scripts that would affect column_info, so either that change is so old it's been removed or something else odd happened. You may also want to try doing it manually; if you go to edit that column's structure you can add a default of ''.
I have migrated from a server running MySQL version 5.1.73 - Source Distribution to a server running 5.7.16-0ubuntu0.16.04.1 - (Ubuntu). Both servers are still up and running.
However, I'm encountering multiple (maddening) errors on queries that used to work, for example:
(Error #1364) Field 'Settings' doesn't have a default value
What is a fancy way of saying I didn't write the query on insert to include Settings because it didn't need a value yet.
So, I figure I'll go in and ALTER that field and give it a default value. MySQL lovingly tells me
#1101 - BLOB, TEXT, .. column 'Settings' can't have a default value
Thank you, MySQL..
So it looks like I'm going to have to refactor code, but this could take some time. What is the easiest way to make MySQL on the new server emulate 5.1.73?
UPDATE: It appears that one can make a LONGTEXT field be NULL (vs. NOT NULL), and then the default will in effect be null. But one cannot have a default that is "empty" or "blank" on a LONGTEXT or similar field. Lesson I'm learning here, be careful about making a skeleton/bare record entry into the db without referencing certain fields like this explicitly; any non-referenced LONGTEXT field will need to be null - which by the way is a reasonable and logical value vs. blank.
This has to do with the change they made in 5.7 to enforce strict SQL mode by default. The default SQL mode in MySQL 5.7 is: ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY,STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION.
See http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/sql-mode.html#sql-mode-changes for more information.
You might ask, "why don't they make strict mode optional, but leave it off by default?" The answer is, they did—for about 10 years! It was time to make the next step and enforce strict mode by default. It helps bring MySQL into better SQL compliance and compatibility with other standard RDBMS products.
So how can you turn off strict mode to make it act like the previous, more lax SQL mode? It's easy, put this in your /etc/my.cnf:
sql_mode=NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
You can also enable that change without restarting mysqld:
mysql> SET GLOBAL sql_mode='NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION';
You probably want to keep NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION on. Engine substitution means for example if you declare a table with ENGINE=InnoDB but the InnoDB storage engine is not enabled for some reason, MySQL will create the table but make it MyISAM silently. This is a bad thing to let happen if you intended it to be InnoDB.
Quick question as I have never run into this before.
On a webhost I am running the query:
SET NAMES 'utf8'
This is returning the following error:
Error: Unknown system variable 'NAMES'
I haven't run across this before. I get similar errors when trying to specify CURRENT_TIMESTAMP as a default column value as well as setting the collation of a table.
The MySQL queries I am running have worked on literally hundreds of hosting accounts before this one. On contacting the host I was fobbed off saying it was probably my code.
Is the likely hood that this is a dodgy MySQL install? Host says they are running MySQL5
SET NAMES is available since MySQL 4.1, which brought large scale changes to character set handling and full UTF-8 support. Quite sure you have a MySQL version <4.1 in front of you. Try a
SELECT VERSION();
as a1ex07 has recommended.
Older versions of MySQL can only handle 8-bit character data. They can still store UTF-8 data as byte sequences, but they are not aware of it. There are several backdraws to storing UTF-8 in MySQL <4.1. For example string lengths can exceed given column limits although the number of characters should fit. Also the modern string comparison functions do not exist (they correctly compare special characters and different ways to write them, i.e. "ß" vs. "ss" in German).
Just moved a site over to a new server and we started getting some errors. Mainly that some data we were passing into a MySQL table was too long for the field. Having checked through the DB it seems the old server was truncating the data to fit the table, yet the new server throws a TEP STOP. Any ideas what the setting is to switch this back on, to temporarily get stuff working again?
Thanks!
MySQL used to be famous/infamous for silently "correcting" data it could not store directly (overlong strings, invalid dates) etc.. That has fortunately changed in recent versions.
You can now configure this behaviour using "Server SQL Modes". You probably want to switch off STRICT_ALL_TABLES or STRICT_TRANS_TABLES.
See MySQL's docs for details.