script/generate acts_as_taggable_on_migration
rake db:migrate
causes
Mysql::Error: Specified key was too long; max key length is 1000 bytes: CREATE INDEX `index_taggings_on_taggable_id_and_taggable_type_and_context` ON `taggings` (`taggable_id`, `taggable_type`, `context`)
What should I do?
Here is my database encoding:
mysql> SHOW VARIABLES LIKE 'character\_set\_%';
+--------------------------+--------+
| Variable_name | Value |
+--------------------------+--------+
| character_set_client | latin1 |
| character_set_connection | latin1 |
| character开发者_StackOverflow_set_database | utf8 |
| character_set_filesystem | binary |
| character_set_results | latin1 |
| character_set_server | latin1 |
| character_set_system | utf8 |
+--------------------------+--------+
7 rows in set (0.00 sec)
This is solely a MySQL issue -
MySQL has different engines - MyISAM, InnoDB, Memory...
MySQL has different limits on the amount of space you can use to define indexes on column(s) - for MyISAM it's 1,000 bytes; it's 767 for InnoDB. And the data type of those columns matters - for VARCHAR
, it's 3x so an index on a VARCHAR(100)
will take 300 of those bytes (because 100 characters * 3 = 300).
To accommodate some indexing when you hit the ceiling value, you can define the index with regard to portions of the column data type:
CREATE INDEX example_idx ON YOUR_TABLE(your_column(50))
Assuming that your_column
is VARCHAR(100)
, the index in the example above will only be on the first 50 characters. Searching for data beyond the 50th character will not be able to use the index.
This seems to be a bug that was reported here: http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=4541
If you have tried all the answers on this post and still getting the error, you may want to try to run this command on your SQL query window.
set GLOBAL storage_engine='InnoDb';
if this error occur in some proccess like migration, it could be solved by changing config file of MySql (*.ini)
default-storage-engine=InnoDB
I think one of your fields is a varchar with more than 1000 chars. e.g. context?
Think about the meaning of an index. It's quick access to a row when all your indexed fields are within the where clause. If an index is to long (in case of mysql more than 1000 bytes), it makes no sense to use an index, because it's probably slower than accessing the complete table with a full table scan.
I would suggest to shorten the index, e.g to taggable_id and taggable_type, if those both are the shorter once.
Cheers - Gerhard
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