There is a hard limit of 4096 columns per table, but the effective maximum may be less for a given table. The exact limit depends on several interacting factors, listed in the following discussion.
Every table has a maximum row size of 65,535 bytes. This maximum applies to all storage engines, but a given engine might have additional constraints that result in a lower effective maximum row size.
The maximum row size constrains the number of columns
because the total width of all columns cannot exceed this
size. For example, utf8 characters
require up to three bytes per character, so for a
CHAR(255) CHARACTER SET utf8 column, the
server must allocate 255 × 3 = 765 bytes per value.
Consequently, a table cannot contain more than 65,535 / 765
= 85 such columns.
Storage for variable-length columns includes length bytes,
which are assessed against the row size. For example, a
VARCHAR(255) CHARACTER SET utf8 column
takes two bytes to store the length of the value, so each
value can take up to 767 bytes.
BLOB and
TEXT columns count from one
to four plus eight bytes each toward the row-size limit
because their contents are stored separately.
Declaring columns NULL can reduce the
maximum number of columns allowed. NULL
columns require additional space in the row to record
whether their values are NULL.
For MyISAM tables, each
NULL column takes one bit extra, rounded
up to the nearest byte. The maximum row length in bytes can
be calculated as follows:
row length = 1
+ (sum of column lengths)
+ (number of NULL columns + delete_flag + 7)/8
+ (number of variable-length columns)
delete_flag is 1 for tables with
static row format. Static tables use a bit in the row record
for a flag that indicates whether the row has been deleted.
delete_flag is 0 for dynamic
tables because the flag is stored in the dynamic row header.
These calculations do not apply for
InnoDB tables, for which storage size is
no different for NULL columns than for
NOT NULL columns.
The following statement to create table
t1 succeeds because the columns require
32,765 + 2 bytes and 32,766 + 2 bytes, which falls within
the maximum row size of 65,535 bytes:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t1->(c1 VARCHAR(32765) NOT NULL, c2 VARCHAR(32766) NOT NULL);Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec)
The following statement to create table
t2 fails because the columns are
NULL and require additional space that
causes the row size to exceed 65,535 bytes:
mysql>CREATE TABLE t2->(c1 VARCHAR(32765) NULL, c2 VARCHAR(32766) NULL);ERROR 1118 (42000): Row size too large. The maximum row size for the used table type, not counting BLOBs, is 65535. You have to change some columns to TEXT or BLOBs
Each table has an .frm file that
contains the table definition. The server uses the following
expression to check some of the table information stored in
the file against an upper limit of 64KB:
if (info_length+(ulong) create_fields.elements*FCOMP+288+
n_length+int_length+com_length > 65535L || int_count > 255)
The portion of the information stored in the
.frm file that is checked against the
expression cannot grow beyond the 64KB limit, so if the
table definition reaches this size, no more columns can be
added.
The relevant factors in the expression are:
info_length is space needed for
“screens.” This is related to MySQL's
Unireg heritage.
create_fields.elements is the number
of columns.
FCOMP is 17.
n_length is the total length of all
column names, including one byte per name as a
separator.
int_length is related to the list of
values for ENUM and
SET columns.
com_length is the total length of
column and table comments.
Thus, using long column names can reduce the maximum number
of columns, as can the inclusion of
ENUM or
SET columns, or use of column
or table comments.
Individual storage engines might impose additional restrictions that limit table column count. Examples:
InnoDB allows no more than 1000
columns.
InnoDB restricts row size to
something less than half a database page (approximately
8000 bytes), not including
VARBINARY,
VARCHAR,
BLOB, or
TEXT columns.
Different InnoDB storage formats
(COMPRESSED,
REDUNDANT) use different amounts of
page header and trailer data, which affects the amount
of storage available for rows.

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