How do I view the full content of a text or varcha

2020-01-24 10:42发布

In this live SQL Server 2008 (build 10.0.1600) database, there's an Events table, which contains a text column named Details. (Yes, I realize this should actually be a varchar(MAX) column, but whoever set this database up did not do it that way.)

This column contains very large logs of exceptions and associated JSON data that I'm trying to access through SQL Server Management Studio, but whenever I copy the results from the grid to a text editor, it truncates it at 43679 characters.

I've read on various locations on the Internet that you can set your Maximum Characters Retrieved for XML Data in Tools > Options > Query Results > SQL Server > Results To Grid to Unlimited, and then perform a query such as this:

select Convert(xml, Details) from Events
where EventID = 13920

(Note that the data is column is not XML at all. CONVERTing the column to XML is merely a workaround I found from Googling that someone else has used to get around the limit SSMS has from retrieving data from a text or varchar(MAX) column.)

However, after setting the option above, running the query, and clicking on the link in the result, I still get the following error:

Unable to show XML. The following error happened: Unexpected end of file has occurred. Line 5, position 220160.

One solution is to increase the number of characters retrieved from the server for XML data. To change this setting, on the Tools menu, click Options.

So, any idea on how to access this data? Would converting the column to varchar(MAX) fix my woes?

10条回答
混吃等死
2楼-- · 2020-01-24 11:16

You are out of luck, I think. THe problem is not a SQL level problem as all other answers seem to focus on, but simply one of the user interface. Management Studio is not meant to be a general purpose / generic data access interface. It is not there to be your interface, but your administrative area, and it has serious limitations handling binary data and large test data - because people using it within the specified usage profile will not run into this problem.

Presenting large text data is simply not the planned usage.

Your only choice would be a table valued function that takes the text input and cuts it rows for every line, so that Management Studio gets a list of rows, not a single row.

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ら.Afraid
3楼-- · 2020-01-24 11:17

SSMS only allows unlimited data for XML data. This is not the default and needs to be set in the options.

enter image description here

One trick which might work in quite limited circumstances is simply naming the column in a special manner as below so it gets treated as XML data.

DECLARE @S varchar(max) = 'A'

SET @S =  REPLICATE(@S,100000) + 'B' 

SELECT @S as [XML_F52E2B61-18A1-11d1-B105-00805F49916B]

In SSMS (at least versions 2012 to current of 18.3) this displays the results as below

enter image description here

Clicking on it opens the full results in the XML viewer. Scrolling to the right shows the last character of B is preserved,

However this does have some significant problems. Adding extra columns to the query breaks the effect and extra rows all become concatenated with the first one. Finally if the string contains characters such as < opening the XML viewer fails with a parsing error.

A more robust way of doing this that avoids issues of SQL Server converting < to &lt; etc or failing due to these characters is below (credit Adam Machanic here).

DECLARE @S varchar(max)

SELECT @S = ''

SELECT @S = @S + '
' + OBJECT_DEFINITION(OBJECT_ID) FROM SYS.PROCEDURES

SELECT @S AS [processing-instruction(x)] FOR XML PATH('')
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何必那么认真
4楼-- · 2020-01-24 11:17

The data type TEXT is old and should not be used anymore, it is a pain to select data out of a TEXT column.

ntext, text, and image (Transact-SQL)

ntext, text, and image data types will be removed in a future version of Microsoft SQL Server. Avoid using these data types in new development work, and plan to modify applications that currently use them. Use nvarchar(max), varchar(max), and varbinary(max) instead.

you need to use TEXTPTR (Transact-SQL) to retrieve the text data.

Also see this article on Handling The Text Data Type.

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唯我独甜
5楼-- · 2020-01-24 11:18

I was able to get this to work...

SELECT CAST('<![CDATA[' + LargeTextColumn + ']]>' AS XML) FROM TableName;
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我命由我不由天
6楼-- · 2020-01-24 11:26

It sounds like the Xml may not be well formed. If that is the case, then you will not be able to cast it as Xml and given that, you are limited in how much text you can return in Management Studio. However, you could break up the text into smaller chunks like so:

With Tally As
    (
        Select ROW_NUMBER() OVER ( ORDER BY s1.object_id ) - 1 As Num
        From sys.sysobjects As s1
            Cross Join sys.sysobjects As s2
    )
Select Substring(T1.textCol, T2.Num * 8000 + 1, 8000)
From Table As T1
    Cross Join Tally As T2
Where T2.Num <= Ceiling(Len(T1.textCol) / 8000)
Order By T2.Num

You would then need to manually combine them again.

EDIT

It sounds like there are some characters in the text data that the Xml parser does not like. You could try converting those values to entities and then try the Convert(xml, data) trick. So something like:

Update Table
Set Data = Replace(Cast(Data As varchar(max)),'<','&lt;')

(I needed to cast to varchar(max) because the replace function will not work on text columns. There should not be any reason you couldn't convert those text columns to varchar(max).)

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我命由我不由天
7楼-- · 2020-01-24 11:29

One work-around is to right-click on the result set and select "Save Results As...". This exports it to a CSV file with the entire contents of the column. Not perfect but worked well enough for me.

Workaround

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