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Specifying Prefix Length in Data Files

To provide the most compact file storage for the bulk export of data in native format to a data file, the bcp command precedes each field with one or more characters that indicates the length of the field. These characters are called length prefix characters.

The bcp Prompt for Prefix Length

If an interactive bcp command contains the in or out option without either the format file switch (-f) or a data-format switch (-n, -c, -w, or -N), the command prompts for the prefix length of each data field, as follows:

Enter prefix length of field <field_name> [<default>]:

If you specify 0, bcp prompts you for either the length of the field (for a character data type) or a field terminator (for a native non-character type). For an example that shows this prompt in context, see Specifying Data Formats for Compatibility by Using bcp.

Note

After you interactively specify all of the fields in a bcp command, the command prompts you save your responses for each field in a non-XML format file. For more information about non-XML format files, see Understanding Non-XML Format Files.

Overview of Prefix Length

To store the prefix length of a field, you need enoughf bytes to represent the maximum length of the field. The number of bytes that are required also depends upon the file storage type, the nullability of a column, and whether the data is being stored in the data file in its native or character format. For example, a text or image data type requires four prefix characters to store the field length, but a varchar data type requires two characters. In the data file, these length-prefix characters are stored in the internal binary data format of SQL Server.

Important

When you use native format, use length prefixes rather than field terminators. Native format data might conflict with terminators because a native-format data file is stored in the SQL Server internal binary data format.

Prefix Lengths for Bulk Export

Note

The default value that is provided at the prefix-length prompt when you export a field indicates the most efficient prefix length for the field.

Null values are represented as an empty field. To indicate that the field is empty (represents NULL), the field prefix contains the value -1; that is, it requires at least 1 byte. Note that if a SQL Server table column allows null values, the column requires a prefix length of 1 or greater, depending on the file storage type.

When you bulk export data and store it in either native data types or character format, use the prefix lengths shown in the following table.

SQL Server data type Native format NOT NULL Native format NULL Character format NOT NULL Character format NULL

char

2

2

2

2

varchar

2

2

2

2

nchar

2

2

2

2

nvarchar

2

2

2

2

text1

4

4

4

4

ntext1

4

4

4

4

binary

2

2

2

2

varbinary

2

2

2

2

image1

4

4

4

4

datetime

0

1

0

1

smalldatetime

0

1

0

1

decimal

1

1

1

1

numeric

1

1

1

1

float

0

1

0

1

real

0

1

0

1

int

0

1

0

1

bigint

0

1

0

1

smallint

0

1

0

1

tinyint

0

1

0

1

money

0

1

0

1

smallmoney

0

1

0

1

bit

0

1

0

1

uniqueidentifier

1

1

0

1

timestamp

1

1

1

1

varchar(max)

8

8

8

8

varbinary(max)

8

8

8

8

UDT (a user-defined data type)

8

8

8

8

XML

8

8

8

8

1 The ntext, text, and image data types will be removed in a future version of 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. For more information, see Using Large-Value Data Types.

For more information, see Storage of Data in Character Format.

Prefix Lengths for Bulk Import

When data is bulk imported, the prefix length is the value that was specified when the data file was created originally. If the data file was not created by a bcp command, length prefix characters probably do not exist. In this instance, specify 0 for the prefix length.

Note

To specify a prefix length in a data file that was not created by using bcp, use the lengths provided in "Prefix Lengths for Bulk Export," earlier in this topic.

See Also

Concepts

Specifying Field Length by Using bcp
Specifying Field and Row Terminators
Specifying File Storage Type by Using bcp
Storage of Data in Character Format

Other Resources

bcp Utility
Data Types (Transact-SQL)

Help and Information

Getting SQL Server 2005 Assistance