MySQL 9.5 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.5
The following table describes the maximum length for each type of identifier.
| Identifier Type | Maximum Length (characters) | 
|---|---|
| Database | 64 | 
| Table | 64 | 
| Column | 64 | 
| Index | 64 | 
| Constraint | 64 | 
| Stored Program | 64 | 
| View | 64 | 
| Tablespace | 64 | 
| Server | 64 | 
| Log File Group | 64 | 
| Alias | 256 (see exception following table) | 
| Compound Statement Label | 16 | 
| User-Defined Variable | 64 | 
| Resource Group | 64 | 
        Aliases for column names in CREATE
        VIEW statements are checked against the maximum column
        length of 64 characters (not the maximum alias length of 256
        characters).
      
        For constraint definitions that include no constraint name, the
        server internally generates a name derived from the associated
        table name. For example, internally generated foreign key and
        CHECK constraint names consist of the table
        name plus _ibfk_ or _chk_
        and a number. If the table name is close to the length limit for
        constraint names, the additional characters required for the
        constraint name may cause that name to exceed the limit,
        resulting in an error.
      
        Identifiers are stored using Unicode (UTF-8). This applies to
        identifiers in table definitions and to identifiers stored in
        the grant tables in the mysql database. The
        sizes of the identifier string columns in the grant tables are
        measured in characters. You can use multibyte characters without
        reducing the number of characters permitted for values stored in
        these columns.
      
Values such as user name and host names in MySQL account names are strings rather than identifiers. For information about the maximum length of such values as stored in grant tables, see Grant Table Scope Column Properties.