The ionic bond length would be the distance between two adjacent ionic nuclei. But the issue with strictly ionic compounds is that they form regular lattices instead of discrete molecules, so it can be difficult to identify which interactions should be considered the basis of a single "ionic bond". In particular, some lattices may have complicated cell shapes with different possible interatomic distances depending on which lattice points are selected. So does one take an average? Also, the same formula may have different polymorphs depending on how the crystal was formed, what impurities are present, and so forth, all of which can affect the crystalline cell dimensions and effective internuclear distances. In that sense, a question like, "what is the ionic bond length in calcium carbonate?" has no general answer and I would be wary of just grabbing values off the internet without knowing what they represent (some values aren't directly measured, they just add the radii of two ions measured in isolation and call that an ionic bond length between the two in whatever lattice they might appear in).