I have a top list page on my website, which fetches 25 rows with highest values in a particular column. I have no issues fetching the top list if it is based on one column (score for instance), but when more columns are involved, I faced some performance issues.
In the problematic case I want to select 25 rows, ordered by a sum of two columns in a descending order.
SELECT username, rank1 + rank2 AS rank FROM users ORDER BY rank DESC LIMIT 25
The query works, but takes approximately 0.25 seconds to finish, in contrast to queries on single column which take about 0.0003. Below is the result for explain query:
id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra
1 | SIMPLE | accounts | ALL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | 517874 | Using filesort
Both rank1 and rank2 are indexed, but clearly the indexes are not used for this query. Is there a way to improve the performance by somehow editing the query or the indexes?
MySQL does not handle this situation very well. Other databases (Oracle, Postgres, SQL Server, for example) offer some form of function-based indexes which can directly solve this problem. To do this in MySQL requires adding a new column to the table, then adding a trigger to keep it up-to-date. And finally an index on the new column. Perhaps a lot of work.
In some situations, you might be able to assume that the top XXX by the sum is going to be in the top YYY for each ranking. If this is true, then a query such as this will improve performance:
select ur1.*
from (select u.*
from users u
order by rank1 desc
limit 1000
) ur1 join
(select u.*
from users u
order by rank2 desc
limit 1000
) ur2
on ur1.username = ur2.username
order by ur1.rank1 + ur1.rank2 desc
limit 25;
This extracts the top 1000 (or whatever values) by each ranking and then identifies users common to the two lists. Hopefully there are 25 such users (for your application). At the very least, this should perform better than the overall query. You can first try this. If it returns 25 rows, then great. Otherwise, go for your original query.
Related
What I mean by literal order is that, altough the IDs are auto-increment, through business logic, it might end up that 8 comes after 4 when 5 should've been there. That is to say, if a deletion if ID happens, there's no re-indexing
This is how my rows look (table name is wp_posts):
+-----+-------------+----+--+--+--+
| ID | post_author | .. | | | |
+-----+-------------+----+--+--+--+
| 4 | .. | | | | |
+-----+-------------+----+--+--+--+
| 8 | .. | | | | |
+-----+-------------+----+--+--+--+
| 124 | .. | | | | |
+-----+-------------+----+--+--+--+
| 672 | .. | | | | |
+-----+-------------+----+--+--+--+
| 673 | .. | | | | |
+-----+-------------+----+--+--+--+
| 674 | .. | | | | |
+-----+-------------+----+--+--+--+
ID is an int that has the auto-increment characteristic, but when a post is deleted, there is no re-assignment of IDs. It will just simply get deleted and because it's auto-increment, you can still assume that, vertically, the items that come after the one you're looking at are always bigger than the ones before.
I'm querying for ID: SELECT ID FROM wp_posts to get a list of all the IDs I need. Now, it just so happens that I need to batch all of this, using AJAX requests because once I retrieve the IDs, I need to operate on them.
Thing is, I don't really understand how to pass my data back to AJAX. What LIMIT does is, if I provide 2 arguments, such as: SELECT ID FROM wp_posts LIMIT 1,3, it'll return back 4,8,124 because it looks at row number. But what do I do on the next call? Yes, the first call always starts with 1, but once I need to launch the second AJAX request to perform yet another SELECT, how do I know where I should start? In my case, I'd want to start again at 4, so, my second query would be SELECT ID FROM wp_posts LIMIT 4, 7 and so on.
Do I really need to send that counter (even if I can automate it, since, you see, it's an increment of 3) back?
Is there no way for SQL to handle this automatically?
You have many confusions in your question. Let me try to clear up some basic ones.
First, the auto-incremented key is the primary key for the table. You do not need to worry about gaps. In fact, the key should basically be meaningless. It fulfills the following:
It is guaranteed to be unique.
It is guaranteed to be in insertion order.
Gaps are allowed and of no concern. There is no re-indexing. It is a bad idea because:
Primary keys uniquely identify each row and this mapping should be consistent across time.
Primary keys are used in other tables to refer to values, so re-indexing would either invalidate those relationships or require massive changes to many tables.
Re-indexes pre-supposes that the value means something, when it doesn't.
Second, a query such as:
SELECT ID
FROM wp_posts
LIMIT 1, 3;
Can return any three rows. Why? Because you have no specified an ORDER BY and SQL result sets without ORDER BY are unordered. There are no guarantees. So you should always be in the habit of using an ORDER BY.
Third, if you want to essentially "page" through results, then use the OFFSET feature in LIMIT (as you have above):
SELECT ID
FROM wp_posts
ORDER BY ID
LIMIT #offset, 3;
This will allow you to reset the #offset value and go to which rows you want.
First query:
SELECT ID FROM wp_posts ORDER BY ID LIMIT 3
This returns 4,8,124 as you said. In your client, save the largest ID value in a variable.
Subsequent queries:
SELECT ID FROM wp_posts WHERE ID > ? ORDER BY ID LIMIT 3
Send a parameter into this query using the greated ID value from the previous result. It's still in a variable.
This also helps make the query faster, because it doesn't have to skip all those initial rows every time. Paging through a large dataset using LIMIT/OFFSET is pretty inefficient. SQL has to actually read all those rows even though it's not going to return them.
But if you use WHERE ID > ? then SQL can efficiently start the scan in the right place, on the first row that would be included in the result.
Seems, you want to return the first three rows of your query ordered by currently existing ID values(whatever they're after all DML statement's applied on the table wp_posts).
Then, Consider using an auxiliary iteration variable #i to provide an ordered integer value set starting from 1 and increasing as 2,3,... without any gaps :
select t.*
from
(
select #i := #i + 1 as rownum, t1.*
from tab t1
join (select #i:=0) t2
) t
order by rownum
limit 0,3;
Demo
When we log into our database with mysql-client and launch these queries:
first test query:
select a.*
from ads a
inner join searchs_titles s on s.id_ad = a.id
where match(s.label) against ('"bmw serie 3"' in boolean mode)
order by a.ranking asc limit 0, 10;
The result is:
10 rows in set (1 min 5.37 sec)
second test query:
select a.*
from ads a
inner join searchs_titles s on s.id_ad = a.id
where match(s.label) against ('"ford mondeo"' in boolean mode)
order by a.ranking asc limit 0, 10;
The result is:
10 rows in set (2 min 13.88 sec)
These queries are too slow. Is there a way to improve this?
The 'ads' table contains 2 millions rows, triggers are set to duplicate the data into search title. Search titles contains the id, title and label of each row in ads.
Table 'ads' is powered by innoDB and 'searchs_titles' by myISAM with a fulltext index on the label field.
Do we have too many columns? Too many indexes? Too many rows?
Is it a bad query?
Thanks a lot for the time you will spend helping us!
Edit: add explain
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
| 1 | SIMPLE | s | fulltext | id_ad,label | label | 0 | | 1 | Using where; Using temporary; Using filesort |
| 1 | SIMPLE | a | eq_ref | PRIMARY,id,id_2,id_3 | PRIMARY | 4 | XXXXXX.s.id_ad | 1 | |
Pro tip: Never use * in a SELECT statement in production software (unless you have a very good reason). By asking for all columns, you are denying the optimizer access to information about how best to exploit your indexes.
Observation: you're ordering by ads.ranking and taking ten results. But ads.ranking has very low cardinality -- according to that image in your question, it has 26 distinct values. Is your query working correctly?
Observation: You've said that the fulltext part of your search takes .77 seconds. I mean this part:
select s.id
from searchs_titles AS s
where match(s.label) against ('"ford mondeo"' in boolean mode)
That is good. It means we can focus on the rest of the query.
You also said you've been testing with the insertions to the table turned off. That's good because it rules out contention as a cause for the slow queries.
Suggestion: Create a suitable compound index for ads. For your present query, try an index on (id, ranking) This may allow your ORDER BY operation to avoid a full table scan.
Then, try this query to extract the set of ten a.id values you need, and then retrieve the data rows. This will exploit your compound index.
select z.*
from ads AS z
join ( select a.id, a.ranking
from ads AS a
inner join searchs_titles s on s.id_ad = a.id
where match(s.label) against ('"ford mondeo"' in boolean mode)
order by a.ranking asc
limit 0, 10
) AS b ON z.id = b.id
order by z.ranking
This uses a subquery to do the order by ... limit ... datashuffling operation on a small subset of the columns. This should make the retrieval of the appropriate id values much faster. Then the outer query fetches the appropriate rows.
The bottom line is this: ORDER BY ... LIMIT ... can be a very expensive operation if it's done on lots of data. But if you can arrange for it to be done on a minimal choice of columns, and those columns are indexed correctly, it can be very fast.
I'm trying to figure out why is one of my query slow and how I can fix it but I'm a bit puzzled on my results.
I have an orders table with around 80 columns and 775179 rows and I'm doing the following request :
SELECT * FROM orders WHERE id_state = 2 AND id_mp IS NOT NULL ORDER BY creation_date DESC LIMIT 200
which returns 38 rows in 4.5s
When removing the ORDER BY I'm getting a nice improvement :
SELECT * FROM orders WHERE id_state = 2 AND id_mp IS NOT NULL LIMIT 200
38 rows in 0.30s
But when removing the LIMIT without touching the ORDER BY I'm getting an even better result :
SELECT * FROM orders WHERE id_state = 2 AND id_mp IS NOT NULL ORDER BY creation_date DESC
38 rows in 0.10s (??)
Why is my LIMIT so hungry ?
GOING FURTHER
I was trying a few things before sending my answer and after noticing that I had an index on creation_date (which is a datetime) I removed it and the first query now runs in 0.10s. Why is that ?
EDIT
Good guess, I have indexes on the others columns part of the where.
mysql> explain SELECT * FROM orders WHERE id_state = 2 AND id_mp IS NOT NULL ORDER BY creation_date DESC LIMIT 200;
+----+-------------+--------+-------+------------------------+---------------+---------+------+------+-------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
+----+-------------+--------+-------+------------------------+---------------+---------+------+------+-------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | orders | index | id_state_idx,id_mp_idx | creation_date | 5 | NULL | 1719 | Using where |
+----+-------------+--------+-------+------------------------+---------------+---------+------+------+-------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> explain SELECT * FROM orders WHERE id_state = 2 AND id_mp IS NOT NULL ORDER BY creation_date DESC;
+----+-------------+--------+-------+------------------------+-----------+---------+------+-------+----------------------------------------------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
+----+-------------+--------+-------+------------------------+-----------+---------+------+-------+----------------------------------------------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | orders | range | id_state_idx,id_mp_idx | id_mp_idx | 3 | NULL | 87502 | Using index condition; Using where; Using filesort |
+----+-------------+--------+-------+------------------------+-----------+---------+------+-------+----------------------------------------------------+
Indexes do not necessarily improve performance. To better understand what is happening, it would help if you included the explain for the different queries.
My best guess would be that you have an index in id_state or even id_state, id_mp that can be used to satisfy the where clause. If so, the first query without the order by would use this index. It should be pretty fast. Even without an index, this requires a sequential scan of the pages in the orders table, which can still be pretty fast.
Then when you add the index on creation_date, MySQL decides to use that index instead for the order by. This requires reading each row in the index, then fetching the corresponding data page to check the where conditions and return the columns (if there is a match). This reading is highly inefficient, because it is not in "page" order but rather as specified by the index. Random reads can be quite inefficient.
Worse, even though you have a limit, you still have to read the entire table because the entire result set is needed. Although you have saved a sort on 38 records, you have created a massively inefficient query.
By the way, this situation gets significantly worse if the orders table does not fit in available memory. Then you have a condition called "thrashing", where each new record tends to generate a new I/O read. So, if a page has 100 records on it, the page might have to be read 100 times.
You can make all these queries run faster by having an index on orders(id_state, id_mp, creation_date). The where clause will use the first two columns and the order by will use the last.
Same problem happened in my project,
I did some test, and found out that LIMIT is slow because of row lookups
See:
MySQL ORDER BY / LIMIT performance: late row lookups
So, the solution is:
(A)when using LIMIT, select not all columns, but only the PK columns
(B)Select all columns you need, and then join with the result set of (A)
SQL should likes:
SELECT
*
FROM
orders O1 <=== this is what you want
JOIN
(
SELECT
ID <== fetch the PK column only, this should be fast
FROM
orders
WHERE
[your query condition] <== filter record by condition
ORDER BY
[your order by condition] <== control the record order
LIMIT 2000, 50 <== filter record by paging condition
) as O2
ON
O1.ID = O2.ID
ORDER BY
[your order by condition] <== control the record order
in my DB,
the old SQL which select all columns using "LIMIT 21560, 20", costs about 4.484s.
the new sql costs only 0.063s. The new one is about 71 times faster
I had a similar issue on a table of 2.5 million records. Removing the limit part the query took a few seconds. With the limit part it stuck forever.
I solved with a subquery. In your case it would became:
SELECT *
FROM
(SELECT *
FROM orders
WHERE id_state = 2
AND id_mp IS NOT NULL
ORDER BY creation_date DESC) tmp
LIMIT 200
I noted that the original query was fast when the number of selected rows was greater than the limit parameter. Se the query became extremely slow when the limit parameter was useless.
Another solution is trying forcing index. In your case you can try with
SELECT *
FROM orders force index (id_mp_idx)
WHERE id_state = 2
AND id_mp IS NOT NULL
ORDER BY creation_date DESC
LIMIT 200
Problem is that mysql is forced to sort data on the fly. My query of deep offset like:
ORDER BY somecol LIMIT 99990, 10
Took 2.5s.
I fixed it by creating a new table, which has presorted data by column somecol and contains only ids, and there the deep offset (without need to use ORDER BY) takes 0.09s.
0.1s is not still enough fast though. 0.01s would be better.
I will end up creating a table that holds the page number as special indexed column, so instead of doing limit x, y i will query where page = Z.
i just tried it and it is fast as 0.0013. only problem is, that the offseting is based on static numbers (presorted in pages by 10 items for example.. its not that big problem though.. you can still get out any data of any pages.)
My understanding is that in (My)SQL a SELECT DISTINCT should do the same thing as a GROUP BY on all columns, except that GROUP BY does implicit sorting, so these two queries should be the same:
SELECT boardID,threadID FROM posts GROUP BY boardID,threadID ORDER BY NULL LIMIT 100;
SELECT DISTINCT boardID,threadID FROM posts LIMIT 100;
They're both giving me the same results, and they're giving identical output from EXPLAIN:
+----+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+---------+-----------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
+----+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+---------+-----------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | posts | ALL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | 1263320 | Using temporary |
+----+-------------+-------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+---------+-----------------+
1 row in set
But on my table the query with DISTINCT consistently returns instantly and the one with GROUP BY takes about 4 seconds. I've disabled the query cache to test this.
There's 25 columns so I've also tried creating a separate table containing only the boardID and threadID columns, but the same problem and performance difference persists.
I have to use GROUP BY instead of DISTINCT so I can include additional columns without them being included in the evaluation of DISTINCT. So now I don't how to proceed. Why is there a difference?
First of all, your queries are not quite the same - GROUP BY has ORDER BY, but DISTINCT does not.
Note, that in either case, index is NOT used, and that cannot be good for performance.
I would suggest creating compound index for (boardid, threadid) - this should let both queries to make use of index and both should start working much faster
EDIT: Explanation why SELECT DISTINCT ... LIMIT 100 is faster than GROUP BY ... LIMIT 100 when you do not have indexes.
To execute first statement (SELECT DISTINCT) server only needs to fetch 100, maybe slightly more rows and can stop as soon as it has 100 different rows - no more work to do.
This is because original SQL statement did not specify any order, so server can deliver any 100 rows as it pleases, as long as they are distinct. But, if you were to impose any index-less ORDER BY on this before LIMIT 100, this query will immediately become slow.
To execute second statement (SELECT ... GROUP BY ... LIMIT 100), MySQL always does implicit ORDER BY by the same columns as were used in GROUP BY. In other words, it cannot quickly stop after fetching first few 100+ rows until all records are fetched, groupped and sorted. After that, it applies ORDER BY NULL you added (which does not do much I guess, but dropping it may speed things up), and finally, it gets first 100 rows and throws away remaining result. And of course, this is damn slow.
When you have compound index, all these steps can be done very quickly in either case.
I've been doing some research and testing on how to do fast random selection in MySQL. In the process I've faced some unexpected results and now I am not fully sure I know how ORDER BY RAND() really works.
I always thought that when you do ORDER BY RAND() on the table, MySQL adds a new column to the table which is filled with random values, then it sorts data by that column and then e.g. you take the above value which got there randomly. I've done lots of googling and testing and finally found that the query Jay offers in his blog is indeed the fastest solution:
SELECT * FROM Table T JOIN (SELECT CEIL(MAX(ID)*RAND()) AS ID FROM Table) AS x ON T.ID >= x.ID LIMIT 1;
While common ORDER BY RAND() takes 30-40 seconds on my test table, his query does the work in 0.1 seconds. He explains how this functions in the blog so I'll just skip this and finally move to the odd thing.
My table is a common table with a PRIMARY KEY id and other non-indexed stuff like username, age, etc. Here's the thing I am struggling to explain
SELECT * FROM table ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1; /*30-40 seconds*/
SELECT id FROM table ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1; /*0.25 seconds*/
SELECT id, username FROM table ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1; /*90 seconds*/
I was sort of expecting to see approximately the same time for all three queries since I am always sorting on a single column. But for some reason this didn't happen. Please let me know if you any ideas about this. I have a project where I need to do fast ORDER BY RAND() and personally I would prefer to use
SELECT id FROM table ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1;
SELECT * FROM table WHERE id=ID_FROM_PREVIOUS_QUERY LIMIT 1;
which, yes, is slower than Jay's method, however it is smaller and easier to understand. My queries are rather big ones with several JOINs and with WHERE clause and while Jay's method still works, the query grows really big and complex because I need to use all the JOINs and WHERE in the JOINed (called x in his query) sub request.
Thanks for your time!
While there's no such thing as a "fast order by rand()", there is a workaround for your specific task.
For getting any single random row, you can do like this german blogger does: http://web.archive.org/web/20200211210404/http://www.roberthartung.de/mysql-order-by-rand-a-case-study-of-alternatives/ (I couldn't see a hotlink url. If anyone sees one, feel free to edit the link.)
The text is in german, but the SQL code is a bit down the page and in big white boxes, so it's not hard to see.
Basically what he does is make a procedure that does the job of getting a valid row. That generates a random number between 0 and max_id, try fetching a row, and if it doesn't exist, keep going until you hit one that does. He allows for fetching x number of random rows by storing them in a temp table, so you can probably rewrite the procedure to be a bit faster fetching only one row.
The downside of this is that if you delete A LOT of rows, and there are huge gaps, the chances are big that it will miss tons of times, making it ineffective.
Update: Different execution times
SELECT * FROM table ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1; /30-40 seconds/
SELECT id FROM table ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1; /0.25 seconds/
SELECT id, username FROM table ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1; /90 seconds/
I was sort of expecting to see approximately the same time for all three queries since I am always sorting on a single column. But for some reason this didn't happen. Please let me know if you any ideas about this.
It may have to do with indexing. id is indexed and quick to access, whereas adding username to the result, means it needs to read that from each row and put it in the memory table. With the * it also has to read everything into memory, but it doesn't need to jump around the data file, meaning there's no time lost seeking.
This makes a difference only if there are variable length columns (varchar/text), which means it has to check the length, then skip that length, as opposed to just skipping a set length (or 0) between each row.
It may have to do with indexing. id is
indexed and quick to access, whereas
adding username to the result, means
it needs to read that from each row
and put it in the memory table. With
the * it also has to read everything
into memory, but it doesn't need to
jump around the data file, meaning
there's no time lost seeking. This
makes a difference only if there are
variable length columns, which means
it has to check the length, then skip
that length, as opposed to just
skipping a set length (or 0) between
each row
Practice is better that all theories! Why not just to check plans? :)
mysql> explain select name from avatar order by RAND() limit 1;
+----+-------------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------------+---------+------+-------+----------------------------------------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
+----+-------------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------------+---------+------+-------+----------------------------------------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | avatar | index | NULL | IDX_AVATAR_NAME | 302 | NULL | 30062 | Using index; Using temporary; Using filesort |
+----+-------------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------------+---------+------+-------+----------------------------------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> explain select * from avatar order by RAND() limit 1;
+----+-------------+--------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+-------+---------------------------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
+----+-------------+--------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+-------+---------------------------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | avatar | ALL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | 30062 | Using temporary; Using filesort |
+----+-------------+--------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+-------+---------------------------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> explain select name, experience from avatar order by RAND() limit 1;
+----+-------------+--------+------+--------------+------+---------+------+-------+---------------------------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
+----+-------------+--------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+-------+---------------------------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | avatar | ALL | NULL | NULL | NULL | NULL | 30064 | Using temporary; Using filesort |
+----+-------------+--------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+-------+---------------------------------+
I can tell you why the SELECT id FROM ... is much slower than the other two, but I am not sure, why SELECT id, username is 2-3 times faster than SELECT *.
When you have an index (the primary key in your case) and the result includes only the columns from the index, MySQL optimizer is able to use the data from the index only, does not even look into the table itself. The more expensive is each row, the more effect you will observe, since you substitute the filesystem IO operations with pure in-memory operations. If you will have an additional index on (id, username), you will have a similar performance in the third case as well.
Why don't you add an index id, username on the table see if that forces mysql to use the index rather than just a filesort and temp table.
PrimaryKey's are indexed. So those are "found" faster.
If you want a random (entire row) but the speed of using the PrimaryKey with the Random function..you can try this (below code):
You use the derived-table to "find" the primary-key of a single random row. Then you join on it..to get the entire-row.
Select * from my_thing mainTable
JOIN
(
Select my_thing_key from my_thing order by RAND() LIMIT 1
) derived1
on mainTable.my_thing_key = derived1.my_thing_key;
Using RAND() is slower. And * is slower, too.
What I cannot explain is why id, username is slower than *.
This is a strange phenomenon that I cannot replicate.
The fastest method would be to get MAX(id) and store it in memory. Then, using your software pull a random number with it as the ceiling and then in SQL
SELECT id, username FROM table WHERE id > ? LIMIT 1;
and if no row, fall back to
SELECT id, username FROM table LIMIT 1;
If your MySQL installation is not buggy, you should do
SELECT id, username FROM table ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1;
with a small-medium data set. Doing two selects cannot be faster. But software is buggy.