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I've a MySQL question

I've two tables (posts and authors) in a one to many relationship (since each post is written by an author and an author can write multiple posts).

So here are the tables:

Authors:
   id:BIGINT, name:VARCHAR(255)

Posts: 
   id:BIGINT, author_id:BIGINT, body:TEXT

I've got 700,000 posts and 60,000 authors.

If I choose an author (e.g. author_id = 45) and I want a random post written by him I write:

SELECT * FROM Posts WHERE author_id = 45 ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1;

I know this is right, but when I got 4,000 simultaneous people online it takes about 6 secs..

Maybe indexing author_id column in Posts table would speed up things?

Thank you all! :)

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6 Answers 6

5

Indexing should mirror your most popular WHERE clause scenarios.

In this particular case, create your index, then change your query to this:

SELECT id,author_id,body 
FROM Posts 
WHERE author_id = 45 
ORDER BY RAND() 
LIMIT 1;

This will prevent a schema lookup prior to the search thereby increasing performance.

SELECT * is evil for high frequency queries.

2

Yes, you definitely should add the index.

CREATE INDEX Post_author_id ON Posts(author_id);

As further evidence, run

EXPLAIN SELECT * FROM Posts WHERE author_id = 45 ORDER BY RAND() LIMIT 1;
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  • Is your syntax to add an index different in any way from this one? ALTER TABLE Posts ADD INDEX ( author_id )
    – checcco
    Oct 20, 2009 at 16:11
  • Yes, those syntaxes are different. :-) ALTER TABLE isn't very portable between databases, whereas CREATE INDEX is pretty darned portable. I hate SQL so have only memorized the portable stuff. Oct 20, 2009 at 16:16
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If you haven't and index on author_id, definitely put one on it. Also I'm not sure ORDER BY RAND() is not responsible for the performance drawback. Try adding the index and it should already improve dramatically.

0

Especially in a situation where you read your data a lot more than you update your data, be generous when setting up indexing. Anything you'll ever have in a where clause should be indexed.

0

A [possibly clustered] index on Author_id will definitively help.

There appears to be an additional risk factor with the ORDER BY RAND() part. Essentially this clause causes SQL to dynamically assign a random number to each row (for a given Author_id), and to order these. This could become a bottleneck as some prolific authors start having hundred and thousands of posts.

0

if author_id is foreign key then it does not need to create index. It has built-in index.

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