2

This query runs slowly:

SELECT UserAccountNumber, balance, username FROM users JOIN balances ON 
users.UserAccountNumber=balances.UserAccountNumber WHERE date < “2011-02-02”

What can i do to improve its performance?

I thought about using the user ID for the join instead of the userAccountNumber. Appart form it, as far as i know, the JOIN and WHERE users.id = balances.idUser perform at the same speed...

So.. what else could i change to improve it? Thanks.

4
  • We'll need more info on your schema. Are you using indexes and foreign keys?
    – user419017
    Jun 13, 2012 at 22:58
  • What indicies do you have? If you have both a userId and userAccountNumber in both users and balances, you haven't normalized your setup completely, which could come back to bite you later (what happens if they no longer point to the same user record?). Jun 13, 2012 at 23:00
  • I have the UserAccountNumber indexed. But. wouldn't it be faster to have another table with UserAccountNumber and ID and here only using the ID to make the JOIN? Thanks.
    – Alvaro
    Jun 13, 2012 at 23:06
  • 1
    Which table is the column 'date' in?
    – Ami
    Jun 14, 2012 at 0:35

2 Answers 2

4

The query itself looks OK to me, but make sure you have indexes on the UserAccountNumber columns (since they're involved in the join) and date (the column you're searching on). If the database has to do a sequential scan of a lot of records, that'll be slow. Using EXPLAIN SELECT may help you to understand how the database is actually performing the query.

2
  • Ok, so i will have to index also the date column. And... what about using and UNIXDATE saving the DATE field as an INT? Isn't it faster than comparing DATE fields?
    – Alvaro
    Jun 13, 2012 at 23:09
  • Dates are probably already stored as integers internally, so I doubt it'd make a difference.
    – Wyzard
    Jun 14, 2012 at 0:29
0

If the tables are huge you might get some improvement using a temporary table rather then letting MySQL's optimiser sort it out for you. It'll be a trade off for sure though.

CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE `tmp_balances`
(
  `UserAccountNumber` INT,
  `balance` INT,
  INDEX (`UserAccountNumber`)
) ENGINE=MEMORY
SELECT `UserAccountNumber`, `balance`
FROM balances
WHERE date < "2011-02-02";

SELECT `tmp_balances`.`UserAccountNumber`, 
    `tmp_balances`.`balance`, 
    `users`.`username`
FROM `tmp_balances` INNER JOIN users USING (`UserAccountNumber`);

Other then that (and it's a bit of a long-shot), I'd have to echo what the earlier commentors said about indexing.

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