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I've got C# code that accesses MySQL through ODBC.

It creates a transaction, does a few thousand insert commands, and then commits. Now my question is how many "round trips", so to speak, happen against the DB server? I mean, does it simply transmit every insert command to the DB server, or does it cache/buffer them and send them in batches? And is this configurable in any way?

Thanks.

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7 Answers

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Mysql has an extended SQL style that can be used, where mass inserts are put in several at a time.

INSERT INTO table (id, event) VALUES (1, 94263), (2, 75015), (3, 75015);

I will usually collect a few hundred insert-parts into a string before running the SQL query itself. This will reduce the overhead of parsing and communication by batching them yourself.

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Any idea how many sets of parenthesis (),(),() are to be considered as 'large'? What I mean to ask is, after how many extended insert rows (= sets of parenthesis after VALUES ) in 1 query should we consider making a new query? – Swanand Jan 6 '09 at 13:44
It depends as to the size of the data, but it's a toss-up between personal choice and database traffic limits (eg Mysql's 'max allowed packet' size). I generally do somewhere around 100. It's just a little extra time if there's less per packet, and I don't want to risk any problems. – Alister Bulman Jan 8 '09 at 18:41
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Its hard to say without seeing your code, but Im assuming you are executing the statements 1 at a time. So, you will get 1 round trip per insert statement. In MSSql you can execute multiple inserts in a single statement eg.

cmd.ExecuteNonQuery "insert table values (1) insert table values (2)"

So you can create a big string and execute it (I think it will have a limit), I assume this will work for MySql

Also in MSsql you have a batch inserter (Lookup SqlBulkCopy), in MySql perhaps try loading the data from a temp file

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I do not know about the ODBC connection of MySQL, but MySQL itself allows to concat several commands in a single execution. Also, you can do smth. like "INSERT INTO table VALUES ('hello', 'bye'), ('what', 'ever');" so answering nickf's question withe the given information is a bit hard. :) – hangy Sep 21 '08 at 12:40
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It does one round trip per query you submit (regardless of whether it's in a transaction or not).

It is possible, in MySQL, to use "extended insert" syntax which allows you to insert several (or indeed, many) rows in a single statement. This is generally considered a Good Thing.

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When using MySQL 4.x a few years ago, we ran into a hard limit on query size that was not configurable.

This probably won't help you much as, 1) I don't remember what the hard limit was, 2) you're probably not using MySQL 4.x, and 3) we weren't using transactions.

Good luck!

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A round trip to the DB server is not the same as a round trip to the database on disk.

Before you decide that the round trips are a bottleneck, do some actual measurements.

There are ways to insert multiple rows with a single insert, depending on your DBMS. Before you invest the coding effort, figure out whether it's likely to do you any good.

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So what's the limit on the number of rows that can/should be inserted in one extended insert command?

Any ideas on how to go about figuring the right number? (naturally I assume the performance benefit decreases at some point as a function of the number of rows)

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depends on where you invoke sql statement, I tried it once with Mysql JDBC driver and get an error saying the limit is 1MB but it is configurable . I didn't bother to try to configure it and just split the sql statements into smaller pieces

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