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I am creating a database for keeping track of water usage per person for a city in South Florida.

There are around 40000 users, each one uploading daily readouts.

I was thinking of ways to set up the database and it would seem easier to give each user separate a table. This should ease the download of data because the server will not have to sort through a table with 10's of millions of entries.

Am I false in my logic?
Is there any way to index table names?
Are there any other ways of setting up the DB to both raise the speed and keep the layout simple enough?

-Thank you,
Jared

p.s. The essential data for the readouts are:
-locationID (table name in my idea)
-Reading
-ReadDate
-ReadTime

p.p.s. during this conversation, i uploaded 5k tables and the server froze. ~.O
thanks for your help, ya'll

9
  • Another plus, when a user moves away, I can just drop their respective table.
    – Jared
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:33
  • Then how??? lol (don't make fun, this is the first time I'm dealing with this much data)
    – Jared
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:35
  • You've got like four fields to worry about. You don't need a whole new table per user for four fields.
    – Blender
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:37
  • 4
    sounds like you need more professional help than asking random strangers on the internet.
    – user557846
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:44
  • 1
    you're doing this and in school? how does South Florida hire people? picks randomly from phone book?
    – user557846
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:54

4 Answers 4

8

Setting up thousands of tables in not a good idea. You should maintain one table and put all entries in that table. MySQL can handle a surprisingly large amount of data. The biggest issue that you will encounter is the amount of queries that you can handle at a time, not the size of the database. For instances where you will be handling numbers use int with attribute unsigned, and instances where you will be handling text use varchar of appropriate size (unless text is large use text).

Handling users If you need to identify records with users, setup another table that might look something like this:

  • user_id INT(10) AUTO_INCREMENT UNSIGNED PRIMARY
  • name VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL

When you need to link a record to the user, just reference the user's user_id. For the record information I would setup the SQL something like:

  • id INT(10) AUTO_INCREMENT UNSIGNED PRIMARY
  • u_id INT(10) UNSIGNED
  • reading Im not sure what your reading looks like. If it's a number use INT if its text use VARCHAR
  • read_time TIMESTAMP

You can also consolidate the date and time of the reading to a TIMESTAMP.

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  • there would also be no primary key in that case. How can I work around that?
    – Jared
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:37
  • No keep an auto incrementing primary integer with length of 10 or so. Aug 21, 2012 at 3:38
  • If you give me additional details I can tailor my answer to them. Aug 21, 2012 at 3:53
  • Thank you for your help. Dealing with the schema, there is a lot more data, such that each user can have multiple locations, contacts, billing information, etc. but that was taking care of. I was planning on having a table of customer information point to which locations they own (a Customer Id can point to multiple Location IDs). I will definitely keep a separate (single)table for that data. Once again, thank you.
    – Jared
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:55
  • the reading rolls over at 1M gal (9 digit positive int). One thing that I was reading is that it is hard to search by date using a timestamp. link (at the bottom)
    – Jared
    Aug 21, 2012 at 4:11
5

Do NOT create a seperate table for each user.

Keep indexes on the columns that identify a user and any other common contraints such as date.

Think about how you want to query the data at the end. How on earth would you sum up the data from ALL users for a single day?

If you are worried about primary key, I would suggest keeping a LocationID, Date composite key.

Edit: Lastly, (and I do mean this in a nice way) but if you are asking these sorts of questions about database design, are you sure that you are qualified for this project? It seems like you might be in over your head. Sometimes it is better to know your limitations and let a project pass by, rather than implement it in a way that creates too much work for you and folks aren't satisfied with the results. Again, I am not saying don't, I am just saying have you asked yourself if you can do this to the level they are expecting. It seems like a large amount of users constantly using it. I guess I am saying that learning certain things while at the same time delivering a project to thousands of users may be an exceptionally high pressure environment.

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  • >How on earth would you sum up the data from ALL users for a single day? Very good point The end queries were just for one particular customer to look up their usage, but there is a possibility that we might want to implement a comparison operation.
    – Jared
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:41
  • @Jared Use the SQL function SUM. Aug 21, 2012 at 3:45
  • @GlennDayton I meant how would he sum them up if the data was in thousands of tables.
    – Fluffeh
    Aug 21, 2012 at 3:46
  • @Fluffeh This is my first project; a learning project. Working on it with my brother, pro bono. "...delivering a project to thousands of users may be an exceptionally high pressure environment." -thats why i want to do it right. :-)
    – Jared
    Aug 21, 2012 at 4:01
  • @Jared I am glad that you want to do it right, I am just trying to say in a nice way that learning to do it right and doing it to a deadline are often conflicting goals. I admire the idea, just want to ensure that you aren't put in a position that you aren't happy with. I find that learning how to do something is best done by taking your time, going through things at a slow pace and best done without a waiting audience. Still, I do certainly wish you the best of luck and will happily answer more questions if you ask them.
    – Fluffeh
    Aug 21, 2012 at 4:15
4

Generally speaking tables should represent sets of things. In your example, it's easy to identify the sets you have: users and readouts; there the theoretical best structure would be having those two tables, where the readouts entries have a reference to the id of the user.

MySQL can handle very large amounts of data, so your best bet is to just try the user-readouts structure and see how it performs. Alternatively you may want to look into a document based NoSQL database such as MongoDB or CouchDB, since storing readouts reports as individual documents could be a good choice aswell.

2

If you create a summary table that contains the monthly total per user, surely that would be the primary usage of the system, right?

Every month, you crunch the numbers and store the totals into a second table. You can prune the log table on a rolling 12 month period. i.e., The old data can be stuffed in the corner to keep the indexes smaller, since you'll only need to access it when the city is accused of fraud.

So exactly how you store the daily readouts isn't that big of a concern that you need to be freaking out about it. Giving each user his own table is not the proper solution. If you have tons and tons of data, then you might want to consider sharding via something like MongoDB.

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  • Two implementation of this system are: 1) to inform users if their daily usage exceeds a limit set by their previous usage (leaks) and 2) see if anyone is using water after they have been shut-off (stupid that the company doesn't already have this) - which needs daily data
    – Jared
    Aug 21, 2012 at 4:06
  • @Jared, 1) could be part of a monthly (or whatever the billing period is) sum and 2) could be a real time check. Really neither of those use cases demand that you persist data on a daily basis. e.g., You could simply update a monthly total on a daily basis. You have to draw the line somewhere, after all. (Why not log every hour or minute or second?) But that said, I'd probably log daily and keep a monthly total for faster access and reports.
    – Matthew
    Aug 21, 2012 at 4:17

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