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I've been toying around with switching from ms-access files to SQLite files for my simple database needs; for the usual reasons: smaller file size, less overhead, open source, etc.

One thing that is preventing me from making the switch is what seems to be a lack of speed in SQLite. For simple SELECT queries, SQLite seems to perform as well as, or better than MS-Access. The problem occurs with a fairly complex SELECT query with multiple INNER JOIN statements:

SELECT DISTINCT 
       DESCRIPTIONS.[oCode] AS OptionCode, 
       DESCRIPTIONS.[descShort] AS OptionDescription 
FROM DESCRIPTIONS 
INNER JOIN tbl_D_E ON DESCRIPTIONS.[oCode] = tbl_D_E.[D] 
INNER JOIN tbl_D_F ON DESCRIPTIONS.[oCode] = tbl_D_F.[D] 
INNER JOIN tbl_D_H ON DESCRIPTIONS.[oCode] = tbl_D_H.[D] 
INNER JOIN tbl_D_J ON DESCRIPTIONS.[oCode] = tbl_D_J.[D] 
INNER JOIN tbl_D_T ON DESCRIPTIONS.[oCode] = tbl_D_T.[D] 
INNER JOIN tbl_Y_D ON DESCRIPTIONS.[oCode] = tbl_Y_D.[D] 
WHERE ((tbl_D_E.[E] LIKE '%') 
        AND (tbl_D_H.[oType] ='STANDARD') 
        AND (tbl_D_J.[oType] ='STANDARD') 
        AND (tbl_Y_D.[Y] = '41') 
        AND (tbl_Y_D.[oType] ='STANDARD') 
        AND (DESCRIPTIONS.[oMod]='D'))

In MS-Access, this query executes in about 2.5 seconds. In SQLite, it takes a little over 8 minutes. It takes the same amount of time whether I'm running the query from VB code or from the command prompt using sqlite3.exe.

So my questions are the following:

  1. Is SQLite just not optimized to handle multiple INNER JOIN statements?
  2. Have I done something obviously stupid in my query (because I am new to SQLite) that makes it so slow?

And before anyone suggests a completely different technology, no I can not switch. My choices are MS-Access or SQLite. :)

UPDATE: Assigning an INDEX to each of the columns in the SQLite database reduced the query time from over 8 minutes down to about 6 seconds. Thanks to Larry Lustig for explaining why the INDEXing was needed.

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  • @Phill Pafford: I am not using indices on either the MS-Access or the SQLite data. I'm trying to compare access to sqlite so I have left the data structure the same in both.
    – Stewbob
    Oct 13, 2009 at 16:21
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    Not able to post an answer, so trying a comment: MS Access is very aggressive about indexing columns on your behalf, whereas SQLite will require you to explicitly create the indexes you need. So, it's possible that Access has indexed either [Description] or [D] for you but that those indexes are missing in SQLite. I don't have experience with that amount of JOIN activity in SQLite. I used it in one Django project with a relatively small amount of data and did not detect any performance issues. Oct 13, 2009 at 16:23
  • 1
    Use Indexes. Are there Indexes in Access? If not, I still consider it a fair comparison, and still consider it the same data structure in both. Conversely, of what benefit would it be to compare the two products while crippling one? Oct 13, 2009 at 16:24
  • @Larry Lustig: Thanks for the info. I will trying adding indices to the SQLite data and see what kind of improvement I get.
    – Stewbob
    Oct 13, 2009 at 16:28
  • Larry is right that if you implement referential integrity between tables, Jet/ACE creates hidden indexes on the foreign key side of the join. I think he was quite astute in immediately seeing this as the likely cause of the performance difference. Oct 14, 2009 at 2:00

3 Answers 3

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As requested, I'm reposting my previous comment as an actual answer (when I first posted the comment I was not able, for some reason, to post it as an answer):

MS Access is very aggressive about indexing columns on your behalf, whereas SQLite will require you to explicitly create the indexes you need. So, it's possible that Access has indexed either [Description] or [D] for you but that those indexes are missing in SQLite. I don't have experience with that amount of JOIN activity in SQLite. I used it in one Django project with a relatively small amount of data and did not detect any performance issues.

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Do you have issues with referencial integrity? I ask because have the impression you've got unnecessary joins, so I re-wrote your query as:

SELECT DISTINCT 
       t.[oCode] AS OptionCode, 
       t.[descShort] AS OptionDescription 
  FROM DESCRIPTIONS t
  JOIN tbl_D_H h ON h.[D] = t.[oCode]
                AND h.[oType] = 'STANDARD'
  JOIN tbl_D_J j ON j.[D] = t.[oCode]
                AND j.[oType] = 'STANDARD'
  JOIN tbl_Y_D d ON d.[D] = t.[oCode]
                AND d.[Y] = '41'
                AND d.[oType] ='STANDARD'
 WHERE t.[oMod] = 'D'
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  • @rexem: Thanks for your cleaned up version of the query. I went back and looked at my query, and it turns out I left out several of the WHERE statements, so yes, I did need all the JOINs. I still learned a few useful things from your answer. THANKS!
    – Stewbob
    Oct 13, 2009 at 20:59
  • Stewbob - if this is indeed the answer, you should mark it as such so that rexem gets the points. He put in some good work to deliver this solution! Oct 14, 2009 at 16:27
  • @Mark: According to the comments, Larry Lustig provided the answer but hasn't come back to post it as an answer to get credit.
    – OMG Ponies
    Oct 14, 2009 at 16:39
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If DESCRIPTIONS and tbl_D_E have multiple row scans then oCode and D should be indexed. Look at example here to see how to index and tell how many row scans there are (http://www.siteconsortium.com/h/p1.php?id=mysql002).

This might fix it though ..

CREATE INDEX ocode_index ON DESCRIPTIONS (oCode) USING BTREE; CREATE INDEX d_index ON tbl_D_E (D) USING BTREE;

etc ....

Indexing correctly is one piece of the puzzle that can easily double, triple or more the speed of the query.

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