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In MySQL 5.0.75-0ubuntu10.2 I've got a fixed table layout like that:

Table parent with an id Table parent2 with an id Table children1 with a parentId

CREATE TABLE  `Parent` (
  `id` int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment,
  `name` varchar(200) default NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY  (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB
CREATE TABLE  `Parent2` (
  `id` int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment,
  `name` varchar(200) default NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY  (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB
CREATE TABLE  `Children1` (
  `id` int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment,
  `parentId` int(11) NOT NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY  (`id`),
  KEY `parent` (`parentId`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB

A children has a parent in one of the tables Parent or Parent2. When I need to get a children I use a query like that:

select * from Children1 c 
inner join (
select id as parentId from Parent
union 
select id as parentId from Parent2
) p on p.parentId = c.parentId

Explaining this query yields:

+----+--------------+------------+-------+---------------+---------+---------+------+------+-----------------------------------------------------+
| id | select_type  | table      | type  | possible_keys | key     | key_len | ref  | rows | Extra                                               |
+----+--------------+------------+-------+---------------+---------+---------+------+------+-----------------------------------------------------+
|  1 | PRIMARY      | NULL       | NULL  | NULL          | NULL    | NULL    | NULL | NULL | Impossible WHERE noticed after reading const tables | 
|  2 | DERIVED      | Parent     | index | NULL          | PRIMARY | 4       | NULL |    1 | Using index                                         | 
|  3 | UNION        | Parent2    | index | NULL          | PRIMARY | 4       | NULL |    1 | Using index                                         | 
| NULL | UNION RESULT | <union2,3> | ALL   | NULL          | NULL    | NULL    | NULL | NULL |                                                     | 
+----+--------------+------------+-------+---------------+---------+---------+------+------+-----------------------------------------------------+
4 rows in set (0.00 sec)

which is reasonable given the layout.

Now the problem: The previous query is somewhat useless, since it returns no columns from the parent elements. In the moment I add more columns to the inner query no index will be used anymore:

mysql> explain select * from Children1 c  inner join ( select id as parentId,name from Parent union  select id as parentId,name from Parent2 ) p on p.parentId = c.parentId;
+----+--------------+------------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+-----------------------------------------------------+
| id | select_type  | table      | type | possible_keys | key  | key_len | ref  | rows | Extra                                               |
+----+--------------+------------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+-----------------------------------------------------+
|  1 | PRIMARY      | NULL       | NULL | NULL          | NULL | NULL    | NULL | NULL | Impossible WHERE noticed after reading const tables | 
|  2 | DERIVED      | Parent     | ALL  | NULL          | NULL | NULL    | NULL |    1 |                                                     | 
|  3 | UNION        | Parent2    | ALL  | NULL          | NULL | NULL    | NULL |    1 |                                                     | 
| NULL | UNION RESULT | <union2,3> | ALL  | NULL          | NULL | NULL    | NULL | NULL |                                                     | 
+----+--------------+------------+------+---------------+------+---------+------+------+-----------------------------------------------------+
4 rows in set (0.00 sec)

Can anyone explain why the (PRIMARY) indices are not used any more? Is there a workaround for this problem if possible without having to change the DB layout?

Thanks!

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1 Answer

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My first thought is to insert a "significant" number of records in the tables and use ANALYZE TABLE to update the statistics. A table with 4 records will always be faster to read using a full scan rather then going via the index! Further, you can try USE INDEX to force the usage of the index and look how the plan changes.

I will also recomend reading this documentation and see which bits are relevant MYSQL::Optimizing Queries with EXPLAIN

This article can also be useful 7 ways to convince MySQL to use the right index

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