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I have a really generic database question. I have created a table in my database that tracks clicks throughout my website. My table structure is as follows:

  • (PK) - ID,
  • (FK) - PageID,
  • (FK) - ContactID,
  • Date

The problem I am having is that with a large user set, and large volumes of click through data the number of rows in this table are in the 20-30 million range. Is there a different way I could organize this data to make reporting by date easier?

SELECT P.TITLE, COUNT(DISTINCT(C.ID)) 
FROM PAGES P 
INNER JOIN CLICKS C ON C.PAGEID = P.PAGEID 
WHERE C.DATE >= 5/1/2013 AND C.DATE < 6/1/2013 AND C.PAGEID = XYZ
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  • 2
    Why don't you keep this schema, and run a aggregate query once a day that puts the aggregate results into a separate table? The smaller aggregate table should be faster to query.
    – Suman
    Jun 21, 2013 at 19:01
  • Do you have an index on Date? Jun 21, 2013 at 19:01
  • Have a cron job periodically archive (and maybe aggregate?) data.
    – Kevin
    Jun 21, 2013 at 19:04
  • @GilbertLeBlanc: Yes, the date column is indexed. Jun 21, 2013 at 19:07
  • 3
    30 million rows isn't very much for any modern DBMS. Based on your table structure I'd estimate that's about 1-2GB, which is a small database by anyone's standards. If you are seriously having problems then either your software, the techniques you are using or your indexing is letting you down. It might help if you told us what DBMS and/or reporting software you are using.
    – nvogel
    Jun 21, 2013 at 19:51

2 Answers 2

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It's called dimensional design.

You can use a tool like Pentaho Aggregation Designer to find appropriate aggregations (such as clicks by customer by month).

Then use an OLAP tool like Mondrian + Saiku, that can dynamically rewrite your queries to use the aggregates when it is advantageous.

You should use a date dimension table with an integer smart-key† (like 20130621). This makes it easy to partition your visit facts by date.

Pentaho Data Integration can make it easy to partition your tables.

† this is the only time you should use a smart key in dimensional design.

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Oracle Partitions handle this requirement beautifully.

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