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Ok, strange one here

I have a database for customer data. My customers are businesses with their own customers.

I have 3000 tables (one for each business) with several thousand email addresses in each. Each table is identical, save the name.

I need to find a way to find where emails cross over between businesses (ie appear in multiple tables) and the name of the table that they sit in.

I have tried collating all entries and table names into one table and using a "group by", but the volume of data is too high to run this without our server keeling over...

Does anyone have a suggestion on how to accomplish this without running 3000 sets of joins?

Also, I cannot change the data structure AT ALL.

Thanks

EDIT: In response to those "helpful" restructure comments, not my database, not my system, I only started a couple of months ago to analyse the data

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    Does anyone have a suggestion YES! Stop making tables for businesses. Use a single table!
    – juergen d
    Jul 25, 2014 at 16:11
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    Why would you want to join those tables? It sounds as if you actually want a UNION or even UNION ALL
    – user330315
    Jul 25, 2014 at 16:13
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    Find the person who designed this monstrosity and punch them in the head. Second tell management this structure has to be changed as it is completely asinine. Third if management refuses then find a new job as this one cannot possibly be paying you enough to put up with this level of incompetence.
    – Zane
    Jul 25, 2014 at 16:24
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    Each table is identical, save the name. Then merge the tables and add a name field (or a foreign key). Problem solved. Jul 25, 2014 at 16:32
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    it's idiotic designs like this that feed the ridiculous notion of "JOINS BAD!!! NOSQL GOOOOD!!!" when the RDBMS is a tool in the hands of developers without a clue, then i guess it stands no chance.
    – swasheck
    Jul 25, 2014 at 16:33

2 Answers 2

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Multiple tables of identical structure almost never makes sense, all it would take is a business field to fix this structure. If at all possible you should fix the structure. If it has been foisted upon you and you cannot change it, you should still be able to work with it.

Select the distinct emails and the table name from each table either UNION ALL or pull them into a new table, then use GROUP BY and HAVING to find emails with multiple tables.

SELECT email
FROM Combined_Table
GROUP BY email
HAVING COUNT(sourc_table) > 1
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  • Insert all the data into one table and use the query above.
    – mungea05
    Jul 25, 2014 at 16:22
  • Thanks, this is what I initially went with. Sadly, the server was unable to cope with the massive dataset
    – JohnHC
    Jul 25, 2014 at 16:24
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    @JohnHC Did you try to UNION them all at once? If you go table by table and insert the distinct emails into a new table this shouldn't be that taxing.
    – Hart CO
    Jul 25, 2014 at 16:32
  • @JohnHC . . . If the one table solution didn't work at first, you took the wrong approach to fixing it. The first two things that come to mind are indexing the table and using multiple partitions for storage. Breaking up the table would be a last resort and typically only done for security reasons. Jul 25, 2014 at 18:43
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So, you say you can't change the data structure, but you might be able to provide a compatible upgrade.

  1. Provide a new mega table:

     CREATE TABLE business_email (
         id_business INT(10) NOT NULL,
         email VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL UNIQUE,
         PRIMARY KEY id_business, email
     ) ENGINE = MYISAM;
    

Myisam engine so you don't have to worry about transactions.

  1. Add a trigger to every single business table to duplicate the email into the new one:

    DELIMITER \\
    
    CREATE TRIGGER TRG_COPY_EMAIL_BUSINESS1 AFTER INSERT OR UPDATE ON business1 FOR EACH ROW 
    BEGIN
        INSERT INTO `business_email` (`id_business`, `email`) VALUES (NEW.`id_business`, NEW.`email`) ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE `id_business`=NEW.`id_business`;
    END;
    \\
    
    DELIMITER ;
    

Your problem is to add it dynamically whenever a new table is created. It shouldn't be a problem since apparently there's already dynamic DDL in your application code.

  1. Copy all existing data to the new table:

    INSERT INTO `business_email` (`id_business`, `email`) 
    SELECT email FROM business1
    UNION
    SELECT email FROM business2
    ...
    ;
    
    COMMIT;
    
  2. proceed with your query on the new business_email table, that should be greatly simplified:

    SELECT `id_business` FROM `business_email` 
    WHERE
    GROUP BY `email`
    HAVING COUNT(`email`) > 2;
    

This query should be easy to cope with. If not, please detail the issue as I don't think properly indexed tables should be a problem even for millions of rows (Which I don't believe is the case since we talk about emails)

The advantage of this solution is that you stay up to date all the time, while you don't change the way your application works. You just add another layer to provide additional business value.

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