Please, stop using ORDER BY RAND(). Just stop. This operation has complexity of n*log2(n), which means that the time spent on query would grow "
entries | time units
-------------------------
10 | 1 /* if this takes 0.001s */
1'000 | 300
1'000'000 | 600'000 /* then this will need 10 minutes */
If you want to generate random results, create a stored procedure, which generates them. Something like this (code taken from this article, which you should read):
DELIMITER $$
DROP PROCEDURE IF EXISTS get_rands$$
CREATE PROCEDURE get_rands(IN cnt INT)
BEGIN
DROP TEMPORARY TABLE IF EXISTS rands;
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE rands ( tagname VARCHAR(63) );
loop_me: LOOP
IF cnt < 1 THEN
LEAVE loop_me;
END IF;
SET cnt = cnt - 1;
INSERT INTO rands
SELECT tags.tagname
FROM tags
JOIN (SELECT (RAND()*(SELECT MAX(tags.id) FROM tags)) AS id) AS choices
WHERE tags.id >= choices.id
LIMIT 1;
END LOOP loop_me;
END$$
DELIMITER ;
And to use it, you would write:
CALL get_rands(10);
SELECT * FROM rands;
As for executing it all on PHP side, you should stop using the ancient mysql_* API. It is more the 10 years old and no longer maintained. Community has even begun process for deprecating them. There should not be any more new code written with mysql_* in 2012. Instead you should use PDO or MySQLi. As for how to write it (with PDO):
// creates DB connection
$connection = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=mydb;charset=UTF-8',
'username', 'password');
$connection->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_EMULATE_PREPARES, false);
// executes the procedure and creates select statement
$connection->exec('CALL get_rands(10)');
$statement = $connection->query('SELECT * FROM rands');
// performs query and collects all the info
if ($statement->execute())
{
$tags = $statement->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH::ASSOC);
}
Update
If the requirement is to get not only 10 random results, but actually 10 UNIQUE random results, then it would require two changes to the PROCEDURE:
The temporary table should enforce the uniqueness of entries:
CREATE TEMPORARY TABLE rands ( tagname VARCHAR(63) UNIQUE);
It also might make sense to collect just IDs and not the values. Esspecially if what you are looking for are 10 unique articles, not just tags.
When inserting a duplicate value is found, the cnt counter should not decrease. This can be ensured by adding a HANDLER (before definition of LOOP), which would "catch" the raised warning, and adjust the counter:
DECLARE CONTINUE HANDLER FOR SQLSTATE '23000' SET cnt = cnt + 1;