My understanding of the WITH statement (CTE) is that it executes once per query. With a query like this:
WITH Query1 AS ( ... )
SELECT *
FROM
SomeTable t1
LEFT JOIN Query1 t2 ON ...
If this results in 100 rows, I expect that Query1
was executed only once - not 100 times. If that assumption is correct, the time taken to run the entire query is roughly equal to the time taken to: run Query1
+ select from SomeTable
+ join SomeTable
to Query1
.
I am in a situation where:
Query1
when run alone takes ~5 seconds (400k rows).- The remainder of the query, after removing the
WITH
statement and theLEFT JOIN
takes ~15 seconds (400k rows).
So, when running the entire query with the WITH
statement and the LEFT JOIN
in place, I would have expected the query to complete in a timely manner, instead I've let it run for over an hour and once stopped it only got as far as 11k rows.
I am clearly wrong, but why?