I have one table with 2 unique indexed fields named "username" and "emailid". when I have fire one query on this table with OR condition like
SELECT * FROM tableName where (username = 'aaaa' OR emailid = 'aaaa')
the explain statement shows me for above query is
"Using union(UX_EMailID,UX_UserName); Using where"
under "SIMPLE" as select_type.
Is it ok for performance, or something is wrong. One more way to do this with me. first call with one field and if no record found then try for second field like as follows.
IF EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM tableName where username = 'aaaa' ) THEN
//do code
ELSE
IF EXISTS (SELECT 1 FROM tableName where emailid = 'aaaa' ) THEN
//do code
ELSE
//throw error
END IF;
END IF;
So, Now I have confusion, which is better way for performance.
EDIT :
table: usermst
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
id int //primary key
username varchar(20) //unique index
emailid varchar(50) //unique index
EXPLAIN:
id: 1,
select_type: 'SIMPLE'
table: 'usermst'
type: 'index_merge'
possible_keys: 'ux_username,ux_emailid'
key: 'ux_emailid,ux_username'
key_len: '153,63'
ref: null
rows: 2
Extra: 'Using union(ux_emailid,ux_username); Using where'
SELECT * FROM tableName where username = 'aaaa' UNION SELECT * FROM tableName where emailid = 'aaaa'
but I would only consider this if your orignal query was not unioning the indexes.