One of the major differences between sysdate()
and now()
recently bit me in the behind. It was the difference in the point-in-time and frequency of their execution. sysdate()
is evaluated every time within the same statement--ie, in every row to which it applies. But now()
will only be evaluated only once, which is at the start of query execution.
This difference isn't noticeable when there are only a few rows. But it's very significant when there are millions of rows. In RHEL7, for example, sysdate()
apparently makes a costly system call, so that when there are millions of rows, using sysdate()
took more than an hour, but using now()
in the exact same statement took only several seconds!
This is on top of precision issues, because sysdate()
will return a different value, for example, between time t and time t+50 millis.
With regard to curdate()
, I was also wondering how it's different from either now()
or sysdate()
. The MySQL Reference says that, with regard to when and how many times it's executed, curdate()
behaves like now()
.
Reference: MySQL 5.7 Reference - Date and Time Functions -- All of the above is described in this page. However, it's scattered on the page, so you'll have to read through the overview section as well as the reference for each function.