I cleaned the question a little bit because it was getting very big and unreadable.
Running on my localhost.
As you can see in the image below, the query takes 755.15 ms
when selecting from the table Job that contains 15000 rows (with the where conditions returning 6650)
The table Company contains 1000 rows. The table geo__name contains 84300 rows approx and is not giving me any problem, so I believe the problem is the database structure or something.
The structure of these 2 tables is the following:
Table Job is:
CREATE TABLE `job` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`created_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`updated_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`company_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`activity_sector_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`status` int(11) NOT NULL,
`active` datetime NOT NULL,
`contract_type_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`salary_type_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`workday_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`geoname_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`title` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`minimum_experience` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`min_salary` decimal(7,2) DEFAULT NULL,
`max_salary` decimal(7,2) DEFAULT NULL,
`zip_code` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`vacancies` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
`show_salary` tinyint(1) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
KEY `created_at` (`created_at`,`active`,`status`) USING BTREE,
CONSTRAINT `FK_FBD8E0F823F5422B` FOREIGN KEY (`geoname_id`) REFERENCES `geo__name` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `FK_FBD8E0F8398DEFD0` FOREIGN KEY (`activity_sector_id`) REFERENCES `activity_sector` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `FK_FBD8E0F85248165F` FOREIGN KEY (`salary_type_id`) REFERENCES `job_salary_type` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `FK_FBD8E0F8979B1AD6` FOREIGN KEY (`company_id`) REFERENCES `company` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `FK_FBD8E0F8AB01D695` FOREIGN KEY (`workday_id`) REFERENCES `workday` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `FK_FBD8E0F8CD1DF15B` FOREIGN KEY (`contract_type_id`) REFERENCES `job_contract_type` (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=15001 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
The table company is:
CREATE TABLE `company` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`name` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`logo` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`created_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`updated_at` datetime NOT NULL,
`website` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci DEFAULT NULL,
`user_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`phone` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`cifnif` varchar(255) COLLATE utf8mb4_unicode_ci NOT NULL,
`type` int(11) NOT NULL,
`subscription_id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
UNIQUE KEY `UNIQ_4FBF094FA76ED395` (`user_id`),
KEY `IDX_4FBF094F9A1887DC` (`subscription_id`),
KEY `name` (`name`(191)),
CONSTRAINT `FK_4FBF094F9A1887DC` FOREIGN KEY (`subscription_id`) REFERENCES `subscription` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `FK_4FBF094FA76ED395` FOREIGN KEY (`user_id`) REFERENCES `user` (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=1001 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_unicode_ci;
The query is the following:
SELECT
j0_.id AS id_0,
j0_.status AS status_1,
j0_.title AS title_2,
j0_.min_salary AS min_salary_3,
j0_.max_salary AS max_salary_4,
c1_.id AS id_5,
c1_.name AS name_6,
c1_.logo AS logo_7,
a2_.id AS id_8,
a2_.name AS name_9,
g3_.id AS id_10,
g3_.name AS name_11,
j4_.id AS id_12,
j4_.name AS name_13,
j5_.id AS id_14,
j5_.name AS name_15,
w6_.id AS id_16,
w6_.name AS name_17
FROM
job j0_
INNER JOIN company c1_ ON j0_.company_id = c1_.id
INNER JOIN activity_sector a2_ ON j0_.activity_sector_id = a2_.id
INNER JOIN geo__name g3_ ON j0_.geoname_id = g3_.id
INNER JOIN job_salary_type j4_ ON j0_.salary_type_id = j4_.id
INNER JOIN job_contract_type j5_ ON j0_.contract_type_id = j5_.id
INNER JOIN workday w6_ ON j0_.workday_id = w6_.id
WHERE
j0_.active >= CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
AND j0_.status = 1
ORDER BY
j0_.created_at DESC
When executing the above query I have these results:
In MYSQL Workbench: 0.578 sec / 0.016 sec
In Symfony profiler: 755.15 ms
The question is: Is the duration of this query correct? if not, how can I improve the speed of the query? it seems too much.
The Symfony debug toolbar if it helps:
As you can see in the below image, I'm only getting the data I really need:
The explain query:
The timeline:
EXPLAIN
change between including the j7_ columns and not?PRIMARY KEY (
id), UNIQUE KEY
UNIQ_642A8732BE04EA9` (job_id
),` -- Why haveid
;job_id
could be the PK. And... Since this is 1:1 withjob
, why have a separate table?