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The most efficient way to process GROUP BY
is when an index is used to directly
retrieve the grouping columns. With this access method, MySQL uses the property of some index types that the
keys are ordered (for example, BTREE
). This property enables use of lookup groups
in an index without having to consider all keys in the index that satisfy all WHERE
conditions. This access method considers only a fraction of the keys in an index, so it is called a loose index scan. When there is no WHERE
clause, a
loose index scan reads as many keys as the number of groups, which may be a much smaller number than that of all
keys. If the WHERE
clause contains range predicates (see the discussion of the range
join type in
Section
8.8.1, "Optimizing Queries with EXPLAIN
"), a loose index scan looks up the
first key of each group that satisfies the range conditions, and again reads the least possible number of keys.
This is possible under the following conditions:
The query is over a single table.
The GROUP BY
names only columns that form a leftmost
prefix of the index and no other columns. (If, instead of GROUP BY
, the
query has a DISTINCT
clause, all distinct attributes refer to columns that
form a leftmost prefix of the index.) For example, if a table t1
has an
index on (c1,c2,c3)
, loose index scan is applicable if the query has GROUP BY c1, c2,
. It is not applicable if the query has GROUP BY c2, c3
(the columns are not a leftmost prefix) or GROUP BY c1, c2, c4
(c4
is not in the
index).
The only aggregate functions used in the select list (if any) are MIN()
and MAX()
, and all of them refer to the same column. The column must be in
the index and must follow the columns in the GROUP BY
.
Any other parts of the index than those from the GROUP
BY
referenced in the query must be constants (that is, they must be referenced in equalities with
constants), except for the argument of MIN()
or MAX()
functions.
For columns in the index, full column values must be indexed, not just a prefix.
For example, with c1 VARCHAR(20), INDEX (c1(10))
, the index cannot be used
for loose index scan.
If loose index scan is applicable to a query, the EXPLAIN
output shows Using index for group-by
in the Extra
column.
Assume that there is an index idx(c1,c2,c3)
on table t1(c1,c2,c3,c4)
.
The loose index scan access method can be used for the following queries:
SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 GROUP BY c1, c2;SELECT DISTINCT c1, c2 FROM t1;SELECT c1, MIN(c2) FROM t1 GROUP BY c1;SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 <const
GROUP BY c1, c2;SELECT MAX(c3), MIN(c3), c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c2 >const
GROUP BY c1, c2;SELECT c2 FROM t1 WHERE c1 <const
GROUP BY c1, c2;SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 WHERE c3 =const
GROUP BY c1, c2;
The following queries cannot be executed with this quick select method, for the reasons given:
There are aggregate functions other than MIN()
or MAX()
:
SELECT c1, SUM(c2) FROM t1 GROUP BY c1;
The columns in the GROUP BY
clause do not form a
leftmost prefix of the index:
SELECT c1, c2 FROM t1 GROUP BY c2, c3;
The query refers to a part of a key that comes after the GROUP
BY
part, and for which there is no equality with a constant:
SELECT c1, c3 FROM t1 GROUP BY c1, c2;
Were the query to include WHERE c3 =
, loose index scan could be used.const
The loose index scan access method can be applied to other forms of aggregate function references in the select
list, in addition to the MIN()
and MAX()
references already supported:
AVG(DISTINCT)
,
SUM(DISTINCT)
, and
COUNT(DISTINCT)
are supported. AVG(DISTINCT)
and SUM(DISTINCT)
take a single argument. COUNT(DISTINCT)
can have more than one column argument.
There must be no GROUP BY
or DISTINCT
clause in the query.
The loose scan limitations described earlier still apply.
Assume that there is an index idx(c1,c2,c3)
on table t1(c1,c2,c3,c4)
.
The loose index scan access method can be used for the following queries:
SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT c1), SUM(DISTINCT c1) FROM t1;SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT c1, c2), COUNT(DISTINCT c2, c1) FROM t1;
Loose index scan is not applicable for the following queries:
SELECT DISTINCT COUNT(DISTINCT c1) FROM t1;SELECT COUNT(DISTINCT c1) FROM t1 GROUP BY c1;