Spec-Zone .ru
спецификации, руководства, описания, API
|
Some general tips for speeding up queries on MyISAM
tables:
To help MySQL better optimize queries, use ANALYZE TABLE
or run myisamchk --analyze on a table after it has been loaded
with data. This updates a value for each index part that indicates the average number of rows that have
the same value. (For unique indexes, this is always 1.) MySQL uses this to decide which index to choose
when you join two tables based on a nonconstant expression. You can check the result from the table
analysis by using SHOW INDEX FROM
and examining the tbl_name
Cardinality
value. myisamchk
--description --verbose shows index distribution information.
To sort an index and data according to an index, use myisamchk --sort-index --sort-records=1 (assuming that you want to sort on index 1). This is a good way to make queries faster if you have a unique index from which you want to read all rows in order according to the index. The first time you sort a large table this way, it may take a long time.
Try to avoid complex SELECT
queries on MyISAM
tables that are
updated frequently, to avoid problems with table locking that occur due to contention between readers
and writers.
MyISAM
supports concurrent inserts: If a table has no
free blocks in the middle of the data file, you can INSERT
new rows into it at the same time that other threads are
reading from the table. If it is important to be able to do this, consider using the table in ways that
avoid deleting rows. Another possibility is to run OPTIMIZE TABLE
to defragment the table after you have deleted a lot
of rows from it. This behavior is altered by setting the concurrent_insert
variable. You can force new rows to be appended
(and therefore permit concurrent inserts), even in tables that have deleted rows. See Section
8.10.3, "Concurrent Inserts".
For MyISAM
tables that change frequently, try to avoid
all variable-length columns (VARCHAR
, BLOB
, and TEXT
). The table uses dynamic row format if it includes even a single
variable-length column. See Chapter 14, Storage
Engines.
It is normally not useful to split a table into different tables just because the
rows become large. In accessing a row, the biggest performance hit is the disk seek needed to find the
first byte of the row. After finding the data, most modern disks can read the entire row fast enough for
most applications. The only cases where splitting up a table makes an appreciable difference is if it is
a MyISAM
table using dynamic row format that you can change to a fixed row
size, or if you very often need to scan the table but do not need most of the columns. See Chapter 14, Storage
Engines.
Use ALTER TABLE ... ORDER BY
if you usually retrieve rows in expr1
,
expr2
, ...
order. By using this option after extensive
changes to the table, you may be able to get higher performance. expr1
, expr2
, ...
If you often need to calculate results such as counts based on information from a lot of rows, it may be preferable to introduce a new table and update the counter in real time. An update of the following form is very fast:
UPDATEtbl_name
SETcount_col
=count_col
+1 WHEREkey_col
=constant
;
This is very important when you use MySQL storage engines such as MyISAM
that has only table-level locking (multiple readers with single
writers). This also gives better performance with most database systems, because the row locking
manager in this case has less to do.
Use INSERT
DELAYED
for MyISAM
(or other supported nontransactional tables)
when you do not need to know when your data is written. This reduces the overall insertion impact
because many rows can be written with a single disk write.
As of MySQL 5.6.6, INSERT
DELAYED
is deprecated, and will be removed in a future release. Use INSERT
(without DELAYED
) instead.
Use OPTIMIZE
TABLE
periodically to avoid fragmentation with dynamic-format MyISAM
tables. See Section
14.3.3, "MyISAM
Table Storage Formats".
Declaring a MyISAM
table with the DELAY_KEY_WRITE=1
table option makes index updates faster because they are
not flushed to disk until the table is closed. The downside is that if something kills the server while
such a table is open, you must ensure that the table is okay by running the server with the --myisam-recover-options
option, or by running myisamchk before restarting the server. (However,
even in this case, you should not lose anything by using DELAY_KEY_WRITE
,
because the key information can always be generated from the data rows.)
Strings are automatically prefix- and end-space compressed in MyISAM
indexes. See Section 13.1.13,
"CREATE INDEX
Syntax".
You can increase performance by caching queries or answers in your application and then executing many inserts or updates together. Locking the table during this operation ensures that the index cache is only flushed once after all updates. You can also take advantage of MySQL's query cache to achieve similar results; see Section 8.9.3, "The MySQL Query Cache".