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I have a table with more than 100 millions rows in Innodb.

I have to know if there is more than 5000 rows where the foreign key = 1. I don't need the exact number.

I made some testing :

SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table WHERE fk = 1 => 16 seconds
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table WHERE fk = 1 LIMIT 5000 => 16 seconds
SELECT primary FROM table WHERE fk = 1 => 0.6 seconds

I will have a bigger network and treatment time but it can be an overload of 15.4 seconds !

Do you have a better idea ?

Thanks

Edit: [Added OP's relevant comments]

I tried SELECT SQL_NO_CACHE COUNT(fk) FROM table WHERE fk = 1 but it took 25 seconds

Mysql was tuned for Innodb with Mysql Tuner.

CREATE TABLE table ( pk bigint(20) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
fk tinyint(3) unsigned DEFAULT '0', 
PRIMARY KEY (pk), KEY idx_fk (fk) USING BTREE ) 
ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=100380914 DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1

DB Stuff:

'have_innodb', 'YES' 'ignore_builtin_innodb', 'OFF' 'innodb_adaptive_hash_index', 'ON'    
'innodb_additional_mem_pool_size', '20971520' 'innodb_autoextend_increment', '8' 
'innodb_autoinc_lock_mode', '1' 'innodb_buffer_pool_size', '25769803776' 
'innodb_checksums', 'ON' 'innodb_commit_concurrency', '0',
'innodb_concurrency_tickets', '500' 'innodb_data_file_path',
'ibdata1:10M:autoextend' 'innodb_data_home_dir', '', 'innodb_doublewrite', 'ON'     
'innodb_fast_shutdown', '1' 'innodb_file_io_threads', '4' 
'innodb_file_per_table', 'OFF', 'innodb_flush_log_at_trx_commit', '1' 
'innodb_flush_method', '' 'innodb_force_recovery', '0' 'innodb_lock_wait_timeout', '50' 
'innodb_locks_unsafe_for_binlog', 'OFF' 'innodb_log_buffer_size', '8388608' 
'innodb_log_file_size', '26214400' 'innodb_log_files_in_group', '2' 
'innodb_log_group_home_dir', './' 'innodb_max_dirty_pages_pct', '90'     
'innodb_max_purge_lag', '0' 'innodb_mirrored_log_groups', '1' 'innodb_open_files', 
'300' 'innodb_rollback_on_timeout', 'OFF' 'innodb_stats_on_metadata', 'ON' 
'innodb_support_xa', 'ON' 'innodb_sync_spin_loops', '20' 'innodb_table_locks', 'ON' 
'innodb_thread_concurrency', '8' 'innodb_thread_sleep_delay', '10000'      
'innodb_use_legacy_cardinality_algorithm', 'ON'

Update '15: I used the same method up to now with 600 millions rows and 640 000 new rows per day. It's still working fine.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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You don't seem interested in the actual count so give this a try:

SELECT 1 FROM table WHERE fk = 1 LIMIT 5000, 1

If a row is returned, you have 5000 and more records. I presume the fk column is indexed.


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