
MySQL is a widely used and fast SQL database server. It is a client/server implementation that consists of a server daemon (mysqld) and many different client programs/libraries.
You can check the same tips from here.Here is very useful tips for all mysql DBA’s,Developers these tips are noted from MySQL Camp 2006 suggested by mysql community experts.
1. Kaj (Most Excellent Obvious Facilitator) Index stuff.
2. Ronald Don’t Index Everything
3. Use benchmarking
4. Minimize traffic by fetching only what you need.
1. Paging/chunked data retrieval to limit
2. Don’t use SELECT *
3. Be wary of lots of small quick queries if a longer query can be more
efficient
5. Use EXPLAIN to profile the query execution plan
6. Use Slow Query Log (always have it on!)
7. Don’t use DISTINCT when you have or could use GROUP BY
8. Use proper data partitions
1. For Cluster. Start thinking about Cluster *before* you need them
9. Insert performance
1. Batch INSERT and REPLACE
2. Use LOAD DATA instead of INSERT
10. LIMIT m,n may not be as fast as it sounds
11. Don’t use ORDER BY RAND() if you have > ~2K records
12. Use SQL_NO_CACHE when you are SELECTing frequently updated data or
large sets of data
13. avoid wildcards at the start of LIKE queries
14. avoid correlated subqueries and in select and where clause (try to
avoid in)
15. config params –
16. no calculated comparisons — isolate indexed columns
17. innodb_flush_commit=0 can help slave lag
18. ORDER BY and LIMIT work best with equalities and covered indexes
19. isolate workloads don’t let administrative work interfere with
customer performance. (ie backups)
20. use optimistic locking, not pessimistic locking. try to use shared
lock, not exclusive lock. share mode vs. FOR UPDATE
21. use row-level instead of table-level locking for OLTP workloads
22. Know your storage engines and what performs best for your needs, know
that different ones exist.
1. use MERGE tables ARCHIVE tables for logs
23. Optimize for data types, use consistent data types. Use PROCEDURE
ANALYSE() to help determine if you need less
24. separate text/blobs from metadata, don’t put text/blobs in
results if you don’t need them
25. if you can, compress text/blobs
26. compress static data
27. don’t back up static data as often
28. derived tables (subqueries in the FROM clause) can be useful for
retrieving BLOBs w/out sorting them. (self-join can speed up a query if 1st
part finds the IDs and use it to fetch the rest)
29. enable and increase the query and buffer caches if appropriate
30. ALTER TABLE…ORDER BY can take chronological data and re-order
it by a different field
31. InnoDB ALWAYS keeps the primary key as part of each index, so do not
make the primary key very large, be careful of redundant columns in an
index, and this can make the query faster
32. Do not duplicate indexes
33. Utilize different storage engines on master/slave ie, if you need
fulltext indexing on a table.
34. BLACKHOLE engine and replication is much faster than FEDERATED tables
for things like logs.
35. Design sane query schemas. don’t be afraid of table joins, often
they are faster than denormalization
36. Don’t use boolean flags
37. Use a clever key and ORDER BY instead of MAX
38. Keep the database host as clean as possible. Do you really need a
windowing system on that server?
39. Utilize the strengths of the OS
40. Hire a MySQL ™ Certified DBA
41. Know that there are many consulting companies out there that can help,
as well as MySQL’s Professional Services.
42. Config variables & tips:
1. use one of the supplied config files
2. key_buffer, unix cache (leave some RAM free), per-connection variables,
innodb memory variables
3. be aware of global vs. per-connection variables
4. check SHOW STATUS and SHOW VARIABLES (GLOBAL|SESSION in 5.0 and up)
5. be aware of swapping esp. with Linux, “swappiness” (bypass
OS filecache for innodb data files, innodb_flush_method=O_DIRECT if
possible (this is also OS specific))
6. defragment tables, rebuild indexes, do table maintenance
7. If you use innodb_flush_txn_commit=1, use a battery-backed hardware
cache write controller
8. more RAM is good so faster disk speed
9. use 64-bit architectures
43. Know when to split a complex query and join smaller ones
44. Debugging sucks, testing rocks!
45. Delete small amounts at a time if you can
46. Archive old data — don’t be a pack-rat! 2 common engines
for this are ARCHIVE tables and MERGE tables
47. use INET_ATON and INET_NTOA for IP addresses, not char or varchar
48. make it a habit to REVERSE() email addresses, so you can easily search
domains
49. –skip-name-resolve
50. increase myisam_sort_buffer_size to optimize large inserts (this is a
per-connection variable)
51. look up memory tuning parameter for on-insert caching
52. increase temp table size in a data warehousing environment (default is
32Mb) so it doesn’t write to disk (also constrained by
max_heap_table_size, default 16Mb)
53. Normalize first, and denormalize where appropriate.
54. Databases are not spreadsheets, even though Access really really looks
like one. Then again, Access isn’t a real database
55. In 5.1 BOOL/BIT NOT NULL type is 1 bit, in previous versions
it’s 1 byte.
56. A NULL data type can take more room to store than NOT NULL
57. Choose appropriate character sets & collations — UTF16 will
store each character in 2 bytes, whether it needs it or not, latin1 is
faster than UTF8.
58. make similar queries consistent so cache is used
59. Have good SQL query standards
60. Don’t use deprecated features
61. Use Triggers wisely
62. Run in SQL_MODE=STRICT to help identify warnings
63. Turning OR on multiple index fields (<5.0) into UNION may speed
things up (with LIMIT), after 5.0 the index_merge should pick stuff up.
64. /tmp dir on battery-backed write cache
65. consider battery-backed RAM for innodb logfiles
66. use min_rows and max_rows to specify approximate data size so space
can be pre-allocated and reference points can be calculated.
67. as your data grows, indexing may change (cardinality and selectivity
change). Structuring may want to change. Make your schema as modular as
your code. Make your code able to scale. Plan and embrace change, and get
developers to do the same.
68. pare down cron scripts
69. create a test environment
70. try out a few schemas and storage engines in your test environment
before picking one.
71. Use HASH indexing for indexing across columns with similar data
prefixes
72. Use myisam_pack_keys for int data
73. Don’t use COUNT * on Innodb tables for every search, do it a few
times and/or summary tables, or if you need it for the total # of rows, use
SQL_CALC_FOUND_ROWS and SELECT FOUND_ROWS()
74. use –safe-updates for client
75. Redundant data is redundant
76. Use INSERT … ON DUPLICATE KEY update (INSERT IGNORE) to avoid
having to SELECT
77. use groupwise maximum instead of subqueries
78. be able to change your schema without ruining functionality of your
code
79. source control schema and config files
80. for LVM innodb backups, restore to a different instance of MySQL so
Innodb can roll forward
81. use multi_query if appropriate to reduce round-trips
82. partition appropriately
83. partition your database when you have real data
84. segregate tables/databases that benefit from different configuration
variables
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This page was last modified on 05 Sep 2011 at 16:48:26. |
Pravin Mishra Programmer |
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