MySQL: The Problem With Synthetic Primary Keys
MySQL manages primary keys as clustered indexes. That means you're looking a performance hit with some synthetic primary keys. Here's when to avoid them.
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Join For FreeOne of the standard practices in database design is to use a “synthetic” primary key — often an auto-increment integer — rather than a “natural” key relevant to the business domain. This is a Good Thing: natural keys are often not unique or ever-present, even when you think they are. Social security numbers are a perfect example: Aside from the fact that you're not legally allowed to use it for non-tax-related identification, not everybody has one, and some people (either maliciously or accidentally) give you the wrong one.
So this post is not against synthetic primary keys per se. Rather, it's about the performance penalty that you'll pay if you create a single-column auto-increment primary key for every table in your database.
As an example, I'm going to use the USERS
and EVENTS
tables from my previous post. The former has 100,000 rows, the latter 10,000,000. As before, only 25% of events have associated users, so it's not a strict parent-child relationship, but we'll get to that.
create table USERS
(
ID integer not null auto_increment,
CREATED_AT timestamp not null default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
VALUE varchar(255),
primary key (ID),
key (CREATED_AT)
)
create table EVENTS
(
ID integer not null auto_increment,
CREATED_AT timestamp not null default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
TYPE smallint not null,
USER_ID integer null,
VALUE varchar(255),
primary key (ID),
key EVENTS_USER_IDX (USER_ID)
)
Both of these tables have synthetic primary keys, an auto-increment ID
column. The EVENTS
table has a foreign key relationship to USERS
via USER_ID
, and a secondary index to (we hope!) improve join times. Here's a typical query, with its execution plan:
select count(*)
from USERS U
join EVENTS E on E.USER_ID = U.ID
where U.CREATED_AT > subdate(CURRENT_TIMESTAMP(), 7)
and E.TYPE = 7;
+----+-------------+-------+------------+-------+--------------------+-----------------+---------+--------------+------+----------+--------------------------+
| id | select_type | table | partitions | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | filtered | Extra |
+----+-------------+-------+------------+-------+--------------------+-----------------+---------+--------------+------+----------+--------------------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | U | NULL | range | PRIMARY,CREATED_AT | CREATED_AT | 4 | NULL | 3891 | 100.00 | Using where; Using index |
| 1 | SIMPLE | E | NULL | ref | EVENTS_USER_IDX | EVENTS_USER_IDX | 5 | example.U.ID | 98 | 10.00 | Using where |
+----+-------------+-------+------------+-------+--------------------+-----------------+---------+--------------+------+----------+--------------------------+
That looks perfectly reasonable: The query selects rows from USERS
using the index on CREATED_AT
, and then joins to EVENTS
using the index on USER_ID
. With my test database it returns slightly under 10,000 rows.
But why does it take 12 seconds the first time I run it, and only 1 second for subsequent runs?
The problem is that MySQL manages primary keys as a clustered index: It orders the physical rows in the table according to the primary key value. What this means for the join between USERS
and EVENTS
is that the events for a given user will be sprinkled all over the disk: Each new row will be assigned a primary key value that's physically located at the end of the current data. As a result, if you select all of the rows for a particular user, you may have to access a large number of disk blocks. And to access a block you have to read it from disk.
That's not so bad if you have enough RAM to cache your entire database — which is why my subsequent queries ran so quickly. But if you don't, or queries against the EVENTS
table are infrequent, you'll be hitting the disk constantly. Worse, you'll be evicting pages from the disk cache, so all your other queries will slow down because they also have to read data from the disk.
So what's the alternative?
create table NEW_EVENTS
(
ID int not null auto_increment,
CREATED_AT timestamp not null default CURRENT_TIMESTAMP on update CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
TYPE smallint not null,
USER_ID int not null,
VALUE varchar(255),
PRIMARY KEY (USER_ID, ID),
UNIQUE KEY NEW_EVENTS_ID_KEY(ID)
);
With this new table, my example query has the same execution plan. But the primary key on the new table organizes its data such that rows for the same user are collocated: assuming that your conditions don't select all users, it should read fewer blocks. On my laptop — after restarting MySQL and flushing the disk cache — it took just under half a second for the first query, and 0.04 seconds for subsequent queries.
So clearly the theory is borne out in practice, but can we gain more insight into what's happening? The answer is yes, provided that you have the performance schema enabled for your database (and you really should, even in production!). You can retrieve information about the number of disk operations and the time they take by querying TABLE_IO_WAITS_SUMMARY_BY_INDEX_USAGE
:
select OBJECT_SCHEMA, OBJECT_NAME, INDEX_NAME,
COUNT_READ, SUM_TIMER_READ,
COUNT_WRITE, SUM_TIMER_WRITE,
COUNT_FETCH, SUM_TIMER_FETCH
from performance_schema.table_io_waits_summary_by_index_usage
where OBJECT_NAME in ('USERS', 'EVENTS');
Like other tables in the performance schema, the counters are not tied to a query; you need to ensure that nothing else is happening and truncate the table between your test queries. Arguably better is to restart your server and flush the disk caches, as this will show you the worst-case timings.
Here are the stats for the first query:
+---------------+-------------+-----------------+------------+----------------+-------------+-----------------+-------------+-----------------+
| OBJECT_SCHEMA | OBJECT_NAME | INDEX_NAME | COUNT_READ | SUM_TIMER_READ | COUNT_WRITE | SUM_TIMER_WRITE | COUNT_FETCH | SUM_TIMER_FETCH |
+---------------+-------------+-----------------+------------+----------------+-------------+-----------------+-------------+-----------------+
| example | EVENTS | PRIMARY | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| example | EVENTS | EVENTS_USER_IDX | 97669 | 12350283888004 | 0 | 0 | 97669 | 12350283888004 |
| example | USERS | PRIMARY | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| example | USERS | CREATED_AT | 3892 | 5101149804 | 0 | 0 | 3892 | 5101149804 |
+---------------+-------------+-----------------+------------+----------------+-------------+-----------------+-------------+-----------------+
And for the second:
+---------------+-------------+-------------------+------------+----------------+-------------+-----------------+-------------+-----------------+
| OBJECT_SCHEMA | OBJECT_NAME | INDEX_NAME | COUNT_READ | SUM_TIMER_READ | COUNT_WRITE | SUM_TIMER_WRITE | COUNT_FETCH | SUM_TIMER_FETCH |
+---------------+-------------+-------------------+------------+----------------+-------------+-----------------+-------------+-----------------+
| example | NEW_EVENTS | PRIMARY | 97669 | 455075854140 | 0 | 0 | 97669 | 455075854140 |
| example | NEW_EVENTS | NEW_EVENTS_ID_KEY | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| example | USERS | PRIMARY | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| example | USERS | CREATED_AT | 3892 | 2637773460 | 0 | 0 | 3892 | 2637773460 |
+---------------+-------------+-------------------+------------+----------------+-------------+-----------------+-------------+-----------------+
The number of reads are identical, but look at the difference in the read timer. This value is measured in trillionths of a second, so after adding a decimal point and dropping digits from the end we see that accesses to the EVENTS
table took 12.350 seconds for the first query and 0.455 seconds for the second, with the same number of reads in each. The difference is that, to find all of the relevant events for a given user the first query had to read (and wait for) far more blocks to come from the disk.
You will also notice that the time taken to access the USERS
table via the CREATED_AT
index has decreased as well. This can't be explained by data clustering — indeed, in creating the test data for this post, I ensured that users would not be clustered by creation date. However, I believe that these numbers show the overall benefit of reducing disk operations: by reading fewer blocks in the NEW_EVENTS
table, there's a higher likelihood that blocks from USERS
will remain in the disk cache.
There are, of course, tradeoffs to reindexing your tables. The most obvious one is that EVENTS.USER_ID
can no longer be nullable, because it's part of the primary key. This will cause some pain when dealing with anonymous users: you must insert an explicit value rather than leave the column NULL (I will note that some authorities, including C. J. Date, will say you shouldn't use nulls anyway, so this isn't necessarily a hardship).
There's also a price to pay with inserts: In order to keep the rows ordered by primary key, MySQL may need to split blocks on insert, in order to make room for the new rows. I don't think this is a major issue: for active users, you'll be inserting new blocks into the table rather than splitting existing blocks, and for inactive users, you won't often pay the price of a split.
And finally, beware that this technique this isn't appropriate everywhere. It works best with large tables, where physical row data has to be read to perform a query (versus a covering index). As with all performance optimizations, there's no substitute for actual measurement.
Published at DZone with permission of Keith Gregory, DZone MVB. See the original article here.
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