Re: SELECT DISTINCT slow, how can I speed up
- From: William Robertson <williamr2019@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 16 Aug 2008 15:32:29 -0700 (PDT)
On Aug 14, 7:18 pm, Barry Bulsara <bbulsar...@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hello. I have a question about how I can structure a SQL query to make
the results come back faster. I have experimented a bit and include
some results here.
We have read-only SELECT access to tables for a payroll and absence
system running Oracle 10.0.1 on (I think) a dedicated Windows 2003
Server in the IT department on the same site. We do not have
privileges to UPDATE, DELETE, or create anymore indexes and if I did,
it would probably invalidate our software support contract.
We have staff using Access 2003 as a front end to the Oracle tables
for the purposes of ad hoc queries. These staff regularly enter
queries across 5-6 tables with various bits added to the SQL to limit
the number of rows returned and match criteria. All the rows starts to
come back within a second of the SQL starting to run.
When the SQL is like this (I have anonymised the table names).
SELECT a1,a2,a3,a5,a10
FROM table1, table2, table3, table4
WHERE table1.empID=table2.empID
AND table2.empID=table3.empID
AND table3.empID=table4.empID
AND table4.absenceT IN (15,19)
AND table4.year=2008;
The rows start to come back immediately. Around 1700-1800 rows
typically come back and there is a lot of network IO. If I type
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM
(
SELECT a1,a2,a3,a5,a10
FROM table1, table2, table3, table4
WHERE table1.empID=table2.empID
AND table2.empID=table3.empID
AND table3.empID=table4.empID
AND table4.absenceT IN (15,19)
AND table4.year=2008
)
it returns in 2.14seconds saying it found 1792 rows.
If I type SELECT DISTINCT a1,a2,a3,a5,a10
only 20-50 rows come back and the query takes 28 seconds and there is
a lot less network IO.
I only want the 20-50 rows but I don't want to wait 28 seconds. As
Oracle seems to find all 1792 rows in 2.14seconds, why does it take 28
seconds only to return the unique ones.
These are ad hoc queries so I am not trying to optimize a single
query. My question is Is there a more quick way of generally returning
a DISTINCT set of rows other than using DISTINCT in the SELECT
statement.
Thank you
Barry
A COUNT query can often use a very different execution plan to the
corresponding SELECT <actual columns>, because without the need to
access the columns it may be able to get the required result entirely
from indexes, avoiding some table accesses.
.
- References:
- SELECT DISTINCT slow, how can I speed up
- From: Barry Bulsara
- SELECT DISTINCT slow, how can I speed up
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