Hi,

I tried the profiling but now the query performance seems to have degraded even 
further, the query hadn't completed after 24 hours at which point I aborted it.

I guess with could look at the Shard-Query stuff. However, given that the 
performance is okay with MyISAM, I'd like to understand what the problem with 
InnoDB is.

Is there are any way to "trace" what the query execution is doing in the InnoDB 
engine?

/Conor
________________________________
From: Justin Swanhart <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday 11 December 2018 12:01
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Maria-discuss] Large query performance degrade after converting 
table from MyISAM to InnoDB

You could use Shard-Query (https://mariadb.com/kb/en/library/shard-query/) to 
process the query in parallel over the partitions.  This will improve the 
performance of OLAP type queries.

On Dec 11, 2018, at 5:27 AM, 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:


Can you put this is a proc and cycle through the list of partitions? I recall 
doing this a number of years ago and found this to be much faster than a single 
query.



Perhaps profiling the query can throw up some specifics…



https://mariadb.com/kb/en/library/information-schema-profiling-table/





From: Maria-discuss 
[mailto:maria-discuss-bounces+rhys.campbell=swisscom....@lists.launchpad.net] 
On Behalf Of Conor Murphy
Sent: 11 December 2018 01:27
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Maria-discuss] Large query performance degrade after converting 
table from MyISAM to InnoDB



Hi,



The explain for the MyISAM table is the same as what's given for the InnoDB 
version



+------+-------------+------------+-------+---------------+--------+---------+------+-----------+-------+

| id   | select_type | table      | type  | possible_keys | key    | key_len | 
ref  | rows      | Extra |

+------+-------------+------------+-------+---------------+--------+---------+------+-----------+-------+

|    1 | SIMPLE      | proc_stats | index | NULL          | pidIdx | 2       | 
NULL | 956763463 |       |

+------+-------------+------------+-------+---------------+--------+---------+------+-----------+-------+



I've only done a very basic tuning for InnoDB, i.e. give it a 24GB cache



innodb-file-per-table=1

innodb-buffer-pool-size=24G

innodb_buffer_pool_instances=12



The table holds time series data and the majority of queries on the table use 
the time column which allows the partition pruning to operate.However, this 
particular query is related to a nightly maintenance activity and ends up 
performing a full scan of the table. But this is the same for MyISAM which 
takes ~ 6 minutes to perform the query.



So cause of the ~ 14 hours must be something specific to InnoDB but I've no 
idea how to drill down to see what the issue with InnoDB is.



Thanks,

Conor



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