Yes, sure.
From: Dave Harvey
Sent: 11 октября 2018 г. 23:59
To: user@ignite.apache.org
Subject: Re: Query 3x slower with index
"Ignite will only use one index per table"
I assume you mean "Ignite will only use one index per table per query"?
On Thu, Oct 11, 2018 at 1:55 P
having worked with databases for 20 years i can see your indexes are not
fully scoped. i see this as your issue
having SUM(product_views_app) > 2 OR SUM(product_clicks_app) > 1
add those columns to the composite index so that it doesn't need to access
the underlying table and can just use the in
y_id), in that order, with no columns in between.
>
> Note that index (customer_id, dt, category_id) can’t be used instead of it.
>
> On the other hand, (customer_id, category_id, dt) can - the last part of
> the index will be left unused.
>
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Stan
>
>
&
can’t be used instead of it.
>
> On the other hand, (customer_id, category_id, dt) can - the last part of
> the index will be left unused.
>
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Stan
>
>
>
> *From: *eugene miretsky
> *Sent: *9 октября 2018 г. 19:40
> *To: *user@ignite.apach
@ignite.apache.org
Subject: Re: Query 3x slower with index
Hi Ilya,
I have tried it, and got the same performance as forcing using category index
in my initial benchmark - query is 3x slowers and uses only one thread.
From my experiments so far it seems like Ignite can either (a) use affinity key
and run
Hi Ilya,
I have tried it, and got the same performance as forcing using category
index in my initial benchmark - query is 3x slowers and uses only one
thread.
>From my experiments so far it seems like Ignite can either (a) use
affinity key and run queries in parallel, (b) use index but run the qu
Hello!
I guess that using AFFINITY_KEY as index have something to do with the fact
that GROUP BY really wants to work per-partition.
I have the following query for you:
1: jdbc:ignite:thin://localhost> explain Select count(*) FROM( Select
customer_id from (Select customer_id, product_views_app,
An easy way to reproduce would be to
1. Create table
CREATE TABLE GA_DATA (
customer_id bigint,
dt timestamp,
category_id int,
product_views_app int,
product_clict_app int,
product_clict_web int,
product_clict_web int,
PRIMARY KEY (customer_id, dt, category_id)
) W
Hello!
Can you share a reproducer project which loads (or generates) data for
caches and then queries them? I could try and debug it if I had the
reproducer.
Regards.
--
Ilya Kasnacheev
чт, 20 сент. 2018 г. в 21:05, eugene miretsky :
> Thanks Ilya,
>
> Tried it, no luck. It performs the same
Thanks Ilya,
Tried it, no luck. It performs the same as when using category_id index
alone (slow).
Any combindation I try either uses AFFINITY_KEY or category index. When
it uses category index it runs slowers.
Also, when AFFINITY_KEY key is used, the jobs runs on 32 threads (my query
paralleli
Hello!
> 2) ga_customer_and_category_id: on customer_id and category_id
Have you tried to do an index on category_id first, customer_id second?
Note that Ignite will use only one index when joining two tables and that
in your case it should start with category_id.
You can also try adding affinit
Hi Ilya,
I created 4 indexs on the table:
1) ga_pKey: on customer_id, dt, category_id (that's our primary key columns)
2) ga_customer_and_category_id: on customer_id and category_id
2) ga_customer_id: on customer_id
4) ga_category_id: on category_id
For the first query (category in ()), the exec
Hello!
I can see you try to use _key_PK as index. If your primary key is
composite, it won't work properly for you. I recommend creating an explicit
(category_id, customer_id) index.
Regards,
--
Ilya Kasnacheev
вт, 18 сент. 2018 г. в 17:47, eugene miretsky :
> Hi Ilya,
>
> The different query
Hi Ilya,
The different query result was my mistake - one of the categoy_ids was
duplicate, so in the query that used join, it counted rows for that
category twice. My apologies.
However, we are still having an issue with query time, and the index not
being applied to category_id. Would appreciate
Hello!
Why don't you diff the results of those two queries, tell us what the
difference is?
Regards,
--
Ilya Kasnacheev
пн, 17 сент. 2018 г. в 16:08, eugene miretsky :
> Hello,
>
> Just wanted to see if anybody had time to look into this.
>
> Cheers,
> Eugene
>
> On Wed, Sep 12, 2018 at 6:29
Hello,
Just wanted to see if anybody had time to look into this.
Cheers,
Eugene
On Wed, Sep 12, 2018 at 6:29 PM eugene miretsky
wrote:
> Thanks!
>
> Tried joining with an inlined table instead of IN as per the second
> suggestion, and it didn't quite work.
>
> Query1:
>
>- Select COUNT(*)
Thanks!
Tried joining with an inlined table instead of IN as per the second
suggestion, and it didn't quite work.
Query1:
- Select COUNT(*) FROM( Select customer_id from GATABLE3 use Index( )
where category_id in (9005, 175930, 175930, 175940,175945,101450, 6453)
group by customer_id h
Hello!
I don't think that we're able to use index with IN () clauses. Please
convert it into OR clauses.
Please see
https://apacheignite-sql.readme.io/docs/performance-and-debugging#section-sql-performance-and-usability-considerations
Regards,
--
Ilya Kasnacheev
пн, 3 сент. 2018 г. в 12:46, A
Hi
Actually, first query uses index on affinity key which looks more efficient
than index on category_id column.
The first query can process groups one by one and stream partial results
from map phase to reduce phase as it use sorted index lookup,
while second query should process full dataset on
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