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ADD COLUMNADD INDEXADMINADMIN CANCEL DDLADMIN CHECKSUM TABLEADMIN CHECK [TABLE|INDEX]ADMIN SHOW DDL [JOBS|QUERIES]ALTER DATABASEALTER INDEXALTER TABLEALTER TABLE COMPACTALTER USERANALYZE TABLEBATCHBEGINCHANGE COLUMNCOMMITCHANGE DRAINERCHANGE PUMPCREATE [GLOBAL|SESSION] BINDINGCREATE DATABASECREATE INDEXCREATE ROLECREATE SEQUENCECREATE TABLE LIKECREATE TABLECREATE USERCREATE VIEWDEALLOCATEDELETEDESCDESCRIBEDODROP [GLOBAL|SESSION] BINDINGDROP COLUMNDROP DATABASEDROP INDEXDROP ROLEDROP SEQUENCEDROP STATSDROP TABLEDROP USERDROP VIEWEXECUTEEXPLAIN ANALYZEEXPLAINFLASHBACK TABLEFLUSH PRIVILEGESFLUSH STATUSFLUSH TABLESGRANT <privileges>GRANT <role>INSERTKILL [TIDB]MODIFY COLUMNPREPARERECOVER TABLERENAME INDEXRENAME TABLEREPLACEREVOKE <privileges>REVOKE <role>ROLLBACKSELECTSET DEFAULT ROLESET [NAMES|CHARACTER SET]SET PASSWORDSET ROLESET TRANSACTIONSET [GLOBAL|SESSION] <variable>SHOW ANALYZE STATUSSHOW [GLOBAL|SESSION] BINDINGSSHOW BUILTINSSHOW CHARACTER SETSHOW COLLATIONSHOW [FULL] COLUMNS FROMSHOW CREATE SEQUENCESHOW CREATE TABLESHOW CREATE USERSHOW DATABASESSHOW DRAINER STATUSSHOW ENGINESSHOW ERRORSSHOW [FULL] FIELDS FROMSHOW GRANTSSHOW INDEX [FROM|IN]SHOW INDEXES [FROM|IN]SHOW KEYS [FROM|IN]SHOW MASTER STATUSSHOW PLUGINSSHOW PRIVILEGESSHOW [FULL] PROCESSSLISTSHOW PROFILESSHOW PUMP STATUSSHOW SCHEMASSHOW STATS_HEALTHYSHOW STATS_HISTOGRAMSSHOW STATS_METASHOW STATUSSHOW TABLE NEXT_ROW_IDSHOW TABLE REGIONSSHOW TABLE STATUSSHOW [FULL] TABLESSHOW [GLOBAL|SESSION] VARIABLESSHOW WARNINGSSHUTDOWNSPLIT REGIONSTART TRANSACTIONTABLETRACETRUNCATEUPDATEUSEWITH
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Eliminate Max/Min
When a SQL statement contains max/min functions, the query optimizer tries to convert the max/min aggregate functions to the TopN operator by applying the max/min optimization rule. In this way, TiDB can perform the query more efficiently through indexes.
This optimization rule is divided into the following two types according to the number of max/min functions in the select statement:
One max/min function
When a SQL statement meets the following conditions, this rule is applied:
- The statement contains only one aggregate function, which is
maxormin. - The aggregate function has no related
group byclause.
For example:
select max(a) from t
The optimization rule rewrites the statement as follows:
select max(a) from (select a from t where a is not null order by a desc limit 1) t
When column a has an index, or when column a is the prefix of some composite index, with the help of index, the new SQL statement can find the maximum or minimum value by scanning only one row of data. This optimization avoids full table scan.
The example statement has the following execution plan:
mysql> explain select max(a) from t;
+------------------------------+---------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------------------+
| id | estRows | task | access object | operator info |
+------------------------------+---------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------------------+
| StreamAgg_13 | 1.00 | root | | funcs:max(test.t.a)->Column#4 |
| └─Limit_17 | 1.00 | root | | offset:0, count:1 |
| └─IndexReader_27 | 1.00 | root | | index:Limit_26 |
| └─Limit_26 | 1.00 | cop[tikv] | | offset:0, count:1 |
| └─IndexFullScan_25 | 1.00 | cop[tikv] | table:t, index:idx_a(a) | keep order:true, desc, stats:pseudo |
+------------------------------+---------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------------------+
5 rows in set (0.00 sec)
Multiple max/min functions
When a SQL statement meets the following conditions, this rule is applied:
- The statement contains multiple aggregate functions, which are all
maxorminfunctions. - None of the aggregate functions has a related
group byclause. - The columns in each
max/minfunction has indexes to preserve the order.
For example:
select max(a) - min(a) from t
The optimization rule first checks whether column a has an index to preserve its order. If yes, the SQL statement is rewritten as the Cartesian product of two subqueries:
select max_a - min_a
from
(select max(a) as max_a from t) t1,
(select min(a) as min_a from t) t2
Through the rewrite, the optimizer can apply the rule for statements with only one max/min function to the two subqueries respectively. The statement is then rewritten as follows:
select max_a - min_a
from
(select max(a) as max_a from (select a from t where a is not null order by a desc limit 1) t) t1,
(select min(a) as min_a from (select a from t where a is not null order by a asc limit 1) t) t2
Similarly, if column a has an index to preserve its order, the optimized execution only scans two rows of data instead of the whole table. However, if column a does not have an index to preserve its order, this rule results in two full table scans, but the execution only needs one full table scan if it is not rewritten. Therefore, in such cases, this rule is not applied.
The final execution plan is as follows:
mysql> explain select max(a)-min(a) from t;
+------------------------------------+---------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------------------+
| id | estRows | task | access object | operator info |
+------------------------------------+---------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------------------+
| Projection_17 | 1.00 | root | | minus(Column#4, Column#5)->Column#6 |
| └─HashJoin_18 | 1.00 | root | | CARTESIAN inner join |
| ├─StreamAgg_45(Build) | 1.00 | root | | funcs:min(test.t.a)->Column#5 |
| │ └─Limit_49 | 1.00 | root | | offset:0, count:1 |
| │ └─IndexReader_59 | 1.00 | root | | index:Limit_58 |
| │ └─Limit_58 | 1.00 | cop[tikv] | | offset:0, count:1 |
| │ └─IndexFullScan_57 | 1.00 | cop[tikv] | table:t, index:idx_a(a) | keep order:true, stats:pseudo |
| └─StreamAgg_24(Probe) | 1.00 | root | | funcs:max(test.t.a)->Column#4 |
| └─Limit_28 | 1.00 | root | | offset:0, count:1 |
| └─IndexReader_38 | 1.00 | root | | index:Limit_37 |
| └─Limit_37 | 1.00 | cop[tikv] | | offset:0, count:1 |
| └─IndexFullScan_36 | 1.00 | cop[tikv] | table:t, index:idx_a(a) | keep order:true, desc, stats:pseudo |
+------------------------------------+---------+-----------+-------------------------+-------------------------------------+
12 rows in set (0.01 sec)