I'm working on a event tracking system which uses a handful of lookup tables as well as the primary logging table. In a report I'm writing, an object can be selected to view statistics against. The interface shows all objects in order of decreasing importance (ie, hits).
The schema for the two tables (slightly trimmed down, but you get the gist):
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `event_log` (
`event_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`user_id` int(5) DEFAULT NULL,
`object_id` int(5) DEFAULT NULL,
`event_date` datetime DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`event_id`),
KEY `user_id` (`user_id`),
KEY `object_id` (`object_id`)
);
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `lookup_event_objects` (
`object_id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`object_desc` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`object_id`)
);
The query I'm having trouble with is below. It works fine with my table of ~100 entries, but the EXPLAIN worries me a little.
explain SELECT
el.object_id,
leo.object_desc,
COUNT(el.object_id) as count_rows
FROM
event_log el
LEFT JOIN lookup_event_objects leo ON leo.object_id = el.object_id
GROUP BY
el.object_id
ORDER BY
count_rows DESC,
leo.object_desc ASC
Returns:
Using index; Using temporary; Using filesort
So -- what's wrong with my schema and/or query for MySQL to fall back on temporary
and filesort
? Or is it as optimized as it can get using ORDER BY?
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…