7.7. Optimizing for MEMORY Tables

Consider using MEMORY tables for noncritical data that is accessed often, and is read-only or rarely updated. Benchmark your application against equivalent InnoDB or MyISAM tables under a realistic workload, to confirm that any additional performance is worth the risk of losing data, or the overhead of copying data from a disk-based table at application start.

For best performance with MEMORY tables, examine the kinds of queries against each table, and specify the type to use for each associated index, either a B-tree index or a hash index. On the CREATE INDEX statement, use the clause USING BTREE or USING HASH. B-tree indexes are fast for queries that do greater-than or less-than comparisons through operators such as > or BETWEEN. Hash indexes are only fast for queries that look up single values through the = operator, or a restricted set of values through the IN operator. For why USING BTREE is often a better choice than the default USING HASH, see Section 7.2.1.4, “How to Avoid Table Scans”. For implementation details of the different types of MEMORY indexes, see Section 7.3.7, “Comparison of B-Tree and Hash Indexes”.

Copyright © 2010-2024 Platon Technologies, s.r.o.           Index | Man stránky | tLDP | Dokumenty | Utilitky | O projekte
Design by styleshout