The optimization known as partition pruning is based on a relatively simple concept which can be described as “Do not scan partitions where there can be no matching values”. Suppose a partitioned table t1
is created by this statement:
CREATE TABLE t1 (
fname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
lname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
region_code TINYINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
dob DATE NOT NULL
)
PARTITION BY RANGE( region_code ) (
PARTITION p0 VALUES LESS THAN (64),
PARTITION p1 VALUES LESS THAN (128),
PARTITION p2 VALUES LESS THAN (192),
PARTITION p3 VALUES LESS THAN MAXVALUE
);
Suppose that you wish to obtain results from a SELECT
statement such as this one:
SELECT fname, lname, region_code, dob
FROM t1
WHERE region_code > 125 AND region_code < 130;
It is easy to see that none of the rows which ought to be returned are in either of the partitions p0
or p3
; that is, we need search only in partitions p1
and p2
to find matching rows. By limiting the search, it is possible to expend much less time and effort in finding matching rows than by scanning all partitions in the table. This “cutting away” of unneeded partitions is known as pruning. When the optimizer can make use of partition pruning in performing this query, execution of the query can be an order of magnitude faster than the same query against a nonpartitioned table containing the same column definitions and data.
The optimizer can perform pruning whenever a WHERE
condition can be reduced to either one of the following two cases:
-
partition_column
=constant
-
partition_column
IN (constant1
,constant2
, ...,constantN
)
In the first case, the optimizer simply evaluates the partitioning expression for the value given, determines which partition contains that value, and scans only this partition. In many cases, the equal sign can be replaced with another arithmetic comparison, including <
, >
, <=
, >=
, and <>
. Some queries using BETWEEN
in the WHERE
clause can also take advantage of partition pruning. See the examples later in this section.
In the second case, the optimizer evaluates the partitioning expression for each value in the list, creates a list of matching partitions, and then scans only the partitions in this partition list.
SELECT
, DELETE
, and UPDATE
statements support partition pruning. An INSERT
statement also accesses only one partition per inserted row; this is true even for a table that is partitioned by HASH
or KEY
although this is not currently shown in the output of EXPLAIN
.
Pruning can also be applied to short ranges, which the optimizer can convert into equivalent lists of values. For instance, in the previous example, the WHERE
clause can be converted to WHERE region_code IN (126, 127, 128, 129)
. Then the optimizer can determine that the first two values in the list are found in partition p1
, the remaining two values in partition p2
, and that the other partitions contain no relevant values and so do not need to be searched for matching rows.
The optimizer can also perform pruning for WHERE
conditions that involve comparisons of the preceding types on multiple columns for tables that use RANGE COLUMNS
or LIST COLUMNS
partitioning.
This type of optimization can be applied whenever the partitioning expression consists of an equality or a range which can be reduced to a set of equalities, or when the partitioning expression represents an increasing or decreasing relationship. Pruning can also be applied for tables partitioned on a DATE
or DATETIME
column when the partitioning expression uses the YEAR()
or TO_DAYS()
function. Pruning can also be applied for such tables when the partitioning expression uses the TO_SECONDS()
function.
Suppose that table t2
, partitioned on a DATE
column, is created using the statement shown here:
CREATE TABLE t2 (
fname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
lname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
region_code TINYINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
dob DATE NOT NULL
)
PARTITION BY RANGE( YEAR(dob) ) (
PARTITION d0 VALUES LESS THAN (1970),
PARTITION d1 VALUES LESS THAN (1975),
PARTITION d2 VALUES LESS THAN (1980),
PARTITION d3 VALUES LESS THAN (1985),
PARTITION d4 VALUES LESS THAN (1990),
PARTITION d5 VALUES LESS THAN (2000),
PARTITION d6 VALUES LESS THAN (2005),
PARTITION d7 VALUES LESS THAN MAXVALUE
);
The following statements using t2
can make of use partition pruning:
SELECT * FROM t2 WHERE dob = '1982-06-23';
UPDATE t2 SET region_code = 8 WHERE dob BETWEEN '1991-02-15' AND '1997-04-25';
DELETE FROM t2 WHERE dob >= '1984-06-21' AND dob <= '1999-06-21'
In the case of the last statement, the optimizer can also act as follows:
-
Find the partition containing the low end of the range.
YEAR('1984-06-21')
yields the value1984
, which is found in partitiond3
. -
Find the partition containing the high end of the range.
YEAR('1999-06-21')
evaluates to1999
, which is found in partitiond5
. -
Scan only these two partitions and any partitions that may lie between them.
In this case, this means that only partitions
d3
,d4
, andd5
are scanned. The remaining partitions may be safely ignored (and are ignored).
Invalid DATE
and DATETIME
values referenced in the WHERE
condition of a statement against a partitioned table are treated as NULL
. This means that a query such as SELECT * FROM
does not return any values (see Bug #40972).partitioned_table
WHERE date_column
< '2008-12-00'
So far, we have looked only at examples using RANGE
partitioning, but pruning can be applied with other partitioning types as well.
Consider a table that is partitioned by LIST
, where the partitioning expression is increasing or decreasing, such as the table t3
shown here. (In this example, we assume for the sake of brevity that the region_code
column is limited to values between 1 and 10 inclusive.)
CREATE TABLE t3 (
fname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
lname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
region_code TINYINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
dob DATE NOT NULL
)
PARTITION BY LIST(region_code) (
PARTITION r0 VALUES IN (1, 3),
PARTITION r1 VALUES IN (2, 5, 8),
PARTITION r2 VALUES IN (4, 9),
PARTITION r3 VALUES IN (6, 7, 10)
);
For a statement such as SELECT * FROM t3 WHERE region_code BETWEEN 1 AND 3
, the optimizer determines in which partitions the values 1, 2, and 3 are found (r0
and r1
) and skips the remaining ones (r2
and r3
).
For tables that are partitioned by HASH
or [LINEAR] KEY
, partition pruning is also possible in cases in which the WHERE
clause uses a simple =
relation against a column used in the partitioning expression. Consider a table created like this:
CREATE TABLE t4 (
fname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
lname VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
region_code TINYINT UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
dob DATE NOT NULL
)
PARTITION BY KEY(region_code)
PARTITIONS 8;
A statement that compares a column value with a constant can be pruned:
UPDATE t4 WHERE region_code = 7;
Pruning can also be employed for short ranges, because the optimizer can turn such conditions into IN
relations. For example, using the same table t4
as defined previously, queries such as these can be pruned:
SELECT * FROM t4 WHERE region_code > 2 AND region_code < 6;
SELECT * FROM t4 WHERE region_code BETWEEN 3 AND 5;
In both these cases, the WHERE
clause is transformed by the optimizer into WHERE region_code IN (3, 4, 5)
.
This optimization is used only if the range size is smaller than the number of partitions. Consider this statement:
DELETE FROM t4 WHERE region_code BETWEEN 4 AND 12;
The range in the WHERE
clause covers 9 values (4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12), but t4
has only 8 partitions. This means that the DELETE
cannot be pruned.
When a table is partitioned by HASH
or [LINEAR] KEY
, pruning can be used only on integer columns. For example, this statement cannot use pruning because dob
is a DATE
column:
SELECT * FROM t4 WHERE dob >= '2001-04-14' AND dob <= '2005-10-15';
However, if the table stores year values in an INT
column, then a query having WHERE year_col >= 2001 AND year_col <= 2005
can be pruned.
Tables using a storage engine that provides automatic partitioning, such as the NDB
storage engine used by MySQL Cluster can be pruned if they are explicitly partitioned.