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A: MySQL- Improvement on count(*) aggregation with composite index keys

Neville KuytIf type_id is selective (i.e. it reduces the search space significantly), creating an index on type_id, group_id should help significantly. This is because it reduces the number of records that need to be grouped first (remove everything where type_id != 1), and only then does the grouping/summi...

thanks. I see the same suggestion from the otehr answer too. Please follow my comment
I still couldn't improve time though the rows for evaluation reduced to half
Can you please update your question showing the new query plan and index?
just updated the question
In that case, it is likely you're running up against a bottleneck elsewhere - have you checked memory, CPU and disk utilization?
I don't think that's the issue as every other query on other tables and even on the same table is running fine.
12:00
I've updated my answer with the next step if figuring out what's going on. Can you please update your question with the answer?
Added the details
Thanks - could you post the query execution plan too? It looks like this is the slow part of the query - the total is 0.3 seconds, and finding the records takes 0.25, is that correct?
+----+-------------+------------------+------+---------------+---------+---------+-------+-------+-------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
+----+-------------+------------------+------+---------------+---------+---------+-------+-------+-------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | co_student_tasks | ref | pl_task | pl_task | 5 | const | 59866 | Using index |
+----+-------------+------------------+------+---------------+---------+---------+-------+-------+-------------+
yes looks like almost same time for both the queries
that table name and index name are different in that query plan - are you anonymizing for Stack Overflow, or is this a mistake?
am sorry looks like i posted a different query result
i updated the right one on question
+----+-------------+------------------+------+---------------+---------+---------+-------+-------+-------------+
| id | select_type | table | type | possible_keys | key | key_len | ref | rows | Extra |
+----+-------------+------------------+------+---------------+---------+---------+-------+-------+-------------+
| 1 | SIMPLE | user_group_report | ref | type_group | type_group | 5 | const | 59866 | Using index |
+----+-------------+------------------+------+---------------+---------+---------+-------+-------+-------------+
i think this is fine
12:11
but still 0.25 seconds?
yes
just 0.03-0.05 secs less than the actual query
OK - the problem then is that just finding the records you're interested in (with type_id = 1) is what's taking time. The index means it should be as fast as it can possibly be. I can't really explain what's happening
so I have a couple of things that might work
first, can you run ANALYZE TABLE user_group_report
this rebuilds all the information MySQL's query optimizer has about the table. It shouldn't make a difference, because your index is brand new
okay
yeah It doesn't bring any difference
I even tried adding an index on type_id alone even it didn't help.
can you try adding an order by clause?
select count(*) user_count, group_id
from user_group_report
where type_id = 1
group by group_id
order by grouo_id;
again, this shouldn't make a difference
yeah nothing changed
12:24
OK - can you read dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/explain-extended.html and see if there are any warnings in the query plan?
No no warnings
12:39
I think I've run out of ideas.
the query uses the index available to it, the majority of the time is consumed by finding the records (using that index).
ok no issues ..even i couldnt find whats wrong with this query alone.

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