I spent several hours crafting an SQL query that executes a JOIN and sorts two columns together, in a way that I haven’t dealt with before. Here is the query:
SELECT `m`.`id`, `m`.`primary_category_id`, `m`.`primary_category_priority`, `m`.`description`
FROM (`merchant` AS m)
LEFT JOIN `merchant_category`
ON `merchant_category`.`merchant_id` = `m`.`id`
WHERE
`merchant_category`.`category_id` = '2'
OR `m`.`primary_category_id` = '2'
GROUP BY `m`.`id`
ORDER BY
LEAST(merchant_category.priority = 0, `primary_category_priority` = 0) ASC,
LEAST(merchant_category.priority, `primary_category_priority` ) ASC
LIMIT 10
It has to sort two columns together, one from the merchant_category table, and one from the merchant table, so that they’re sorted together. Each row of the merchant has a a “primary” category, referred to directly in the table, and zero or more “secondary” categories, stored in the merchant_category table. Now it works fine, but it’s very slow: usually over a minute on my production database. I imagine the JOIN plus the complex sorting is causing the problem, but what can I do?
EDIT Here are the two table’s schemas:
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `merchant` (
`id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`name` varchar(100) CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL,
`primary_category_id` int(11) NOT NULL,
`primary_category_priority` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
`description` mediumtext CHARACTER SET utf8 NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
)
CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS `merchant_category` (
`id` int(10) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`merchant_id` int(10) NOT NULL,
`category_id` int(10) NOT NULL,
`priority` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
)
Try to add foreign key constraint on the second table,