In this sql:
SELECT s.*,
u.id,
u.name
FROM shops s
LEFT JOIN users u ON u.id = s.user_id
OR u.id = s.owner_user_id
WHERE s.status = 1
For some reason this query takes an amazing time. although id is the primary key. it seems especially after I added this part OR u.id=s.owner_user_id the query became slow. owner_user_id often is 0 only handful of times. But why would it take so long apparently scanning the whole table? The database table users is very long and big. I didn’t design it. this is for a client who subsequent programmers added too many fields. the table is 22k rows and dozens of fields.
*the names of the fields for demonstration only. actual names are different, so don’t ask me why I’m looking for owner_user_id (; I did solve the slowness by remove the “OR …” part and instead searching for the id in the loop if it is not 0. but I would like to know why this is happening and how to speedup that query as is.
You may be able to speed it up by using
INinstead of theORbut that is minor.Firstly, are there any indexes on this table? Mainly one on the user.id field or the s.user_id or s.owner_user_id?
However, I must ask why you need to use a LEFT JOIN instead of a regular join. The LEFT JOIN causes the matching of every row with every other one. And since I’m assuming the value / id should either be in the user_id or the owner_user_id field, and that there will always be a match, if that is the case then the use of a JOIN should speed the query up a bit.
And as Mitch said, 22k rows is tiny.