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Home/ Questions/Q 6133095
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T17:10:59+00:00 2026-05-23T17:10:59+00:00

I’ve got a MySQL table that looks like this: CREATE TABLE my_facts ( `id`

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I’ve got a MySQL table that looks like this:

CREATE TABLE my_facts (
  `id` int(11) DEFAULT NULL auto_increment PRIMARY KEY, 
  `account_id` int(11) NOT NULL, 
  `asked_on` date NOT NULL, 
  `foo_id` int(11) NOT NULL, 
  `bar_id` int(11) NOT NULL, 
  `baz_id` int(11) NOT NULL, 
  `corge_id` int(11) NOT NULL, 
  `grault_id` int(11) NOT NULL, 
  `flob_id` int(11) NOT NULL, 
  `tag_id` int(11) NOT NULL) 
ENGINE=InnoDB;

and has 450k rows. But: I want to add several indexes to it:

CREATE INDEX `k_account_foo_id` ON `my_facts` (`account_id`, `asked_on`, `foo_id`, `tag_id`);

CREATE INDEX `k_account_bar_id` ON `my_facts` (`account_id`, `asked_on`, `bar_id`, `tag_id`);

CREATE INDEX `k_account_baz_id` ON `my_facts` (`account_id`, `asked_on`, `baz_id`, `tag_id`);

CREATE INDEX `k_account_corge_id` ON `my_facts` (`account_id`, `asked_on`, `corge_id`, `tag_id`);

CREATE INDEX `k_account_grault_id` ON `my_facts` (`account_id`, `asked_on`, `grault_id`, `tag_id`);

My problem is that each index takes longer to create than the last — and it seems to be on a geometric trajectory. In order, the indexes take 11.6s, 28.8s, 44.4s, 76s, and 128s to create. And I’d like to add a few more indexes.

When I create the table as MyISAM, not only is the whole process a whole lot faster, creating each subsequent index takes maybe a second longer than the previous index.

What gives? Is this behavior expected? Am I doing something funny in my index creation?

For what it’s worth, I’m using MySQL 5.1.48/OS X 10.6.8 in this test.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T17:10:59+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 5:10 pm

    This is expected behavior based on how index creation happens in InnoDB.

    In MySQL versions up to 5.0, adding or dropping an index on a table
    with existing data can be very slow if the table has many rows. The
    CREATE INDEX and DROP INDEX commands work by creating a new, empty
    table defined with the requested set of indexes. It then copies the
    existing rows to the new table one-by-one, updating the indexes as it
    goes. Inserting entries into the indexes in this fashion, where the
    key values are not sorted, requires random access to the index nodes,
    and is far from optimal. After all rows from the original table are
    copied, the old table is dropped and the copy is renamed with the name
    of the original table.

    Beginning with version 5.1, MySQL allows a storage engine to create or drop indexes without copying the contents of the entire table. The standard built-in InnoDB in MySQL version 5.1, however, does not take advantage of this capability.

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