So i have a database where there is a lot of data being inserted from a java application. Usualy i insert into table1 get the last id, then again insert into table2 and get the last id from there and finally insert into table3 and get that id as well and work with it within the applic开发者_运维百科ation. And i insert around 1000-2000 rows of data every 10-15 minutes.
And using a lot of small inserts and selects on a production webserver is not really good, because it sometimes bogs down the server.
My question is: is there a way how to insert multiple data into table1, table2, table3 without using such a huge amount of selects and inserts? Is there a sql-fu technique i'm missing?
Since you're probably relying on auto_increment primary keys, you have to do the inserts one at a time, at least for table1 and table2. Because MySQL won't give you more than the very last key generated.
You should never have to select. You can get the last inserted id from the Statement using the getGeneratedKeys()
method. See an example showing this in the MySQL manual for the Connector/J:
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/connector-j-usagenotes-basic.html#connector-j-examples-autoincrement-getgeneratedkeys
Other recommendations:
- Use multi-row
INSERT
syntax for table3. - Use
ALTER TABLE DISABLE KEYS
while you're importing, and re-enable them when you're finished. - Use explicit transactions. I.e. begin a transaction before your data-loading routine, and commit at the end. I'd probably also commit after every 1000 rows of table1.
- Use prepared statements.
Unfortunately, you can't use the fastest method for bulk load of data, LOAD DATA INFILE
, because that doesn't allow you to get the generated id values per row.
There's a lot to talk about here:
- It's likely that network latency is killing you if each of those INSERTs is another network roundtrip. Try batching your requests so they only require a single roundtrip for the entire transaction.
- Speaking of transactions, you don't mention them. If all three of those INSERTs need to be a single unit of work you'd better be handling transactions properly. If you don't know how, better research them.
- Try caching requests if they're reused a lot. The fastest roundtrip is the one you don't make.
You could redesign your database such that the primary key was not a database-generated, auto-incremented value, but rather a client generated UUID. Then you could generated all the keys for every record upfront and batch the inserts however you like.
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