Are MySql Views Dynamic and Efficient? - sql

I'm looking to create a view of a table which will highlight data that meets a specific criteria. For example, if I have a table with integer values, I want my view to show the rows which have a value greater than 100. I know how to achieve this by creating a view on a table, however is the view dynamic? I have tested this in MySQL and it seems to be true. But if my table has over 1000 rows, is this efficient? Will the view still update "dynamically" to any changes in the original table?

Basically, there are basically 2 types of views in MySQL.
Merge Views
This type of view basically just re-writes your queries with the view's SQL. So it's a short-hand for writing the queries yourself. This offers no real performance benefit, but make writing complex queries easier and making maintenance easier (since if the view definition changes, you don't need to change 100 queries against the view, only the one definition).
Temptable Views
This type of view creates a temporary table with the query from the view's SQL. It has all the benefits of the merge view, but also reduces lock time on the view's tables. Therefore on highly loaded servers it could have a fairly significant performance gain.
There's also the "Undefined" view type (the default), which let's MySQL pick what it thinks is the best type at query time...
But note something important to note, is that MySQL does not have any support for materialized views. So it's not like Oracle where a complex view will increase the performance of queries against it significantly. The queries of the views are always executed in MySQL.
As far as the efficiency, Views in MySQL do not increase or decrease efficiency. They are there to make your life easier when writing and maintaining queries. I have used views on tables with hundreds of millions of rows, and they have worked just fine...

mysql does not use indexes on temp tables...so it can badly affect your performance.

Related

SQL View From a View Running Slow

I created a view that pulls data from another view and it is running extremely slow. The original view runs fine so I'm not sure what the hold up would be. Is this typically an issue when querying off a view?
I did some brief research and can conclude that you'll have a hard time maintaining efficient nested views. In short, your SQL Server query optimizer is going to have a near-impossible time figuring out how to quickly execute your query. At best it has to execute three statements: Source statement, View 1, View 2 (Nested). Without indexes on the tables and views performance is going to continually be slow because it's running so many operations.
You'd be much better off by searching for an alternate solution to your nested view, such as replicating your SELECT statement from your first view within your nested view. The duplication is also less than ideal, but it means that your optimizer won't have to work so hard. You can also look into applying indexes to your views. When done properly, you will improve SELECT performance while sacrificing speed when you perform INSERT operations. This should be done if you don't expect your source table to change too often, but is probably the best solution available if you can't restructure view layout.
Probably you use some filters on both internal (fast) and external (slow) views.
Make sure that filters used on the external view are best 'linked' to the internal view. Best 'linked' means that if e.g. at the external view you use some more tables and join the internal view, try to join with filter columns as well or with the lower detail base table.

Are there performance differences between views and in-line table functions?

I'm currently torn between a design decision between using a view and an in-line table function, where the argument in favor of the view is that it's a simple SELECT, but the argument for the table function is consistency, as we already have hundreds of objects in the database that do require parameters, and thus, use a table function.
Given that we have a table, dbo.Data, a view, dbo.vData, and an in-line table function, dbo.tfData():
Our scenario is that we already have several table functions for the same table along the lines of dbo.tfDataFilterBy(parameter), so having consistency when querying is a definite plus. Performance is a significant factor in which direction we would go.
The new view and table function both just do a simple SELECT * FROM dbo.Data. I've tested some basic scenarios selects, joins, and aggregates and the execution plans are identical as far as I can tell. However, are there any edge cases that can potentially produce a different execution plan between the two of them, perhaps with a lot of complex joins, sub-queries, or anything else we might throw at it?
The two are defined in different manners, but the sql engine builds them from the base tables in much the same way.(Hence your execution plans being the same)
Keep in mind, views can in fact update the underlying base tables, so be careful with that difference.
See: https://www.red-gate.com/simple-talk/sql/learn-sql-server/sql-view-basics/
for some good info on uses of views.
If you reuse a view a lot across your application(s), you could define it as an indexed view. SQL server then materializes the view as a table. This creates some overhead with maintaining the index when you make updates to your table, but the indexed view could improve read performance substantially. Also, in Enterprise Edition, the optimizer can use the indexed view if it meets the requirements of a query even if it is not referenced directly.
An occasion in favor of table functions would be one where you need to change the definition of the table very slightly on a regular basis, you would not want to maintain multiple views that are so close in definition. Also, a table function can take a parameter that can be used in your predicates to change the output without changing the function, with views you would need different views defined with different predicates.
These are not the only differences, but are probably the two most influential when deciding which to use.
More directly related to performance: there should not be much difference in execution plan UNLESS you utilize a view enough that the optimizer materializes the table from the definition.

Is it bad to call views inside a View in sql

I have created 8 different views and i am using all these views inside a view.
So i was wondering before i go any further with this idea. i want to know does it affects performance too badly or not.
No, it's fine. In many cases I personally consider it preferable to writing one view with a giant and difficult to understand definition. In my opinion, using multiple views allows you to:
Encapsulate discrete logic in individual views.
Re-use logic in the individual views without having to repeat the logic (eliminating update problems later).
Name your logic so that it's easier for the next programmer to understand what you were trying to accomplish.
Views get "compiled" away during execution plan creation. Therefore there is only a very small penalty for using them: The extra time it takes SQL Server to look up the definition. Usually this delay is not measurable.
That means using views for the purposes mentioned by Larry Lustig is perfectly fine and encourage-able.
HOWEVER: Make sure that you do not introduce unnecessary JOINs using this technique. While SQL Server has mechanisms to eliminate unneeded tables from a query it quickly gives up if the query becomes to complex. Executing those additional JOINs can cause a significant slowdown. This is the reason that many companies have a no-view-rule in place.
So: Use views, but make sure to not misuse them.
It's not bad for performance just for being a view. It may add some complexity to maintain, and cause additional consideration when you want to change the schema of the underlying tables. If you were using views and they joined to the same tables, I think that would be less efficient than joining to the table once in one view.
I favour using nested views, with each view encapsulating and naming some cross section of data.
As for performance, it can actually improve performance if the alternative required that same data to be queried multiple times: A nested view is a bit like a temporary table - fired once.
The best, and recommended, way to discover performance implications is to try both options and examine the explain output.
The pure fact of querying a view from within a view does not have any negative performance implications. It is not different from querying a table from within a view.

Performance of Tables vs. Views

Recently started working with a database in which the convention is to create a view for every table. If you assume that there is a one to one mapping between tables and views, I was wondering if anyone could tell me the performance impacts of doing something like this. BTW, this is on Oracle.
Assuming the question is about non-materialized views -- Really depends on the query that the view is based on, and what is being done to it. Sometimes, the predicates can be pushed into the view query by the optimizer. If not, then it wouldn't be as good as against the table itself. Views are built on top of tables -- why would you expect that the performance would be better?
Layering views, where you build one view on top of another, is a bad practice because you won't know about issues until run time. It's also less of a chance that predicate pushing will occur with layered views.
Views can also be updateable -- they aren't a reliable means to restricting access to resources if someone has INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE privileges on the underlying tables.
Materialized views are as good as tables, but are notoriously restrictive in what they support.
You don't explain what you're doing in the views? A 1:1 with the tables sounds like you are using the views more like synonyms than a view. IOW, are the views = "SELECT * FROM table", then you'll see no performance hit except on hard parse.
If you are joining to other tables or placing filter clauses in them which prevent predicate pushing than you're bound to see a major hit sometime.
The only pain I have had with views is a distributed query over a DB link. The local optimizer gets some details about the remote object, but the view doesn't tell it about any indexes so you can get some kooky plans.
I've heard about some places that use it as a standard since they can easily 're-order' the columns in a view. Not a big benefit in my opinion by YMMV

Is a view faster than a simple query?

Is a
select * from myView
faster than the query itself to create the view (in order to have the same resultSet):
select * from ([query to create same resultSet as myView])
?
It's not totally clear to me if the view uses some sort of caching making it faster compared to a simple query.
Yes, views can have a clustered index assigned and, when they do, they'll store temporary results that can speed up resulting queries.
Microsoft's own documentation makes it very clear that Views can improve performance.
First, most views that people create are simple views and do not use this feature, and are therefore no different to querying the base tables directly. Simple views are expanded in place and so do not directly contribute to performance improvements - that much is true. However, indexed views can dramatically improve performance.
Let me go directly to the documentation:
After a unique clustered index is created on the view, the view's result set is materialized immediately and persisted in physical storage in the database, saving the overhead of performing this costly operation at execution time.
Second, these indexed views can work even when they are not directly referenced by another query as the optimizer will use them in place of a table reference when appropriate.
Again, the documentation:
The indexed view can be used in a query execution in two ways. The query can reference the indexed view directly, or, more importantly, the query optimizer can select the view if it determines that the view can be substituted for some or all of the query in the lowest-cost query plan. In the second case, the indexed view is used instead of the underlying tables and their ordinary indexes. The view does not need to be referenced in the query for the query optimizer to use it during query execution. This allows existing applications to benefit from the newly created indexed views without changing those applications.
This documentation, as well as charts demonstrating performance improvements, can be found here.
Update 2: the answer has been criticized on the basis that it is the "index" that provides the performance advantage, not the "View." However, this is easily refuted.
Let us say that we are a software company in a small country; I'll use Lithuania as an example. We sell software worldwide and keep our records in a SQL Server database. We're very successful and so, in a few years, we have 1,000,000+ records. However, we often need to report sales for tax purposes and we find that we've only sold 100 copies of our software in our home country. By creating an indexed view of just the Lithuanian records, we get to keep the records we need in an indexed cache as described in the MS documentation. When we run our reports for Lithuanian sales in 2008, our query will search through an index with a depth of just 7 (Log2(100) with some unused leaves). If we were to do the same without the VIEW and just relying on an index into the table, we'd have to traverse an index tree with a search depth of 21!
Clearly, the View itself would provide us with a performance advantage (3x) over the simple use of the index alone. I've tried to use a real-world example but you'll note that a simple list of Lithuanian sales would give us an even greater advantage.
Note that I'm just using a straight b-tree for my example. While I'm fairly certain that SQL Server uses some variant of a b-tree, I don't know the details. Nonetheless, the point holds.
Update 3: The question has come up about whether an Indexed View just uses an index placed on the underlying table. That is, to paraphrase: "an indexed view is just the equivalent of a standard index and it offers nothing new or unique to a view." If this was true, of course, then the above analysis would be incorrect! Let me provide a quote from the Microsoft documentation that demonstrate why I think this criticism is not valid or true:
Using indexes to improve query performance is not a new concept; however, indexed views provide additional performance benefits that cannot be achieved using standard indexes.
Together with the above quote regarding the persistence of data in physical storage and other information in the documentation about how indices are created on Views, I think it is safe to say that an Indexed View is not just a cached SQL Select that happens to use an index defined on the main table. Thus, I continue to stand by this answer.
Generally speaking, no. Views are primarily used for convenience and security, and won't (by themselves) produce any speed benefit.
That said, SQL Server 2000 and above do have a feature called Indexed Views that can greatly improve performance, with a few caveats:
Not every view can be made into an indexed view; they have to follow a specific set of guidelines, which (among other restrictions) means you can't include common query elements like COUNT, MIN, MAX, or TOP.
Indexed views use physical space in the database, just like indexes on a table.
This article describes additional benefits and limitations of indexed views:
You Can…
The view definition can reference one or more tables in the
same database.
Once the unique clustered index is created, additional nonclustered
indexes can be created against the view.
You can update the data in the underlying tables – including inserts,
updates, deletes, and even truncates.
You Can’t…
The view definition can’t reference other views, or tables
in other databases.
It can’t contain COUNT, MIN, MAX, TOP, outer joins, or a few other
keywords or elements.
You can’t modify the underlying tables and columns. The view is
created with the WITH SCHEMABINDING option.
You can’t always predict what the query optimizer will do. If you’re
using Enterprise Edition, it will automatically consider the unique
clustered index as an option for a query – but if it finds a “better”
index, that will be used. You could force the optimizer to use the
index through the WITH NOEXPAND hint – but be cautious when using any
hint.
EDIT: I was wrong, and you should see Marks answer above.
I cannot speak from experience with SQL Server, but for most databases the answer would be no. The only potential benefit that you get, performance wise, from using a view is that it could potentially create some access paths based on the query. But the main reason to use a view is to simplify a query or to standardize a way of accessing some data in a table. Generally speaking, you won't get a performance benefit. I may be wrong, though.
I would come up with a moderately more complicated example and time it yourself to see.
In SQL Server at least, Query plans are stored in the plan cache for both views and ordinary SQL queries, based on query/view parameters. For both, they are dropped from the cache when they have been unused for a long enough period and the space is needed for some other newly submitted query. After which, if the same query is issued, it is recompiled and the plan is put back into the cache. So no, there is no difference, given that you are reusing the same SQL query and the same view with the same frequency.
Obviously, in general, a view, by it's very nature (That someone thought it was to be used often enough to make it into a view) is generally more likely to be "reused" than any arbitrary SQL statement.
Definitely a view is better than a nested query for SQL Server. Without knowing exactly why it is better (until I read Mark Brittingham's post), I had run some tests and experienced almost shocking performance improvements when using a view versus a nested query. After running each version of the query several hundred times in a row, the view version of the query completed in half the time. I'd say that's proof enough for me.
It may be faster if you create a materialized view (with schema binding). Non-materialized views execute just like the regular query.
My understanding is that a while back, a view would be faster because SQL Server could store an execution plan and then just use it instead of trying to figure one out on the fly. I think the performance gains nowadays is probably not as great as it once was, but I would have to guess there would be some marginal improvement to use the view.
I would expect the two queries to perform identically. A view is nothing more than a stored query definition, there is no caching or storing of data for a view. The optimiser will effectively turn your first query into your second query when you run it.
It all depends on the situation. MS SQL Indexed views are faster than a normal view or query but indexed views can not be used in a mirrored database invironment (MS SQL).
A view in any kind of a loop will cause serious slowdown because the view is repopulated each time it is called in the loop. Same as a query. In this situation a temporary table using # or # to hold your data to loop through is faster than a view or a query.
So it all depends on the situation.
There should be some trivial gain in having the execution plan stored, but it will be negligible.
In my finding, using the view is a little bit faster than a normal query. My stored procedure was taking around 25 minutes (working with a different larger record sets and multiple joins) and after using the view (non-clustered), the performance was just a little bit faster but not significant at all. I had to use some other query optimization techniques/method to make it a dramatic change.
Select from a View or from a table will not make too much sense.
Of course if the View does not have unnecessary joins, fields, etc. You can check the execution plan of your queries, joins and indexes used to improve the View performance.
You can even create index on views for faster search requirements. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc917715.aspx
But if you are searching like '%...%' than the sql engine will not benefit from an index on text column. If you can force your users to make searches like '...%' than that will be fast
referred to answer on asp forums :
https://forums.asp.net/t/1697933.aspx?Which+is+faster+when+using+SELECT+query+VIEW+or+Table+
Against all expectation, views are way slower in some circumstances.
I discovered this recently when I had problems with data which was pulled from Oracle which needed to be massaged into another format. Maybe 20k source rows. A small table. To do this we imported the oracle data as unchanged as I could into a table and then used views to extract data.
We had secondary views based on those views. Maybe 3-4 levels of views.
One of the final queries, which extracted maybe 200 rows would take upwards of 45 minutes! That query was based on a cascade of views. Maybe 3-4 levels deep.
I could take each of the views in question, insert its sql into one nested query, and execute it in a couple of seconds.
We even found that we could even write each view into a temp table and query that in place of the view and it was still way faster than simply using nested views.
What was even odder was that performance was fine until we hit some limit of source rows being pulled into the database, performs just dropped off a cliff over the space of a couple of days - a few more source rows was all it took.
So, using queries which pull from views which pull from views is much slower than a nested query - which makes no sense for me.
There is no practical different and if you read BOL you will find that ever your plain old SQL SELECT * FROM X does take advantage of plan caching etc.
The purpose of a view is to use the query over and over again. To that end, SQL Server, Oracle, etc. will typically provide a "cached" or "compiled" version of your view, thus improving its performance. In general, this should perform better than a "simple" query, though if the query is truly very simple, the benefits may be negligible.
Now, if you're doing a complex query, create the view.
No. view is just a short form of your actual long sql query. But yes, you can say actual query is faster than view command/query.
First view query will tranlate into simple query then it will execute, so view query will take more time to execute than simple query.
You can use sql views when you are using joins b/w multiple tables, to reuse complicated query again and again in simple manners.
I ran across this thread and just wanted to share this post from Brent Ozar as something to consider when using availability groups.
Brent Ozar bug report