MySQL supports derived condition pushdown for eligible
subqueries. For a query such as SELECT * FROM (SELECT
i, j FROM t1) AS dt WHERE i >
, it is possible
in many cases to push the outer constant
WHERE
condition down to the derived table, in this case resulting in
SELECT * FROM (SELECT i, j FROM t1 WHERE i >
. When a
derived table cannot be merged into the outer query (for
example, if the derived table uses aggregation), pushing the
outer constant
) AS dtWHERE
condition down to the derived
table should decrease the number of rows that need to be
processed and thus speed up execution of the query.
Outer WHERE
conditions can be pushed down
to derived materialized tables under the following
circumstances:
When the derived table uses no aggregate or window functions, the outer
WHERE
condition can be pushed down to it directly. This includesWHERE
conditions having multiple predicates joined withAND
,OR
, or both.For example, the query
SELECT * FROM (SELECT f1, f2 FROM t1) AS dt WHERE f1 < 3 AND f2 > 11
is rewritten asSELECT f1, f2 FROM (SELECT f1, f2 FROM t1 WHERE f1 < 3 AND f2 > 11) AS dt
.When the derived table has a
GROUP BY
and uses no window functions, an outerWHERE
condition referencing one or more columns which are not part of theGROUP BY
can be pushed down to the derived table as aHAVING
condition.For example,
SELECT * FROM (SELECT i, j, SUM(k) AS sum FROM t1 GROUP BY i, j) AS dt WHERE sum > 100
is rewritten following derived condition pushdown asSELECT * FROM (SELECT i, j, SUM(k) AS sum FROM t1 GROUP BY i, j HAVING sum > 100) AS dt
.When the derived table uses a
GROUP BY
and the columns in the outerWHERE
condition areGROUP BY
columns, theWHERE
conditions referencing those columns can be pushed down directly to the derived table.For example, the query
SELECT * FROM (SELECT i,j, SUM(k) AS sum FROM t1 GROUP BY i,j) AS dt WHERE i > 10
is rewritten asSELECT * FROM (SELECT i,j, SUM(k) AS sum FROM t1 WHERE i > 10 GROUP BY i,j) AS dt
.In the event that the outer
WHERE
condition has predicates referencing columns which are part of theGROUP BY
as well as predicates referencing columns which are not, predicates of the former sort are pushed down asWHERE
conditions, while those of the latter type are pushed down asHAVING
conditions. For example, in the querySELECT * FROM (SELECT i, j, SUM(k) AS sum FROM t1 GROUP BY i,j) AS dt WHERE i > 10 AND sum > 100
, the predicatei > 10
in the outerWHERE
clause references aGROUP BY
column, whereas the predicatesum > 100
does not reference anyGROUP BY
column. Thus the derived table pushdown optimization causes the query to be rewritten in a manner similar to what is shown here:SELECT * FROM ( SELECT i, j, SUM(k) AS sum FROM t1 WHERE i > 10 GROUP BY i, j HAVING sum > 100 ) AS dt;
To enable derived condition pushdown, the
optimizer_switch
system
variable's
derived_condition_pushdown
flag (added in this release) must be set to
on
, which is the default setting. If this
optimization is disabled by
optimizer_switch
, you can enable it for a
specific query using the
DERIVED_CONDITION_PUSHDOWN
optimizer hint. To disable the optimization for a given query,
use the
NO_DERIVED_CONDITION_PUSHDOWN
optimizer hint.
The following restrictions and limitations apply to the derived table condition pushdown optimization:
The derived table condition pushdown optimization can be employed with
UNION
queries, with the following exceptions:Condition pushdown cannot be used with a
UNION
query if any materialized derived table that is part of theUNION
is a recursive common table expression (see Recursive Common Table Expressions).Conditions containing nondeterministic expressions cannot be pushed down to a derived table.
The derived table cannot use a
LIMIT
clause.Conditions containing subqueries cannot be pushed down.
The optimization cannot be used if the derived table is an inner table of an outer join.
If a materialized derived table is a common table expression, conditions are not pushed down to it if it is referenced multiple times.
Conditions using parameters can be pushed down if the condition is of the form
. If a derived column in an outerderived_column
> ?WHERE
condition is an expression having a?
in the underlying derived table, this condition cannot be pushed down.For a query in which the condition is on the tables of a view created using
ALGORITHM=TEMPTABLE
instead of on the view itself, the multiple equality is not recognized at resolution, and thus the condition cannot be not pushed down. This because, when optimizing a query, condition pushdown takes place during resolution phase while multiple equality propagation occurs during optimization.This is not an issue in such cases for a view using
ALGORITHM=MERGE
, where the equality can be propagated and the condition pushed down.A condition cannot be pushed down if the derived table's
SELECT
list contain any assignments to user variables.