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MariaDB and MySQL can optimize the MIN() and MAX() functions to be a single row lookup in the following cases:
SELECT. MIN() and MAX() in the SELECT part. MIN() and MAX() is a simple column reference that is part of a key. WHERE clause or the WHERE is used with a constant for all prefix parts of the key before the argument to MIN()/MAX(). WHERE clause, it can be be compared to a constant with < or <= in case of MAX() and with > or >= in case of MIN(). Here are some examples to clarify this. In this case we assume there is an index on columns (a,b,c)
SELECT MIN(a),MAX(a) from t1 SELECT MIN(b) FROM t1 WHERE a=const SELECT MIN(b),MAX(b) FROM t1 WHERE a=const SELECT MAX(c) FROM t1 WHERE a=const AND b=const SELECT MAX(b) FROM t1 WHERE a=const AND b<const SELECT MIN(b) FROM t1 WHERE a=const AND b>const SELECT MIN(b) FROM t1 WHERE a=const AND b BETWEEN const AND const SELECT MAX(b) FROM t1 WHERE a=const AND b BETWEEN const AND const
a=const the condition a IS NULL can be used. The above optimization also works for subqueries:
SELECT x from t2 where y= (SELECT MIN(b) FROM t1 WHERE a=const)
Cross joins, where there is no join condition for a table, can also be optimized to a few key lookups:
select min(t1.key_part_1), max(t2.key_part_1) from t1, t2
MariaDB and MySQL support loose index scan, which can speed up certain GROUP BY queries. The basic idea is that when scanning a BTREE index (the most common index type for the MariaDB storage engines) we can jump over identical values for any prefix of a key and thus speed up the scan significantly.
Loose scan is possible in the following cases:
GROUP BY part only uses indexed columns in the same order as in the index. SELECT part are MIN() and MAX() functions and all of them using the same column which is the next index part after the used GROUP BY columns. VARCHAR(20) column). Loose scan will apply for your query if EXPLAIN shows Using index for group-by in the Extra column. In this case the optimizer will do only one extra row fetch to calculate the value for MIN() or MAX() for every unique key prefix.
The following examples assume that the table t1 has an index on (a,b,c).
SELECT a, b, MIN(c),MAX(c) FROM t1 GROUP BY a,b
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https://mariadb.com/kb/en/minmax-optimization/