This page provides best practices for optimizing SQL performance in CockroachDB.
For a demonstration of some of these techniques, see Performance Tuning. For guidance on deployment and data location techniques to minimize network latency, see Topology Patterns.
Multi-row DML best practices
Use multi-row DML instead of multiple single-row DMLs
For INSERT
, UPSERT
, and DELETE
statements, a single multi-row DML is faster than multiple single-row DMLs. Whenever possible, use multi-row DML instead of multiple single-row DMLs.
For more information, see:
- Insert Multiple Rows
- Upsert Multiple Rows
- Delete Multiple Rows
- How to improve IoT application performance with multi-row DML
Use TRUNCATE
instead of DELETE
to delete all rows in a table
The TRUNCATE
statement removes all rows from a table by dropping the table and recreating a new table with the same name. This performs better than using DELETE
, which performs multiple transactions to delete all rows
Bulk insert best practices
Use multi-row INSERT
statements for bulk inserts into existing tables
To bulk-insert data into an existing table, batch multiple rows in one multi-row INSERT
statement and do not include the INSERT
statements within a transaction. Experimentally determine the optimal batch size for your application by monitoring the performance for different batch sizes (10 rows, 100 rows, 1000 rows). For more information, see Insert Multiple Rows.
New in v19.2: You can also use the IMPORT INTO
statement to bulk-insert CSV data into an existing table.
Use IMPORT
instead of INSERT
for bulk inserts into new tables
To bulk-insert data into a brand new table, the IMPORT
statement performs better than INSERT
.
Bulk delete best practices
Batch deletes
To delete a large number of rows, we recommend iteratively deleting batches of rows until all of the unwanted rows are deleted. For an example, see Batch deletes.
Batch-delete "expired" data
CockroachDB does not support Time to Live (TTL) on table rows. To delete "expired" rows, we recommend automating a batch delete process with a job scheduler like cron
. For an example, see Batch-delete "expired" data.
Assign column families
A column family is a group of columns in a table that is stored as a single key-value pair in the underlying key-value store.
When a table is created, all columns are stored as a single column family. This default approach ensures efficient key-value storage and performance in most cases. However, when frequently updated columns are grouped with seldom updated columns, the seldom updated columns are nonetheless rewritten on every update. Especially when the seldom updated columns are large, it's therefore more performant to assign them to a distinct column family.
Interleave tables
Interleaving tables improves query performance by optimizing the key-value structure of closely related tables, attempting to keep data on the same key-value range if it's likely to be read and written together. This is particularly helpful if the tables are frequently joined on the columns that consist of the interleaving relationship.
However, the above is only true for tables where all operations (e.g., SELECT
or INSERT
) are performed on a single value shared between both tables. The following types of operations may actually become slower after interleaving:
- Operations that span multiple values.
- Operations that do not specify the interleaved parent ID.
This happens because when data is interleaved, queries that work on the parent table(s) will need to "skip over" the data in interleaved children, which increases the read and write latencies to the parent in proportion to the number of interleaved values.
Unique ID best practices
The best practices for generating unique IDs in a distributed database like CockroachDB are very different than for a legacy single-node database. Traditional approaches for generating unique IDs for legacy single-node databases include:
- Using the
SERIAL
pseudo-type for a column to generate random unique IDs. This can result in a performance bottleneck because IDs generated temporally near each other have similar values and are located physically near each other in a table's storage. - Generating monotonically increasing
INT
IDs by using transactions with roundtripSELECT
s, e.g.,INSERT INTO tbl (id, …) VALUES ((SELECT max(id)+1 FROM tbl), …)
. This has a very high performance cost since it makes allINSERT
transactions wait for their turn to insert the next ID. You should only do this if your application really does require strict ID ordering. In some cases, using Change Data Capture (CDC) can help avoid the requirement for strict ID ordering. If you can avoid the requirement for strict ID ordering, you can use one of the higher performance ID strategies outlined below.
The approaches described above are likely to create hotspots for both reads and writes in CockroachDB. To avoid this issue, we recommend the following approaches (listed in order from best to worst performance).
Approach | Pros | Cons |
---|---|---|
1. Use multi-column primary keys | Potentially fastest, if done right | Complex, requires up-front design and testing to ensure performance |
2. Use UUID to generate unique IDs |
Good performance; spreads load well; easy choice | May leave some performance on the table; requires other columns to be useful in queries |
3. Use INSERT with the RETURNING clause |
Easy to query against; familiar design | Slower performance than the other options; higher chance of transaction contention |
Use multi-column primary keys
A well-designed multi-column primary key can yield even better performance than a UUID primary key, but it requires more up-front schema design work. To get the best performance, ensure that any monotonically increasing field is located after the first column of the primary key. When done right, such a composite primary key should result in:
- Enough randomness in your primary key to spread the table data / query load relatively evenly across the cluster, which will avoid hotspots. By "enough randomness" we mean that the prefix of the primary key should be relatively uniformly distributed over its domain. Its domain should have at least as many elements as you have nodes.
- A monotonically increasing column that is part of the primary key (and thus indexed) which is also useful in your queries.
For example, consider a social media website. Social media posts are written by users, and on login the user's last 10 posts are displayed. A good choice for a primary key might be (username, post_timestamp)
. For example:
> CREATE TABLE posts (
username STRING,
post_timestamp TIMESTAMP,
post_id INT,
post_content STRING,
CONSTRAINT posts_pk PRIMARY KEY(username, post_timestamp)
);
This would make the following query efficient.
> SELECT * FROM posts
WHERE username = 'alyssa'
ORDER BY post_timestamp DESC
LIMIT 10;
username | post_timestamp | post_id | post_content
+----------+---------------------------+---------+--------------+
alyssa | 2019-07-31 18:01:00+00:00 | ... | ...
alyssa | 2019-07-30 10:22:00+00:00 | ... | ...
alyssa | 2019-07-30 09:12:00+00:00 | ... | ...
alyssa | 2019-07-29 13:48:00+00:00 | ... | ...
alyssa | 2019-07-29 13:47:00+00:00 | ... | ...
alyssa | 2019-07-29 13:46:00+00:00 | ... | ...
alyssa | 2019-07-29 13:43:00+00:00 | ... | ...
...
Time: 924µs
To see why, let's look at the EXPLAIN
output. It shows that the query is fast because it does a point lookup on the indexed column username
(as shown by the line spans | /"alyssa"-...
). Furthermore, the column post_timestamp
is already in an index, and sorted (since it's a monotonically increasing part of the primary key).
> EXPLAIN (VERBOSE)
SELECT * FROM posts
WHERE username = 'alyssa'
ORDER BY post_timestamp DESC
LIMIT 10;
tree | field | description | columns | ordering
+---------+-------+-------------------------------+----------------------------+-----------------+
revscan | | | (username, post_timestamp) | -post_timestamp
| table | posts@posts_pk | |
| spans | /"alyssa"-/"alyssa"/PrefixEnd | |
| limit | 10 | |
(4 rows)
Time: 818µs
Note that the above query also follows the indexing best practice of indexing all columns in the WHERE
clause.
Use UUID
to generate unique IDs
To auto-generate unique row IDs, use the UUID
column with the gen_random_uuid()
function as the default value:
> CREATE TABLE t1 (id UUID PRIMARY KEY DEFAULT gen_random_uuid(), name STRING);
> INSERT INTO t1 (name) VALUES ('a'), ('b'), ('c');
> SELECT * FROM t1;
+--------------------------------------+------+
| id | name |
+--------------------------------------+------+
| 60853a85-681d-4620-9677-946bbfdc8fbc | c |
| 77c9bc2e-76a5-4ebc-80c3-7ad3159466a1 | b |
| bd3a56e1-c75e-476c-b221-0da9d74d66eb | a |
+--------------------------------------+------+
(3 rows)
Use INSERT
with the RETURNING
clause to generate unique IDs
If something prevents you from using multi-column primary keys or UUID
s to generate unique IDs, you might resort to using INSERT
s with SELECT
s to return IDs. Instead, use the RETURNING
clause with the INSERT
statement as shown below for improved performance.
Generate monotonically-increasing unique IDs
Suppose the table schema is as follows:
> CREATE TABLE X (
ID1 INT,
ID2 INT,
ID3 INT DEFAULT 1,
PRIMARY KEY (ID1,ID2)
);
The common approach would be to use a transaction with an INSERT
followed by a SELECT
:
> BEGIN;
> INSERT INTO X VALUES (1,1,1)
ON CONFLICT (ID1,ID2)
DO UPDATE SET ID3=X.ID3+1;
> SELECT * FROM X WHERE ID1=1 AND ID2=1;
> COMMIT;
However, the performance best practice is to use a RETURNING
clause with INSERT
instead of the transaction:
> INSERT INTO X VALUES (1,1,1),(2,2,2),(3,3,3)
ON CONFLICT (ID1,ID2)
DO UPDATE SET ID3=X.ID3 + 1
RETURNING ID1,ID2,ID3;
Generate random unique IDs
Suppose the table schema is as follows:
> CREATE TABLE X (
ID1 INT,
ID2 INT,
ID3 INT DEFAULT unique_rowid(),
PRIMARY KEY (ID1,ID2)
);
The common approach to generate random Unique IDs is a transaction using a SELECT
statement:
> BEGIN;
> INSERT INTO X VALUES (1,1);
> SELECT * FROM X WHERE ID1=1 AND ID2=1;
> COMMIT;
However, the performance best practice is to use a RETURNING
clause with INSERT
instead of the transaction:
> INSERT INTO X VALUES (1,1),(2,2),(3,3)
RETURNING ID1,ID2,ID3;
Indexes best practices
Use secondary indexes
You can use secondary indexes to improve the performance of queries using columns not in a table's primary key. You can create them:
- At the same time as the table with the
INDEX
clause ofCREATE TABLE
. In addition to explicitly defined indexes, CockroachDB automatically creates secondary indexes for columns with theUNIQUE
constraint. - For existing tables with
CREATE INDEX
. - By applying the
UNIQUE
constraint to columns withALTER TABLE
, which automatically creates an index of the constrained columns.
To create the most useful secondary indexes, check out our best practices.
Use indexes for faster joins
See Join Performance Best Practices.
Drop unused indexes
Though indexes improve read performance, they incur an overhead for every write. In some cases, like the use cases discussed above, the tradeoff is worth it. However, if an index is unused, it slows down DML operations. Therefore, drop unused indexes whenever possible.
Join best practices
See Join Performance Best Practices.
Subquery best practices
See Subquery Performance Best Practices.
Table scans best practices
Avoid SELECT *
for large tables
For large tables, avoid table scans (that is, reading the entire table data) whenever possible. Instead, define the required fields in a SELECT
statement.
Example
Suppose the table schema is as follows:
> CREATE TABLE accounts (
id INT,
customer STRING,
address STRING,
balance INT
nominee STRING
);
Now if we want to find the account balances of all customers, an inefficient table scan would be:
> SELECT * FROM ACCOUNTS;
This query retrieves all data stored in the table. A more efficient query would be:
> SELECT CUSTOMER, BALANCE FROM ACCOUNTS;
This query returns the account balances of the customers.
Avoid SELECT DISTINCT
for large tables
SELECT DISTINCT
allows you to obtain unique entries from a query by removing duplicate entries. However, SELECT DISTINCT
is computationally expensive. As a performance best practice, use SELECT
with the WHERE
clause instead.
Use AS OF SYSTEM TIME
to decrease conflicts with long-running queries
If you have long-running queries (such as analytics queries that perform full table scans) that can tolerate slightly out-of-date reads, consider using the ... AS OF SYSTEM TIME
clause. Using this, your query returns data as it appeared at a distinct point in the past and will not cause conflicts with other concurrent transactions, which can increase your application's performance.
However, because AS OF SYSTEM TIME
returns historical data, your reads might be stale.
Understanding and avoiding transaction contention
Transaction contention occurs when the following three conditions are met:
- There are multiple concurrent transactions or statements (sent by multiple clients connected simultaneously to a single CockroachDB cluster).
- They operate on the same data, specifically over table rows with the same index key values (either on primary keys or secondary indexes, or via interleaving) or using index key values that are close to each other, and thus place the indexed data on the same data ranges.
- At least some of the transactions write or modify the data.
A set of transactions that all contend on the same keys will be limited in performance to the maximum processing speed of a single node (limited horizontal scalability). Non-contended transactions are not affected in this way.
There are two levels of contention:
Transactions that operate on the same range but different index key values will be limited by the overall hardware capacity of a single node (the range lease holder).
Transactions that operate on the same index key values (specifically, that operate on the same column family for a given index key) will be more strictly serialized to obey transaction isolation semantics.
Transaction contention can also increase the rate of transaction restarts, and thus make the proper implementation of client-side transaction retries more critical.
To avoid contention, multiple strategies can be applied:
Use index key values with a more random distribution of values, so that transactions over different rows are more likely to operate on separate data ranges. See the SQL FAQs on row IDs for suggestions.
Make transactions smaller, so that each transaction has less work to do. In particular, avoid multiple client-server exchanges per transaction. For example, use common table expressions to group multiple
SELECT
andINSERT
/UPDATE
/DELETE
/UPSERT
clauses together in a single SQL statement.When replacing values in a row, use
UPSERT
and specify values for all columns in the inserted rows. This will usually have the best performance under contention, compared to combinations ofSELECT
,INSERT
, andUPDATE
.Increase normalization of the data to place parts of the same records that are modified by different transactions in different tables. Note however that this is a double-edged sword, because denormalization can also increase performance by creating multiple copies of often-referenced data in separate ranges.
If the application strictly requires operating on very few different index key values, consider using
ALTER ... SPLIT AT
so that each index key value can be served by a separate group of nodes in the cluster.
It is always best to avoid contention as much as possible via the design of the schema and application. However, sometimes contention is unavoidable. To maximize performance in the presence of contention, you'll need to maximize the performance of a single range. To achieve this, multiple strategies can be applied:
- Minimize the network distance between the replicas of a range, possibly using zone configs and partitioning.
- Use the fastest storage devices available.
- If the contending transactions operate on different keys within the same range, add more CPU power (more cores) per node. Note however that this is less likely to provide an improvement if the transactions all operate on the same key.