This optimization improves the efficiency of direct
comparisons between a nonindexed column and a constant. In
such cases, the condition is “pushed down” to the
storage engine for evaluation. This optimization can be used
only by the NDB storage engine.
For MySQL Cluster, this optimization can eliminate the need to send nonmatching rows over the network between the cluster's data nodes and the MySQL Server that issued the query, and can speed up queries where it is used by a factor of 5 to 10 times over cases where condition pushdown could be but is not used.
Suppose that a MySQL Cluster table is defined as follows:
CREATE TABLE t1 (
a INT,
b INT,
KEY(a)
) ENGINE=NDB;
Condition pushdown can be used with queries such as the one shown here, which includes a comparison between a nonindexed column and a constant:
SELECT a, b FROM t1 WHERE b = 10;
The use of condition pushdown can be seen in the output of
EXPLAIN:
mysql> EXPLAIN SELECT a,b FROM t1 WHERE b = 10\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
id: 1
select_type: SIMPLE
table: t1
type: ALL
possible_keys: NULL
key: NULL
key_len: NULL
ref: NULL
rows: 10
Extra: Using where with pushed condition
However, condition pushdown cannot be used with either of these two queries:
SELECT a,b FROM t1 WHERE a = 10; SELECT a,b FROM t1 WHERE b + 1 = 10;
Condition pushdown is not applicable to the first query
because an index exists on column a. (An
index access method would be more efficient and so would be
chosen in preference to condition pushdown.) Condition
pushdown cannot be employed for the second query because the
comparison involving the nonindexed column
b is indirect. (However, condition pushdown
could be applied if you were to reduce b + 1 =
10 to b = 9 in the
WHERE clause.)
Condition pushdown may also be employed when an indexed column
is compared with a constant using a > or
< operator:
mysql> EXPLAIN SELECT a, b FROM t1 WHERE a < 2\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
id: 1
select_type: SIMPLE
table: t1
type: range
possible_keys: a
key: a
key_len: 5
ref: NULL
rows: 2
Extra: Using where with pushed condition
Other supported comparisons for condition pushdown include the following:
column [NOT] LIKE
pattern
pattern must be a string
literal containing the pattern to be matched; for syntax,
see Section 12.5.1, “String Comparison Functions”.
column IS [NOT]
NULL
column IN
(value_list)
Each item in the value_list
must be a constant, literal value.
column BETWEEN
constant1 AND
constant2
constant1 and
constant2 must each be a
constant, literal value.
In all of the cases in the preceding list, it is possible for the condition to be converted into the form of one or more direct comparisons between a column and a constant.
Engine condition pushdown is enabled by default. To disable it
at server startup, set the
optimizer_switch system
variable. For example, in a my.cnf file,
use these lines:
[mysqld] optimizer_switch=engine_condition_pushdown=off
At runtime, enable condition pushdown like this:
SET optimizer_switch='engine_condition_pushdown=off';
Limitations. Engine condition pushdown is subject to the following limitations:
Condition pushdown is supported only by the
NDB storage engine.
Columns may be compared with constants only; however, this includes expressions which evaluate to constant values.
Columns used in comparisons cannot be of any of the
BLOB or
TEXT types.
A string value to be compared with a column must use the same collation as the column.
Joins are not directly supported; conditions involving
multiple tables are pushed separately where possible. Use
extended EXPLAIN output to
determine which conditions are actually pushed down. See
Section 8.8.3, “EXPLAIN EXTENDED Output Format”.