Book Image

Advanced MySQL 8

By : Eric Vanier, Birju Shah, Tejaswi Malepati
Book Image

Advanced MySQL 8

By: Eric Vanier, Birju Shah, Tejaswi Malepati

Overview of this book

Advanced MySQL 8 teaches you to enhance your existing database infrastructure and build various tools to improve your enterprise applications and overall website performance. The book starts with the new and exciting MySQL 8.0 features and how to utilize them for maximum efficiency. As you make your way through the chapters, you will learn to optimize MySQL performance using indexes and advanced data query techniques for large queries. You will also discover MySQL Server 8.0 settings and work with the MySQL data dictionary to boost the performance of your database. In the concluding chapters, you will cover MySQL 8.0 Group Replication, which will enable you to create elastic, highly available, and fault-tolerant replication topologies. You will also explore backup and recovery techniques for your databases and understand important tips and tricks to help your critical data reach its full potential. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned about new MySQL 8.0 security features that allow a database administrator (DBA) to simplify user management and increase the security of their multi-user environments.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
11
Advanced MySQL Performance Tips and Techniques

How to know when to create an index

An index at the database level is the same principle as having an index at the end of a book. This is a completely separate section of the content from the rest of the book. So, do you see where I'm going with this? For example, if you are looking for a specific value, you can go to the index and search for it (the indexes are ordered, so finding things in this section is much faster than passing each page of the book).

A database index is an ordered list of relevant information that's used to expedite the search for records that match the criteria.

Specifically, you create an index when you have information that you need to look for frequently and need a quick answer for.

In other words, indexes prevent the DBMS from scanning the entire table looking for matching values, and they also help when you need to sort on a column.

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