I have a very simple query that is giving me some issues due to the size of the
database and the number of requests I make to it in order to compile the report
I need:
A dumbed down version of the table and query:
CREATE TABLE a_to_b (
id_a INT NOT NULL REFERENCES table_a(id),
id_b INT NOT NULL REFERENCES table_b(id),
PRIMARY KEY (id_a, id_b)
);
SELECT id_a, id_b FROM a_2_b WHERE id_a = 1 LIMIT 5;
The problem is that the table has a few million records and I need to query it
30+ times in a row.
I'd like to improve this with a parallel search using `IN()`
SELECT id_a, id_b FROM a_2_b WHERE id_a = IN
(1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26.27,28,29,30);
That technique has generally fixed a lot of bottlenecks for us.
However I can't wrap my head around structuring it so that I can apply a limit
based on the column -- so that I only get 5 records per id_a.
The table has columns that I would use for ordering in the future, but I'm fine
with just getting random values right now .
Can anyone offer some suggestions? Thanks in advance.
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