I have an API where I need to log which ids from a table that were returned in a query, and in another query, return results sorted based on the log of ids.
For example:
Tables products had a PK called id and users had a PK called id . I can create a log table with one insert/update per returned id. I'm wondering about performance and the design of this.
Essentially, for each returned ID in the API, I would:
INSERT INTO log (product_id, user_id, counter)
VALUES (@the_product_id, @the_user_id, 1)
ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE counter=counter+1;
.. I'd either have an id column as PK or a combination of product_id and user_id (alt. having those two as a UNIQUE index).
So the first issue is the performance of this (20 insert/updates and the effect on my select calls in the API) - is there a better/smarter way to log these IDs? Extracting from the webserver log?
Second is the performance of the select statements to include the logged data, to allow a user to see new products every request (a simplified example, I'd specify the table fields instead of * in real life):
SELECT p.*, IFNULL(
SELECT log.counter
FROM log
WHERE log.product_id = p.id
AND log.user_id = @the_user_id
, 0 ) AS seen_by_user
FROM products AS p
ORDER BY seen_by_user ASC
In our database, the products table has millions of rows, and the users table is growing rapidly. Am I right in my thinking to do it this way, or are there better ways? How do I optimize the process, and are there tools I can use?