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- Optimize Query Performance
Optimize Query Performance¶
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Create Indexes to Support Queries¶
For commonly issued queries, create indexes. If a query searches multiple fields, create a compound index. Scanning an index is much faster than scanning a collection. The indexes structures are smaller than the documents reference, and store references in order.
Example
If you have a posts
collection containing blog posts,
and if you regularly issue a query that sorts on the author_name
field, then you can optimize the query by creating an index on the
author_name
field:
Indexes also improve efficiency on queries that routinely sort on a given field.
Example
If you regularly issue a query that sorts on the
timestamp
field, then you can optimize the query by creating an
index on the timestamp
field:
Creating this index:
Optimizes this query:
Because MongoDB can read indexes in both ascending and descending order, the direction of a single-key index does not matter.
Indexes support queries, update operations, and some phases of the aggregation pipeline.
Index keys that are of the BinData
type are more efficiently stored
in the index if:
- the binary subtype value is in the range of 0-7 or 128-135, and
- the length of the byte array is: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 20, 24, or 32.
Limit the Number of Query Results to Reduce Network Demand¶
MongoDB cursors return results in groups of multiple
documents. If you know the number of results you want, you can reduce
the demand on network resources by issuing the limit()
method.
This is typically used in conjunction with sort operations. For example,
if you need only 10 results from your query to the posts
collection, you would issue the following command:
For more information on limiting results, see limit()
Use Projections to Return Only Necessary Data¶
When you need only a subset of fields from documents, you can achieve better performance by returning only the fields you need:
For example, if in your query to the posts
collection, you need only
the timestamp
, title
, author
, and abstract
fields, you
would issue the following command:
For more information on using projections, see Project Fields to Return from Query.
Use $hint
to Select a Particular Index¶
In most cases the query optimizer selects the optimal index for a
specific operation; however, you can force MongoDB to use a specific
index using the hint()
method. Use
hint()
to support performance testing, or on
some queries where you must select a field or field included in
several indexes.
Use the Increment Operator to Perform Operations Server-Side¶
Use MongoDB’s $inc
operator to increment or decrement
values in documents. The operator increments the value of the field on
the server side, as an alternative to selecting a document, making
simple modifications in the client and then writing the entire
document to the server. The $inc
operator can also help
avoid race conditions, which would result when two application
instances queried for a document, manually incremented a field, and
saved the entire document back at the same time.