Generating Depth based tree from Hierarchical Data in MySQL (no CTEs)

前端 未结 4 523
误落风尘
误落风尘 2020-11-22 05:06

Hi For many days I have been working on this problem in MySQL, however I can not figure it out. Do any of you have suggestions?

Basically, I have a category table wi

4条回答
  •  灰色年华
    2020-11-22 05:17

    You can do it in a single call from php to mysql if you use a stored procedure:

    Example calls

    mysql> call category_hier(1);
    
    +--------+---------------+---------------+----------------------+-------+
    | cat_id | category_name | parent_cat_id | parent_category_name | depth |
    +--------+---------------+---------------+----------------------+-------+
    |      1 | Location      |          NULL | NULL                 |     0 |
    |      3 | USA           |             1 | Location             |     1 |
    |      4 | Illinois      |             3 | USA                  |     2 |
    |      5 | Chicago       |             3 | USA                  |     2 |
    +--------+---------------+---------------+----------------------+-------+
    4 rows in set (0.00 sec)
    
    
    $sql = sprintf("call category_hier(%d)", $id);
    

    Hope this helps :)

    Full script

    Test table structure:

    drop table if exists categories;
    create table categories
    (
    cat_id smallint unsigned not null auto_increment primary key,
    name varchar(255) not null,
    parent_cat_id smallint unsigned null,
    key (parent_cat_id)
    )
    engine = innodb;
    

    Test data:

    insert into categories (name, parent_cat_id) values
    ('Location',null),
       ('USA',1), 
          ('Illinois',2), 
          ('Chicago',2),  
    ('Color',null), 
       ('Black',3), 
       ('Red',3);
    

    Procedure:

    drop procedure if exists category_hier;
    
    delimiter #
    
    create procedure category_hier
    (
    in p_cat_id smallint unsigned
    )
    begin
    
    declare v_done tinyint unsigned default 0;
    declare v_depth smallint unsigned default 0;
    
    create temporary table hier(
     parent_cat_id smallint unsigned, 
     cat_id smallint unsigned, 
     depth smallint unsigned default 0
    )engine = memory;
    
    insert into hier select parent_cat_id, cat_id, v_depth from categories where cat_id = p_cat_id;
    
    /* http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/temporary-table-problems.html */
    
    create temporary table tmp engine=memory select * from hier;
    
    while not v_done do
    
        if exists( select 1 from categories p inner join hier on p.parent_cat_id = hier.cat_id and hier.depth = v_depth) then
    
            insert into hier 
                select p.parent_cat_id, p.cat_id, v_depth + 1 from categories p 
                inner join tmp on p.parent_cat_id = tmp.cat_id and tmp.depth = v_depth;
    
            set v_depth = v_depth + 1;          
    
            truncate table tmp;
            insert into tmp select * from hier where depth = v_depth;
    
        else
            set v_done = 1;
        end if;
    
    end while;
    
    select 
     p.cat_id,
     p.name as category_name,
     b.cat_id as parent_cat_id,
     b.name as parent_category_name,
     hier.depth
    from 
     hier
    inner join categories p on hier.cat_id = p.cat_id
    left outer join categories b on hier.parent_cat_id = b.cat_id
    order by
     hier.depth, hier.cat_id;
    
    drop temporary table if exists hier;
    drop temporary table if exists tmp;
    
    end #
    

    Test runs:

    delimiter ;
    
    call category_hier(1);
    
    call category_hier(2);
    

    Some performance testing using Yahoo geoplanet places data

    drop table if exists geoplanet_places;
    create table geoplanet_places
    (
    woe_id int unsigned not null,
    iso_code  varchar(3) not null,
    name varchar(255) not null,
    lang varchar(8) not null,
    place_type varchar(32) not null,
    parent_woe_id int unsigned not null,
    primary key (woe_id),
    key (parent_woe_id)
    )
    engine=innodb;
    
    mysql> select count(*) from geoplanet_places;
    +----------+
    | count(*) |
    +----------+
    |  5653967 |
    +----------+
    

    so that's 5.6 million rows (places) in the table let's see how the adjacency list implementation/stored procedure called from php handles that.

         1 records fetched with max depth 0 in 0.001921 secs
       250 records fetched with max depth 1 in 0.004883 secs
       515 records fetched with max depth 1 in 0.006552 secs
       822 records fetched with max depth 1 in 0.009568 secs
       918 records fetched with max depth 1 in 0.009689 secs
      1346 records fetched with max depth 1 in 0.040453 secs
      5901 records fetched with max depth 2 in 0.219246 secs
      6817 records fetched with max depth 1 in 0.152841 secs
      8621 records fetched with max depth 3 in 0.096665 secs
     18098 records fetched with max depth 3 in 0.580223 secs
    238007 records fetched with max depth 4 in 2.003213 secs
    

    Overall i'm pretty pleased with those cold runtimes as I wouldn't even begin to consider returning tens of thousands of rows of data to my front end but would rather build the tree dynamically fetching only several levels per call. Oh and just incase you were thinking innodb is slower than myisam - the myisam implementation I tested was twice as slow in all counts.

    More stuff here : http://pastie.org/1672733

    Hope this helps :)

提交回复
热议问题