optimization.txt 18 KB

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  1. ============================
  2. Database access optimization
  3. ============================
  4. Django's database layer provides various ways to help developers get the most
  5. out of their databases. This document gathers together links to the relevant
  6. documentation, and adds various tips, organized under a number of headings that
  7. outline the steps to take when attempting to optimize your database usage.
  8. Profile first
  9. =============
  10. As general programming practice, this goes without saying. Find out :ref:`what
  11. queries you are doing and what they are costing you <faq-see-raw-sql-queries>`.
  12. Use :meth:`.QuerySet.explain` to understand how specific ``QuerySet``\s are
  13. executed by your database. You may also want to use an external project like
  14. :pypi:`django-debug-toolbar`, or a tool that monitors your database directly.
  15. Remember that you may be optimizing for speed or memory or both, depending on
  16. your requirements. Sometimes optimizing for one will be detrimental to the
  17. other, but sometimes they will help each other. Also, work that is done by the
  18. database process might not have the same cost (to you) as the same amount of
  19. work done in your Python process. It is up to you to decide what your
  20. priorities are, where the balance must lie, and profile all of these as required
  21. since this will depend on your application and server.
  22. With everything that follows, remember to profile after every change to ensure
  23. that the change is a benefit, and a big enough benefit given the decrease in
  24. readability of your code. **All** of the suggestions below come with the caveat
  25. that in your circumstances the general principle might not apply, or might even
  26. be reversed.
  27. Use standard DB optimization techniques
  28. =======================================
  29. ...including:
  30. * Indexes_. This is a number one priority, *after* you have determined from
  31. profiling what indexes should be added. Use
  32. :attr:`Meta.indexes <django.db.models.Options.indexes>` or
  33. :attr:`Field.db_index <django.db.models.Field.db_index>` to add these from
  34. Django. Consider adding indexes to fields that you frequently query using
  35. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.filter()`,
  36. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.exclude()`,
  37. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.order_by()`, etc. as indexes may help
  38. to speed up lookups. Note that determining the best indexes is a complex
  39. database-dependent topic that will depend on your particular application.
  40. The overhead of maintaining an index may outweigh any gains in query speed.
  41. .. _Indexes: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_index
  42. * Appropriate use of field types.
  43. We will assume you have done the things listed above. The rest of this document
  44. focuses on how to use Django in such a way that you are not doing unnecessary
  45. work. This document also does not address other optimization techniques that
  46. apply to all expensive operations, such as :doc:`general purpose caching
  47. </topics/cache>`.
  48. Understand ``QuerySet``\s
  49. =========================
  50. Understanding :doc:`QuerySets </ref/models/querysets>` is vital to getting good
  51. performance with simple code. In particular:
  52. Understand ``QuerySet`` evaluation
  53. ----------------------------------
  54. To avoid performance problems, it is important to understand:
  55. * that :ref:`QuerySets are lazy <querysets-are-lazy>`.
  56. * when :ref:`they are evaluated <when-querysets-are-evaluated>`.
  57. * how :ref:`the data is held in memory <caching-and-querysets>`.
  58. Understand cached attributes
  59. ----------------------------
  60. As well as caching of the whole ``QuerySet``, there is caching of the result of
  61. attributes on ORM objects. In general, attributes that are not callable will be
  62. cached. For example, assuming the :ref:`example blog models
  63. <queryset-model-example>`:
  64. .. code-block:: pycon
  65. >>> entry = Entry.objects.get(id=1)
  66. >>> entry.blog # Blog object is retrieved at this point
  67. >>> entry.blog # cached version, no DB access
  68. But in general, callable attributes cause DB lookups every time:
  69. .. code-block:: pycon
  70. >>> entry = Entry.objects.get(id=1)
  71. >>> entry.authors.all() # query performed
  72. >>> entry.authors.all() # query performed again
  73. Be careful when reading template code - the template system does not allow use
  74. of parentheses, but will call callables automatically, hiding the above
  75. distinction.
  76. Be careful with your own custom properties - it is up to you to implement
  77. caching when required, for example using the
  78. :class:`~django.utils.functional.cached_property` decorator.
  79. Use the ``with`` template tag
  80. -----------------------------
  81. To make use of the caching behavior of ``QuerySet``, you may need to use the
  82. :ttag:`with` template tag.
  83. Use ``iterator()``
  84. ------------------
  85. When you have a lot of objects, the caching behavior of the ``QuerySet`` can
  86. cause a large amount of memory to be used. In this case,
  87. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.iterator()` may help.
  88. Use ``explain()``
  89. -----------------
  90. :meth:`.QuerySet.explain` gives you detailed information about how the database
  91. executes a query, including indexes and joins that are used. These details may
  92. help you find queries that could be rewritten more efficiently, or identify
  93. indexes that could be added to improve performance.
  94. Do database work in the database rather than in Python
  95. ======================================================
  96. For instance:
  97. * At the most basic level, use :ref:`filter and exclude <queryset-api>` to do
  98. filtering in the database.
  99. * Use :class:`F expressions <django.db.models.F>` to filter
  100. based on other fields within the same model.
  101. * Use :doc:`annotate to do aggregation in the database
  102. </topics/db/aggregation>`.
  103. If these aren't enough to generate the SQL you need:
  104. Use ``RawSQL``
  105. --------------
  106. A less portable but more powerful method is the
  107. :class:`~django.db.models.expressions.RawSQL` expression, which allows some SQL
  108. to be explicitly added to the query. If that still isn't powerful enough:
  109. Use raw SQL
  110. -----------
  111. Write your own :doc:`custom SQL to retrieve data or populate models
  112. </topics/db/sql>`. Use ``django.db.connection.queries`` to find out what Django
  113. is writing for you and start from there.
  114. Retrieve individual objects using a unique, indexed column
  115. ==========================================================
  116. There are two reasons to use a column with
  117. :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.unique` or
  118. :attr:`~django.db.models.Field.db_index` when using
  119. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.get` to retrieve individual objects.
  120. First, the query will be quicker because of the underlying database index.
  121. Also, the query could run much slower if multiple objects match the lookup;
  122. having a unique constraint on the column guarantees this will never happen.
  123. So using the :ref:`example blog models <queryset-model-example>`:
  124. .. code-block:: pycon
  125. >>> entry = Entry.objects.get(id=10)
  126. will be quicker than:
  127. .. code-block:: pycon
  128. >>> entry = Entry.objects.get(headline="News Item Title")
  129. because ``id`` is indexed by the database and is guaranteed to be unique.
  130. Doing the following is potentially quite slow:
  131. .. code-block:: pycon
  132. >>> entry = Entry.objects.get(headline__startswith="News")
  133. First of all, ``headline`` is not indexed, which will make the underlying
  134. database fetch slower.
  135. Second, the lookup doesn't guarantee that only one object will be returned.
  136. If the query matches more than one object, it will retrieve and transfer all of
  137. them from the database. This penalty could be substantial if hundreds or
  138. thousands of records are returned. The penalty will be compounded if the
  139. database lives on a separate server, where network overhead and latency also
  140. play a factor.
  141. Retrieve everything at once if you know you will need it
  142. ========================================================
  143. Hitting the database multiple times for different parts of a single 'set' of
  144. data that you will need all parts of is, in general, less efficient than
  145. retrieving it all in one query. This is particularly important if you have a
  146. query that is executed in a loop, and could therefore end up doing many database
  147. queries, when only one was needed. So:
  148. Use ``QuerySet.select_related()`` and ``prefetch_related()``
  149. ------------------------------------------------------------
  150. Understand :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.select_related` and
  151. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.prefetch_related` thoroughly, and use
  152. them:
  153. * in :doc:`managers and default managers </topics/db/managers>` where
  154. appropriate. Be aware when your manager is and is not used; sometimes this is
  155. tricky so don't make assumptions.
  156. * in view code or other layers, possibly making use of
  157. :func:`~django.db.models.prefetch_related_objects` where needed.
  158. Don't retrieve things you don't need
  159. ====================================
  160. Use ``QuerySet.values()`` and ``values_list()``
  161. -----------------------------------------------
  162. When you only want a ``dict`` or ``list`` of values, and don't need ORM model
  163. objects, make appropriate usage of
  164. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.values()`.
  165. These can be useful for replacing model objects in template code - as long as
  166. the dicts you supply have the same attributes as those used in the template,
  167. you are fine.
  168. Use ``QuerySet.defer()`` and ``only()``
  169. ---------------------------------------
  170. Use :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.defer()` and
  171. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.only()` if there are database columns
  172. you know that you won't need (or won't need in most cases) to avoid loading
  173. them. Note that if you *do* use them, the ORM will have to go and get them in
  174. a separate query, making this a pessimization if you use it inappropriately.
  175. Don't be too aggressive in deferring fields without profiling as the database
  176. has to read most of the non-text, non-``VARCHAR`` data from the disk for a
  177. single row in the results, even if it ends up only using a few columns. The
  178. ``defer()`` and ``only()`` methods are most useful when you can avoid loading a
  179. lot of text data or for fields that might take a lot of processing to convert
  180. back to Python. As always, profile first, then optimize.
  181. Use ``QuerySet.contains(obj)``
  182. ------------------------------
  183. ...if you only want to find out if ``obj`` is in the queryset, rather than
  184. ``if obj in queryset``.
  185. Use ``QuerySet.count()``
  186. ------------------------
  187. ...if you only want the count, rather than doing ``len(queryset)``.
  188. Use ``QuerySet.exists()``
  189. -------------------------
  190. ...if you only want to find out if at least one result exists, rather than ``if
  191. queryset``.
  192. But:
  193. .. _overuse_of_count_and_exists:
  194. Don't overuse ``contains()``, ``count()``, and ``exists()``
  195. -----------------------------------------------------------
  196. If you are going to need other data from the QuerySet, evaluate it immediately.
  197. For example, assuming a ``Group`` model that has a many-to-many relation to
  198. ``User``, the following code is optimal::
  199. members = group.members.all()
  200. if display_group_members:
  201. if members:
  202. if current_user in members:
  203. print("You and", len(members) - 1, "other users are members of this group.")
  204. else:
  205. print("There are", len(members), "members in this group.")
  206. for member in members:
  207. print(member.username)
  208. else:
  209. print("There are no members in this group.")
  210. It is optimal because:
  211. #. Since QuerySets are lazy, this does no database queries if
  212. ``display_group_members`` is ``False``.
  213. #. Storing ``group.members.all()`` in the ``members`` variable allows its
  214. result cache to be reused.
  215. #. The line ``if members:`` causes ``QuerySet.__bool__()`` to be called, which
  216. causes the ``group.members.all()`` query to be run on the database. If there
  217. aren't any results, it will return ``False``, otherwise ``True``.
  218. #. The line ``if current_user in members:`` checks if the user is in the result
  219. cache, so no additional database queries are issued.
  220. #. The use of ``len(members)`` calls ``QuerySet.__len__()``, reusing the result
  221. cache, so again, no database queries are issued.
  222. #. The ``for member`` loop iterates over the result cache.
  223. In total, this code does either one or zero database queries. The only
  224. deliberate optimization performed is using the ``members`` variable. Using
  225. ``QuerySet.exists()`` for the ``if``, ``QuerySet.contains()`` for the ``in``,
  226. or ``QuerySet.count()`` for the count would each cause additional queries.
  227. Use ``QuerySet.update()`` and ``delete()``
  228. ------------------------------------------
  229. Rather than retrieve a load of objects, set some values, and save them
  230. individual, use a bulk SQL UPDATE statement, via :ref:`QuerySet.update()
  231. <topics-db-queries-update>`. Similarly, do :ref:`bulk deletes
  232. <topics-db-queries-delete>` where possible.
  233. Note, however, that these bulk update methods cannot call the ``save()`` or
  234. ``delete()`` methods of individual instances, which means that any custom
  235. behavior you have added for these methods will not be executed, including
  236. anything driven from the normal database object :doc:`signals </ref/signals>`.
  237. Use foreign key values directly
  238. -------------------------------
  239. If you only need a foreign key value, use the foreign key value that is already on
  240. the object you've got, rather than getting the whole related object and taking
  241. its primary key. i.e. do::
  242. entry.blog_id
  243. instead of::
  244. entry.blog.id
  245. Don't order results if you don't care
  246. -------------------------------------
  247. Ordering is not free; each field to order by is an operation the database must
  248. perform. If a model has a default ordering (:attr:`Meta.ordering
  249. <django.db.models.Options.ordering>`) and you don't need it, remove
  250. it on a ``QuerySet`` by calling
  251. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.order_by()` with no parameters.
  252. Adding an index to your database may help to improve ordering performance.
  253. Use bulk methods
  254. ================
  255. Use bulk methods to reduce the number of SQL statements.
  256. Create in bulk
  257. --------------
  258. When creating objects, where possible, use the
  259. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.bulk_create()` method to reduce the
  260. number of SQL queries. For example::
  261. Entry.objects.bulk_create(
  262. [
  263. Entry(headline="This is a test"),
  264. Entry(headline="This is only a test"),
  265. ]
  266. )
  267. ...is preferable to::
  268. Entry.objects.create(headline="This is a test")
  269. Entry.objects.create(headline="This is only a test")
  270. Note that there are a number of :meth:`caveats to this method
  271. <django.db.models.query.QuerySet.bulk_create>`, so make sure it's appropriate
  272. for your use case.
  273. Update in bulk
  274. --------------
  275. When updating objects, where possible, use the
  276. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.bulk_update()` method to reduce the
  277. number of SQL queries. Given a list or queryset of objects::
  278. entries = Entry.objects.bulk_create(
  279. [
  280. Entry(headline="This is a test"),
  281. Entry(headline="This is only a test"),
  282. ]
  283. )
  284. The following example::
  285. entries[0].headline = "This is not a test"
  286. entries[1].headline = "This is no longer a test"
  287. Entry.objects.bulk_update(entries, ["headline"])
  288. ...is preferable to::
  289. entries[0].headline = "This is not a test"
  290. entries[0].save()
  291. entries[1].headline = "This is no longer a test"
  292. entries[1].save()
  293. Note that there are a number of :meth:`caveats to this method
  294. <django.db.models.query.QuerySet.bulk_update>`, so make sure it's appropriate
  295. for your use case.
  296. Insert in bulk
  297. --------------
  298. When inserting objects into :class:`ManyToManyFields
  299. <django.db.models.ManyToManyField>`, use
  300. :meth:`~django.db.models.fields.related.RelatedManager.add` with multiple
  301. objects to reduce the number of SQL queries. For example::
  302. my_band.members.add(me, my_friend)
  303. ...is preferable to::
  304. my_band.members.add(me)
  305. my_band.members.add(my_friend)
  306. ...where ``Bands`` and ``Artists`` have a many-to-many relationship.
  307. When inserting different pairs of objects into
  308. :class:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField` or when the custom
  309. :attr:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField.through` table is defined, use
  310. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.bulk_create()` method to reduce the
  311. number of SQL queries. For example::
  312. PizzaToppingRelationship = Pizza.toppings.through
  313. PizzaToppingRelationship.objects.bulk_create(
  314. [
  315. PizzaToppingRelationship(pizza=my_pizza, topping=pepperoni),
  316. PizzaToppingRelationship(pizza=your_pizza, topping=pepperoni),
  317. PizzaToppingRelationship(pizza=your_pizza, topping=mushroom),
  318. ],
  319. ignore_conflicts=True,
  320. )
  321. ...is preferable to::
  322. my_pizza.toppings.add(pepperoni)
  323. your_pizza.toppings.add(pepperoni, mushroom)
  324. ...where ``Pizza`` and ``Topping`` have a many-to-many relationship. Note that
  325. there are a number of :meth:`caveats to this method
  326. <django.db.models.query.QuerySet.bulk_create>`, so make sure it's appropriate
  327. for your use case.
  328. Remove in bulk
  329. --------------
  330. When removing objects from :class:`ManyToManyFields
  331. <django.db.models.ManyToManyField>`, use
  332. :meth:`~django.db.models.fields.related.RelatedManager.remove` with multiple
  333. objects to reduce the number of SQL queries. For example::
  334. my_band.members.remove(me, my_friend)
  335. ...is preferable to::
  336. my_band.members.remove(me)
  337. my_band.members.remove(my_friend)
  338. ...where ``Bands`` and ``Artists`` have a many-to-many relationship.
  339. When removing different pairs of objects from :class:`ManyToManyFields
  340. <django.db.models.ManyToManyField>`, use
  341. :meth:`~django.db.models.query.QuerySet.delete` on a
  342. :class:`~django.db.models.Q` expression with multiple
  343. :attr:`~django.db.models.ManyToManyField.through` model instances to reduce
  344. the number of SQL queries. For example::
  345. from django.db.models import Q
  346. PizzaToppingRelationship = Pizza.toppings.through
  347. PizzaToppingRelationship.objects.filter(
  348. Q(pizza=my_pizza, topping=pepperoni)
  349. | Q(pizza=your_pizza, topping=pepperoni)
  350. | Q(pizza=your_pizza, topping=mushroom)
  351. ).delete()
  352. ...is preferable to::
  353. my_pizza.toppings.remove(pepperoni)
  354. your_pizza.toppings.remove(pepperoni, mushroom)
  355. ...where ``Pizza`` and ``Topping`` have a many-to-many relationship.