Using Indexes to Optimize Equality Conditions

Using indexes can help you improve the performance of queries that have equality conditions. You can define indexes that optimize equality conditions on scalar data fields, nested document and array fields, and container field paths.

If the index has a single key, the condition limits the index search to only the keys matching the scalar value. If the index has more than one key and there are equality conditions on all keys, the conditions limit the search to the combined matching values. If there are conditions on a subset of fields and the most significant keys have equality conditions, HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database limits the search to those scalar values.

Assume that you have a HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database JSON table with documents in the following format:

{
   "_id": "10000",
   "FullName": {
      "LastName": "Smith",
      "FirstName": "John"
   },
   "Address": {
      "Street": "123 SE 22nd St.",
      "City": "Oakland",
      "State": "CA",
      "Zipcode": "94601-1001"
   },
   "Gender": "M",
   "AccountBalance": 999.99,
   "Email": "john.smith@company.com",
   "Phones": [
        {"Type": "Home", "Number": "555-555-1234"},
        {"Type": "Mobile", "Number": "555-555-5678"},
        {"Type": "Work", "Number": "555-555-9012"}
   ],
   "Hobbies": ["Baseball", "Cooking", "Reading"],
   "DateOfBirth": "10/1/1985"
}

The examples in the following sections reference this sample JSON document.

Indexes on Scalar Data Fields in Equality Conditions

The following table provides examples where HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database can and cannot use the index with equality conditions on scalar data. The last entry in the table illustrates the case where you can use index to optimize an equality condition in combination with a range condition.
NOTE
This example assumes that a composite index exists on fields Address.State and Address.City.
Query Condition How HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database Uses the Index
{
  "$and":[
    {"$eq":{"Address.State":"CA"}},
    {"$eq":{"Address.City":"Oakland"}}
  ]
}
Performs a lookup on the specified state and city values, and reads the index until the conditions no longer match.
{"$eq":{"Address.State":"CA"}}
Performs a prefix lookup to find matching state values. The value of the Address.City field is not relevant. Continues reading from the index until the state field no longer matches "CA".
{
  "$and":[
    {"$in":{"Address.State":["CA","NY","MA"]}},
    {"$eq":{"Address.City":"Springfield"}}
  ]
}
Performs the following three lookups in the index:
  • Address.State = "CA" and Address.City = "Springfield"
  • Address.State = "NY" and Address.City = "Springfield"
  • Address.State = "MA" and Address.City = "Springfield"
{"$eq":{"Address.City":"Oakland"}}
Even if the query references the field Address.State, HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database cannot use the index unless there is also an equality condition on the leading key of the index, Address.State.
{"$in":{"Address.State":["CA","NY","MA"]}}
Performs three prefix lookups, one for each of the values in the IN clause.
{
  "$and":[
    {"$eq":{"Address.State":"CA"}},
    {"$ge":{"Address.City":"Oak"}}
  ]
}
Reads from the index starting at the condition Address.State = "CA" and Address.City = "Oak". Continues reading the index until the condition Address.State = "CA" no longer qualifies.

Indexes on Nested Document Fields in Equality Conditions

Starting in data-fabric 6.1, you can define an index on fields that contain nested documents. These indexes benefit only equality conditions. The query condition must specify all subfields from the nested document. They must match the subfields of nested documents stored in your HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database JSON table. The order of the subfields is not relevant.

For example, if you define an index on the Addresses field, and specify the following query condition:

{
  "$eq":{
    "Addresses":{
      "Street":"123 SE 22nd St.",
      "City":"Oakland",
      "State":"CA",
      "Zipcode":"94601-1001"
    }
  }
}

HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database can use the index to locate the sample document shown earlier.

On the other hand, if you specify the following condition instead:

{
  "$eq":{
    "Addresses":{
      "City": "Oakland",
      "State": "CA"
    }
  }
}

When HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database reads using the index and applies this query condition, it does not match the sample document. The condition is missing the Street and Zipcode subfields. If you want to match on only the City and State subfields, you can define a composite index on those subfields as described in the previous section.

Indexes on Array Fields in Equality Conditions

Starting in data-fabric 6.1, you can define an index on fields that contain array data. These indexes benefit only equality conditions. The array elements and their order specified in your query condition must match the content and order stored in your HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database JSON table.

For example, if you define an index on the Hobbies field, and specify the following query condition:

{"$eq":{"Hobbies":["Baseball", "Cooking", "Reading"]}}

HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database can use the index to locate the sample document shown earlier.

On the other hand, if you specify the following condition instead:

{"$eq":{"Hobbies":["Cooking", "Baseball", "Reading"]}}

When HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database reads using the index and applies this query condition, it does not match the sample document. Although the individual array elements match, the order does not.

If Hobbies also has scalar data, HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database can use the index to locate documents with the following condition:

{"$eq":{"Hobbies":"Baseball"}}

If your HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database JSON table has a document where the Hobbies field has a single value "Baseball", HPE Ezmeral Data Fabric Database can use the index to locate the matching document.

Indexes on Container Field Paths in Equality Conditions

Starting in data-fabric 6.1, you can define an index using a container field path as the indexed field.

For example, suppose you want to search for individual hobbies within the Hobbies array field, rather than matching the entire array field. You can define an index on the following field:

Hobbies[]

The following examples show equality conditions that benefit from this index:

Query Condition Description
{"$eq":{"Hobbies[]":"Baseball"}}
Finds documents that contain Baseball as a hobby
{"$in":{"Hobbies[]":["Baseball","Cooking"]}}
Finds documents that contain either Baseball or Cooking as a hobby
{
    "$and":[
        {"$eq":{"Hobbies[]":"Baseball"}},
        {"$eq":{"Hobbies[]":"Cooking"}}
    ]
}
Finds documents that contain both Baseball and Cooking as hobbies

When using the Hobbies[] container field path in the query condition, the condition matches both array elements and individual scalar values.

For another example, suppose you want to filter on phone types. You can define an index on the following field:

Phones[].Type

The following examples show equality conditions that benefit from this index:

Query Condition Description
{"$eq":{"Phones[].Type":"Mobile"}}
Finds documents that have a mobile phone number
{"$in":{"Phones[].Type":["Mobile","Work"]}}
Finds documents that contain either a mobile or work phone number
{
    "$and":[
        {"$eq":{"Phones[].Type":"Mobile"}},
        {"$eq":{"Phones[].Type":"Work"}}
    ]
}
Finds documents that contain both mobile and work phone numbers

When using the Phones[].Type container field path in the query condition, the condition matches instances where Phones is an array of nested documents as well as a single nested document.

IMPORTANT
To use an index defined on a container field path, the container field paths in the query condition and indexed fields must match.

The following table shows examples of conditions that do not benefit from the index shown:

Indexed Field Query Conditions that do not Benefit
Hobbies
{"$eq":{"Hobbies[]":"Baseball"}}

This condition requires an index defined on Hobbies[].

Hobbies[]
{"$eq":{"Hobbies":["Baseball", "Cooking"]}}

This condition requires an index defined on Hobbies.

Phones[].Type
{"$eq":{"Phones[0].Type":"Mobile"}}

This condition cannot be used with indexes because you cannot define an index on array elements.

temps[][]
{"$ge":{"temps[][1]":60}}

This condition cannot be used with indexes because you cannot define an index on array elements..

{"$eq":{"temps[]":[78,54]}}

This condition requires an index defined on temps[].

temps[]
{"$ge":{"temps[][]":60}}

This condition requires an index defined on temps[][].