Table of Contents
INFORMATION_SCHEMA SCHEMATA
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA TABLES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA COLUMNS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA STATISTICS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA USER_PRIVILEGES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA SCHEMA_PRIVILEGES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA TABLE_PRIVILEGES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA COLUMN_PRIVILEGES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA CHARACTER_SETS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA COLLATIONS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA
COLLATION_CHARACTER_SET_APPLICABILITY
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA TABLE_CONSTRAINTS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA ROUTINES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA VIEWS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA TRIGGERS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA PLUGINS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA ENGINES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA PARTITIONS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA EVENTS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA FILES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA TABLESPACES
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA PROCESSLIST
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA GLOBAL_STATUS
and
SESSION_STATUS
TablesINFORMATION_SCHEMA GLOBAL_VARIABLES
and
SESSION_VARIABLES
TablesINFORMATION_SCHEMA PARAMETERS
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA PROFILING
TableINFORMATION_SCHEMA
Tables for
InnoDB
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
TablesINFORMATION_SCHEMA
TablesSHOW
Statements
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
provides access to database
metadata.
Metadata is data about the data, such as the name of a database or table, the data type of a column, or access privileges. Other terms that sometimes are used for this information are data dictionary and system catalog.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
is the information database,
the place that stores information about all the other databases that
the MySQL server maintains. Inside
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
there are several read-only
tables. They are actually views, not base tables, so there are no
files associated with them.
In effect, we have a database named
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, although the server does not
create a database directory with that name. It is possible to select
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
as the default database with a
USE
statement, but it is possible
only to read the contents of tables. You cannot insert into them,
update them, or delete from them.
The fact that INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables are
actually views also means that you cannot set triggers on them. See
Section 18.3, “Using Triggers”.
Here is an example of a statement that retrieves information from
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
:
mysql>SELECT table_name, table_type, engine
->FROM information_schema.tables
->WHERE table_schema = 'db5'
->ORDER BY table_name DESC;
+------------+------------+--------+ | table_name | table_type | engine | +------------+------------+--------+ | v56 | VIEW | NULL | | v3 | VIEW | NULL | | v2 | VIEW | NULL | | v | VIEW | NULL | | tables | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | t7 | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | t3 | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | t2 | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | t | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | pk | BASE TABLE | InnoDB | | loop | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | kurs | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | k | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | into | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | goto | BASE TABLE | MyISAM | | fk2 | BASE TABLE | InnoDB | | fk | BASE TABLE | InnoDB | +------------+------------+--------+ 17 rows in set (0.01 sec)
Explanation: The statement requests a list of all the tables in
database db5
, in reverse alphabetic order,
showing just three pieces of information: the name of the table, its
type, and its storage engine.
The definition for character columns (for example,
TABLES.TABLE_NAME
) is generally
VARCHAR(
where N
) CHARACTER SET
utf8N
is at least 64.
MySQL uses the default collation for this character set
(utf8_general_ci
) for all searches, sorts,
comparisons, and other string operations on such columns. However,
searches in INFORMATION_SCHEMA
string columns are
also affected by file system case sensitivity. For more information,
see Section 9.1.7.9, “Collation and INFORMATION_SCHEMA
Searches”.
Each MySQL user has the right to access these tables, but can see
only the rows in the tables that correspond to objects for which the
user has the proper access privileges. In some cases (for example,
the ROUTINE_DEFINITION
column in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ROUTINES
table),
users who have insufficient privileges will see
NULL
.
The SELECT ... FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA
statement
is intended as a more consistent way to provide access to the
information provided by the various
SHOW
statements that MySQL supports
(SHOW DATABASES
,
SHOW TABLES
, and so forth). Using
SELECT
has these advantages, compared
to SHOW
:
It conforms to Codd's rules. That is, all access is done on tables.
Nobody needs to learn a new statement syntax. Because they
already know how SELECT
works,
they only need to learn the object names.
The implementor need not worry about adding keywords.
There are millions of possible output variations, instead of just one. This provides more flexibility for applications that have varying requirements about what metadata they need.
Migration is easier because every other DBMS does it this way.
However, because SHOW
is popular and
because it might be confusing were it to disappear, the advantages
of conventional syntax are not a sufficient reason to eliminate
SHOW
. In fact, along with the
implementation of INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, there are
enhancements to SHOW
as well. These
are described in Section 19.32, “Extensions to SHOW
Statements”.
There is no difference between the privileges required for
SHOW
statements and those required to
select information from INFORMATION_SCHEMA
. In
either case, you have to have some privilege on an object in order
to see information about it.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
queries that search for
information from more than one database might take a long time and
impact performance. To check the efficiency of a query, you can use
EXPLAIN
. For information about
EXPLAIN
output that is specific to
interpreting the cost of INFORMATION_SCHEMA
queries, see Section 7.2.4, “Optimizing INFORMATION_SCHEMA
Queries”.
The implementation for the INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table structures in MySQL follows the ANSI/ISO SQL:2003 standard
Part 11 Schemata. Our intent is approximate
compliance with SQL:2003 core feature F021 Basic
information schema.
Users of SQL Server 2000 (which also follows the standard) may
notice a strong similarity. However, MySQL has omitted many columns
that are not relevant for our implementation, and added columns that
are MySQL-specific. One such column is the ENGINE
column in the INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
table.
Although other DBMSs use a variety of names, like
syscat
or system
, the standard
name is INFORMATION_SCHEMA
.
The following sections describe each of the tables and columns that
are in INFORMATION_SCHEMA
. For each column, there
are three pieces of information:
“INFORMATION_SCHEMA
Name”
indicates the name for the column in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table. This corresponds to
the standard SQL name unless the “Remarks” field
says “MySQL extension.”
“SHOW
Name”
indicates the equivalent field name in the closest
SHOW
statement, if there is one.
“Remarks” provides additional information where
applicable. If this field is NULL
, it means
that the value of the column is always NULL
.
If this field says “MySQL extension,” the column is
a MySQL extension to standard SQL.
To avoid using any name that is reserved in the standard or in DB2,
SQL Server, or Oracle, we changed the names of some columns marked
“MySQL extension”. (For example, we changed
COLLATION
to TABLE_COLLATION
in the TABLES
table.) See the list of
reserved words near the end of this article:
http://web.archive.org/web/20070409075643rn_1/www.dbazine.com/db2/db2-disarticles/gulutzan5.
Each section indicates what SHOW
statement is equivalent to a SELECT
that retrieves information from
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, if there is such a statement.
For SHOW
statements that display
information for the default database if you omit a FROM
clause, you can often
select information for the default database by adding an
db_name
AND TABLE_SCHEMA = SCHEMA()
condition to the
WHERE
clause of a query that retrieves
information from an INFORMATION_SCHEMA
table.
At present, there are some missing columns and some columns out of order. We are working on this and updating the documentation as changes are made.
For answers to questions that are often asked concerning the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
database, see
Section B.7, “MySQL 5.5 FAQ: INFORMATION_SCHEMA
”.
A schema is a database, so the
SCHEMATA
table provides information
about databases.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
CATALOG_NAME | def | |
SCHEMA_NAME | Database | |
DEFAULT_CHARACTER_SET_NAME | ||
DEFAULT_COLLATION_NAME | ||
SQL_PATH | NULL |
The following statements are equivalent:
SELECT SCHEMA_NAME AS `Database` FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.SCHEMATA [WHERE SCHEMA_NAME LIKE 'wild
'] SHOW DATABASES [LIKE 'wild
']
The TABLES
table provides information
about tables in databases.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
TABLE_CATALOG | def | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | Table_ ... | |
TABLE_NAME | Table_ ... | |
TABLE_TYPE | ||
ENGINE | Engine | MySQL extension |
VERSION | Version | The version number of the table's .frm file, MySQL
extension |
ROW_FORMAT | Row_format | MySQL extension |
TABLE_ROWS | Rows | MySQL extension |
AVG_ROW_LENGTH | Avg_row_length | MySQL extension |
DATA_LENGTH | Data_length | MySQL extension |
MAX_DATA_LENGTH | Max_data_length | MySQL extension |
INDEX_LENGTH | Index_length | MySQL extension |
DATA_FREE | Data_free | MySQL extension |
AUTO_INCREMENT | Auto_increment | MySQL extension |
CREATE_TIME | Create_time | MySQL extension |
UPDATE_TIME | Update_time | MySQL extension |
CHECK_TIME | Check_time | MySQL extension |
TABLE_COLLATION | Collation | MySQL extension |
CHECKSUM | Checksum | MySQL extension |
CREATE_OPTIONS | Create_options | MySQL extension |
TABLE_COMMENT | Comment | MySQL extension |
Notes:
TABLE_SCHEMA
and
TABLE_NAME
are a single field in a
SHOW
display, for example
Table_in_db1
.
TABLE_TYPE
should be BASE
TABLE
or VIEW
. Currently, the
TABLES
table does not list
TEMPORARY
tables.
For partitioned tables, the ENGINE
column
shows the name of the storage engine used by all partitions.
(Previously, this column showed PARTITION
for such tables.)
The TABLE_ROWS
column is
NULL
if the table is in the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
database.
For InnoDB
tables, the row count
is only a rough estimate used in SQL optimization. (This is
also true if the InnoDB
table is
partitioned.)
For NDB
tables,
DATA_LENGTH
includes data stored in main
memory only; the MAX_DATA_LENGTH
and
DATA_FREE
columns apply to Disk Data.
For MySQL Cluster Disk Data tables,
MAX_DATA_LENGTH
shows the space allocated
for the disk part of a Disk Data table or fragment. (In-memory
data resource usage is reported by the
DATA_LENGTH
column.)
The DATA_FREE
column shows the free space
in bytes for InnoDB
tables.
For MySQL Cluster, DATA_FREE
shows the
space allocated on disk for, but not used by, a Disk Data
table or fragment on disk. (In-memory data resource usage is
reported by the DATA_LENGTH
column.)
We have nothing for the table's default character set.
TABLE_COLLATION
is close, because collation
names begin with a character set name.
The CREATE_OPTIONS
column shows
partitioned
if the table is partitioned.
The following statements are equivalent:
SELECT table_name FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES WHERE table_schema = 'db_name
' [AND table_name LIKE 'wild
'] SHOW TABLES FROMdb_name
[LIKE 'wild
']
The COLUMNS
table provides
information about columns in tables.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
TABLE_CATALOG | def | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
TABLE_NAME | ||
COLUMN_NAME | Field | |
ORDINAL_POSITION | see notes | |
COLUMN_DEFAULT | Default | |
IS_NULLABLE | Null | |
DATA_TYPE | Type | |
CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH | Type | |
CHARACTER_OCTET_LENGTH | ||
NUMERIC_PRECISION | Type | |
NUMERIC_SCALE | Type | |
CHARACTER_SET_NAME | ||
COLLATION_NAME | Collation | |
COLUMN_TYPE | Type | MySQL extension |
COLUMN_KEY | Key | MySQL extension |
EXTRA | Extra | MySQL extension |
PRIVILEGES | Privileges | MySQL extension |
COLUMN_COMMENT | Comment | MySQL extension |
Notes:
In SHOW
, the
Type
display includes values from several
different COLUMNS
columns.
ORDINAL_POSITION
is necessary because you
might want to say ORDER BY
ORDINAL_POSITION
. Unlike
SHOW
,
SELECT
does not have automatic
ordering.
CHARACTER_OCTET_LENGTH
should be the same
as CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH
, except for
multi-byte character sets.
CHARACTER_SET_NAME
can be derived from
Collation
. For example, if you say
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM t
, and you see in
the Collation
column a value of
latin1_swedish_ci
, the character set is
what is before the first underscore:
latin1
.
The following statements are nearly equivalent:
SELECT COLUMN_NAME, DATA_TYPE, IS_NULLABLE, COLUMN_DEFAULT FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMNS WHERE table_name = 'tbl_name
' [AND table_schema = 'db_name
'] [AND column_name LIKE 'wild
'] SHOW COLUMNS FROMtbl_name
[FROMdb_name
] [LIKE 'wild
']
The STATISTICS
table provides
information about table indexes.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
TABLE_CATALOG | def | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | = Database | |
TABLE_NAME | Table | |
NON_UNIQUE | Non_unique | |
INDEX_SCHEMA | = Database | |
INDEX_NAME | Key_name | |
SEQ_IN_INDEX | Seq_in_index | |
COLUMN_NAME | Column_name | |
COLLATION | Collation | |
CARDINALITY | Cardinality | |
SUB_PART | Sub_part | MySQL extension |
PACKED | Packed | MySQL extension |
NULLABLE | Null | MySQL extension |
INDEX_TYPE | Index_type | MySQL extension |
COMMENT | Comment | MySQL extension |
Notes:
There is no standard table for indexes. The preceding list is
similar to what SQL Server 2000 returns for
sp_statistics
, except that we replaced the
name QUALIFIER
with
CATALOG
and we replaced the name
OWNER
with SCHEMA
.
Clearly, the preceding table and the output from
SHOW INDEX
are derived from the
same parent. So the correlation is already close.
The following statements are equivalent:
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.STATISTICS WHERE table_name = 'tbl_name
' AND table_schema = 'db_name
' SHOW INDEX FROMtbl_name
FROMdb_name
The USER_PRIVILEGES
table provides
information about global privileges. This information comes from
the mysql.user
grant table.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
GRANTEE | '
value, MySQL extension | |
TABLE_CATALOG | def , MySQL extension | |
PRIVILEGE_TYPE | MySQL extension | |
IS_GRANTABLE | MySQL extension |
Notes:
This is a nonstandard table. It takes its values from the
mysql.user
table.
The SCHEMA_PRIVILEGES
table provides
information about schema (database) privileges. This information
comes from the mysql.db
grant table.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
GRANTEE | '
value, MySQL extension | |
TABLE_CATALOG | def , MySQL extension | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | MySQL extension | |
PRIVILEGE_TYPE | MySQL extension | |
IS_GRANTABLE | MySQL extension |
Notes:
This is a nonstandard table. It takes its values from the
mysql.db
table.
The TABLE_PRIVILEGES
table provides
information about table privileges. This information comes from
the mysql.tables_priv
grant table.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
GRANTEE | '
value | |
TABLE_CATALOG | def | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
TABLE_NAME | ||
PRIVILEGE_TYPE | ||
IS_GRANTABLE |
Notes:
PRIVILEGE_TYPE
can contain one (and only
one) of these values: SELECT
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
,
REFERENCES
,
ALTER
,
INDEX
,
DROP
,
CREATE VIEW
.
The following statements are not equivalent:
SELECT ... FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_PRIVILEGES SHOW GRANTS ...
The COLUMN_PRIVILEGES
table provides
information about column privileges. This information comes from
the mysql.columns_priv
grant table.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
GRANTEE | '
value | |
TABLE_CATALOG | def | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
TABLE_NAME | ||
COLUMN_NAME | ||
PRIVILEGE_TYPE | ||
IS_GRANTABLE |
Notes:
In the output from
SHOW FULL
COLUMNS
, the privileges are all in one field and in
lowercase, for example,
select,insert,update,references
. In
COLUMN_PRIVILEGES
, there is one
privilege per row, in uppercase.
PRIVILEGE_TYPE
can contain one (and only
one) of these values: SELECT
,
INSERT
,
UPDATE
,
REFERENCES
.
If the user has GRANT OPTION
privilege, IS_GRANTABLE
should be
YES
. Otherwise,
IS_GRANTABLE
should be
NO
. The output does not list
GRANT OPTION
as a separate
privilege.
The following statements are not equivalent:
SELECT ... FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLUMN_PRIVILEGES SHOW GRANTS ...
The CHARACTER_SETS
table provides
information about available character sets.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
CHARACTER_SET_NAME | Charset | |
DEFAULT_COLLATE_NAME | Default collation | |
DESCRIPTION | Description | MySQL extension |
MAXLEN | Maxlen | MySQL extension |
The following statements are equivalent:
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.CHARACTER_SETS [WHERE CHARACTER_SET_NAME LIKE 'wild
'] SHOW CHARACTER SET [LIKE 'wild
']
The COLLATIONS
table provides
information about collations for each character set.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
COLLATION_NAME | Collation | |
CHARACTER_SET_NAME | Charset | MySQL extension |
ID | Id | MySQL extension |
IS_DEFAULT | Default | MySQL extension |
IS_COMPILED | Compiled | MySQL extension |
SORTLEN | Sortlen | MySQL extension |
COLLATION_NAME
is the collation name.
CHARACTER_SET_NAME
is the name of the
character set with which the collation is associated.
ID
is the collation ID.
IS_DEFAULT
indicates whether the collation
is the default for its character set.
IS_COMPILED
indicates whether the character
set is compiled into the server.
SORTLEN
is related to the amount of memory
required to sort strings expressed in the character set.
Collation information is also available from the
SHOW COLLATION
statement. The
following statements are equivalent:
SELECT COLLATION_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLLATIONS [WHERE COLLATION_NAME LIKE 'wild
'] SHOW COLLATION [LIKE 'wild
']
The
COLLATION_CHARACTER_SET_APPLICABILITY
table indicates what character set is applicable for what
collation. The columns are equivalent to the first two display
fields that we get from SHOW
COLLATION
.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
COLLATION_NAME | Collation | |
CHARACTER_SET_NAME | Charset |
The TABLE_CONSTRAINTS
table describes
which tables have constraints.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | def | |
CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | ||
CONSTRAINT_NAME | ||
TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
TABLE_NAME | ||
CONSTRAINT_TYPE |
Notes:
The CONSTRAINT_TYPE
value can be
UNIQUE
, PRIMARY KEY
, or
FOREIGN KEY
.
The UNIQUE
and PRIMARY
KEY
information is about the same as what you get
from the Key_name
field in the output from
SHOW INDEX
when the
Non_unique
field is 0
.
The CONSTRAINT_TYPE
column can contain one
of these values: UNIQUE
, PRIMARY
KEY
, FOREIGN KEY
,
CHECK
. This is a
CHAR
(not
ENUM
) column. The
CHECK
value is not available until we
support CHECK
.
The KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
table describes
which key columns have constraints.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | def | |
CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | ||
CONSTRAINT_NAME | ||
TABLE_CATALOG | def | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
TABLE_NAME | ||
COLUMN_NAME | ||
ORDINAL_POSITION | ||
POSITION_IN_UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT | ||
REFERENCED_TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME | ||
REFERENCED_COLUMN_NAME |
Notes:
If the constraint is a foreign key, then this is the column of the foreign key, not the column that the foreign key references.
The value of ORDINAL_POSITION
is the
column's position within the constraint, not the column's
position within the table. Column positions are numbered
beginning with 1.
The value of POSITION_IN_UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT
is NULL
for unique and primary-key
constraints. For foreign-key constraints, it is the ordinal
position in key of the table that is being referenced.
Suppose that there are two tables name t1
and t3
that have the following definitions:
CREATE TABLE t1 ( s1 INT, s2 INT, s3 INT, PRIMARY KEY(s3) ) ENGINE=InnoDB; CREATE TABLE t3 ( s1 INT, s2 INT, s3 INT, KEY(s1), CONSTRAINT CO FOREIGN KEY (s2) REFERENCES t1(s3) ) ENGINE=InnoDB;
For those two tables, the
KEY_COLUMN_USAGE
table has two
rows:
One row with CONSTRAINT_NAME
=
'PRIMARY'
,
TABLE_NAME
= 't1'
,
COLUMN_NAME
= 's3'
,
ORDINAL_POSITION
=
1
,
POSITION_IN_UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT
=
NULL
.
One row with CONSTRAINT_NAME
=
'CO'
, TABLE_NAME
=
't3'
, COLUMN_NAME
=
's2'
,
ORDINAL_POSITION
=
1
,
POSITION_IN_UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT
=
1
.
The ROUTINES
table provides
information about stored routines (both procedures and functions).
The ROUTINES
table does not include
user-defined functions (UDFs) at this time.
The column named “mysql.proc
name”
indicates the mysql.proc
table column that
corresponds to the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ROUTINES
table
column, if any.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | mysql.proc Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
SPECIFIC_NAME | specific_name | |
ROUTINE_CATALOG | def | |
ROUTINE_SCHEMA | db | |
ROUTINE_NAME | name | |
ROUTINE_TYPE | type | {PROCEDURE|FUNCTION} |
DATA_TYPE | same as for COLUMNS table | |
CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH | same as for COLUMNS table | |
CHARACTER_OCTET_LENGTH | same as for COLUMNS table | |
NUMERIC_PRECISION | same as for COLUMNS table | |
NUMERIC_SCALE | same as for COLUMNS table | |
CHARACTER_SET_NAME | same as for COLUMNS table | |
COLLATION_NAME | same as for COLUMNS table | |
DTD_IDENTIFIER | data type descriptor | |
ROUTINE_BODY | SQL | |
ROUTINE_DEFINITION | body | |
EXTERNAL_NAME | NULL | |
EXTERNAL_LANGUAGE | language | NULL |
PARAMETER_STYLE | SQL | |
IS_DETERMINISTIC | is_deterministic | |
SQL_DATA_ACCESS | sql_data_access | |
SQL_PATH | NULL | |
SECURITY_TYPE | security_type | |
CREATED | created | |
LAST_ALTERED | modified | |
SQL_MODE | sql_mode | MySQL extension |
ROUTINE_COMMENT | comment | MySQL extension |
DEFINER | definer | MySQL extension |
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT | MySQL extension | |
COLLATION_CONNECTION | MySQL extension | |
DATABASE_COLLATION | MySQL extension |
Notes:
MySQL calculates EXTERNAL_LANGUAGE
thus:
If mysql.proc.language='SQL'
,
EXTERNAL_LANGUAGE
is
NULL
Otherwise, EXTERNAL_LANGUAGE
is what is
in mysql.proc.language
. However, we do
not have external languages yet, so it is always
NULL
.
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT
is the session value
of the character_set_client
system variable when the routine was created.
COLLATION_CONNECTION
is the session value
of the collation_connection
system variable when the routine was created.
DATABASE_COLLATION
is the collation of the
database with which the routine is associated.
The DATA_TYPE
,
CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH
,
CHARACTER_OCTET_LENGTH
,
NUMERIC_PRECISION
,
NUMERIC_SCALE
,
CHARACTER_SET_NAME
, and
COLLATION_NAME
columns provide information
about the data type for the RETURNS
clause
of stored functions. If a stored routine is a stored
procedure, these columns all are NULL
.
These columns were added in MySQL 5.5.3.
Information about stored function RETURNS
data types is also available in the
PARAMETERS
table. The return
value data type row for a function can be identified as the
row that has an ORDINAL_POSITION
value of
0.
The VIEWS
table provides information
about views in databases. You must have the
SHOW VIEW
privilege to access this
table.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
TABLE_CATALOG | def | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | ||
TABLE_NAME | ||
VIEW_DEFINITION | ||
CHECK_OPTION | ||
IS_UPDATABLE | ||
DEFINER | ||
SECURITY_TYPE | ||
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT | MySQL extension | |
COLLATION_CONNECTION | MySQL extension |
Notes:
The VIEW_DEFINITION
column has most of what
you see in the Create Table
field that
SHOW CREATE VIEW
produces. Skip
the words before SELECT
and
skip the words WITH CHECK OPTION
. Suppose
that the original statement was:
CREATE VIEW v AS SELECT s2,s1 FROM t WHERE s1 > 5 ORDER BY s1 WITH CHECK OPTION;
Then the view definition looks like this:
SELECT s2,s1 FROM t WHERE s1 > 5 ORDER BY s1
The CHECK_OPTION
column has a value of
NONE
, CASCADE
, or
LOCAL
.
MySQL sets a flag, called the view updatability flag, at
CREATE VIEW
time. The flag is
set to YES
(true) if
UPDATE
and
DELETE
(and similar operations)
are legal for the view. Otherwise, the flag is set to
NO
(false). The
IS_UPDATABLE
column in the
VIEWS
table displays the status
of this flag. It means that the server always knows whether a
view is updatable. If the view is not updatable, statements
such UPDATE
,
DELETE
, and
INSERT
are illegal and will be
rejected. (Note that even if a view is updatable, it might not
be possible to insert into it; for details, refer to
Section 12.1.20, “CREATE VIEW
Syntax”.)
The DEFINER
column indicates who defined
the view. SECURITY_TYPE
has a value of
DEFINER
or INVOKER
.
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT
is the session value
of the character_set_client
system variable when the view was created.
COLLATION_CONNECTION
is the session value
of the collation_connection
system variable when the view was created.
MySQL lets you use different
sql_mode
settings to tell the
server the type of SQL syntax to support. For example, you might
use the ANSI
SQL mode to ensure
MySQL correctly interprets the standard SQL concatenation
operator, the double bar (||
), in your queries.
If you then create a view that concatenates items, you might worry
that changing the sql_mode
setting to a value different from
ANSI
could cause the view to
become invalid. But this is not the case. No matter how you write
out a view definition, MySQL always stores it the same way, in a
canonical form. Here is an example that shows how the server
changes a double bar concatenation operator to a
CONCAT()
function:
mysql>SET sql_mode = 'ANSI';
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>CREATE VIEW test.v AS SELECT 'a' || 'b' as col1;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec) mysql>SELECT VIEW_DEFINITION FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS
->WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'test' AND TABLE_NAME = 'v';
+----------------------------------+ | VIEW_DEFINITION | +----------------------------------+ | select concat('a','b') AS `col1` | +----------------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.00 sec)
The advantage of storing a view definition in canonical form is
that changes made later to the value of
sql_mode
will not affect the
results from the view. However an additional consequence is that
comments prior to SELECT
are
stripped from the definition by the server.
The TRIGGERS
table provides
information about triggers. You can see results only for databases
and tables for which you have the
TRIGGER
privilege.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
TRIGGER_CATALOG | def | |
TRIGGER_SCHEMA | ||
TRIGGER_NAME | Trigger | |
EVENT_MANIPULATION | Event | |
EVENT_OBJECT_CATALOG | def | |
EVENT_OBJECT_SCHEMA | ||
EVENT_OBJECT_TABLE | Table | |
ACTION_ORDER | 0 | |
ACTION_CONDITION | NULL | |
ACTION_STATEMENT | Statement | |
ACTION_ORIENTATION | ROW | |
ACTION_TIMING | Timing | |
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_TABLE | NULL | |
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_TABLE | NULL | |
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_ROW | OLD | |
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_ROW | NEW | |
CREATED | NULL (0 ) | |
SQL_MODE | MySQL extension | |
DEFINER | MySQL extension | |
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT | MySQL extension | |
COLLATION_CONNECTION | MySQL extension | |
DATABASE_COLLATION | MySQL extension |
Notes:
The TRIGGER_SCHEMA
and
TRIGGER_NAME
columns contain the name of
the database in which the trigger occurs and the trigger name,
respectively.
The EVENT_MANIPULATION
column contains one
of the values 'INSERT'
,
'DELETE'
, or 'UPDATE'
.
As noted in Section 18.3, “Using Triggers”, every trigger is
associated with exactly one table. The
EVENT_OBJECT_SCHEMA
and
EVENT_OBJECT_TABLE
columns contain the
database in which this table occurs, and the table's name.
The ACTION_ORDER
column contains the
ordinal position of the trigger's action within the list of
all similar triggers on the same table. Currently, this value
is always 0
, because it is not possible to
have more than one trigger with the same
EVENT_MANIPULATION
and
ACTION_TIMING
on the same table.
The ACTION_STATEMENT
column contains the
statement to be executed when the trigger is invoked. This is
the same as the text displayed in the
Statement
column of the output from
SHOW TRIGGERS
. Note that this
text uses UTF-8 encoding.
The ACTION_ORIENTATION
column always
contains the value 'ROW'
.
The ACTION_TIMING
column contains one of
the two values 'BEFORE'
or
'AFTER'
.
The columns ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_ROW
and
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_ROW
contain the old
and new column identifiers, respectively. This means that
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_ROW
always contains
the value 'OLD'
and
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_ROW
always contains
the value 'NEW'
.
The SQL_MODE
column shows the server SQL
mode that was in effect at the time when the trigger was
created (and thus which remains in effect for this trigger
whenever it is invoked, regardless of the current
server SQL mode). The possible range of values for
this column is the same as that of the
sql_mode
system variable. See
Section 5.1.6, “Server SQL Modes”.
The DEFINER
column indicates who defined
the trigger.
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT
is the session value
of the character_set_client
system variable when the trigger was created.
COLLATION_CONNECTION
is the session value
of the collation_connection
system variable when the trigger was created.
DATABASE_COLLATION
is the collation of the
database with which the trigger is associated.
The following columns currently always contain
NULL
: ACTION_CONDITION
,
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_TABLE
,
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_TABLE
, and
CREATED
.
Example, using the ins_sum
trigger defined in
Section 18.3, “Using Triggers”:
mysql> SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TRIGGERS\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
TRIGGER_CATALOG: def
TRIGGER_SCHEMA: test
TRIGGER_NAME: ins_sum
EVENT_MANIPULATION: INSERT
EVENT_OBJECT_CATALOG: def
EVENT_OBJECT_SCHEMA: test
EVENT_OBJECT_TABLE: account
ACTION_ORDER: 0
ACTION_CONDITION: NULL
ACTION_STATEMENT: SET @sum = @sum + NEW.amount
ACTION_ORIENTATION: ROW
ACTION_TIMING: BEFORE
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_TABLE: NULL
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_TABLE: NULL
ACTION_REFERENCE_OLD_ROW: OLD
ACTION_REFERENCE_NEW_ROW: NEW
CREATED: NULL
SQL_MODE:
DEFINER: me@localhost
The PLUGINS
table provides
information about server plugins.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
PLUGIN_NAME | Name | MySQL extension |
PLUGIN_VERSION | MySQL extension | |
PLUGIN_STATUS | Status | MySQL extension |
PLUGIN_TYPE | Type | MySQL extension |
PLUGIN_TYPE_VERSION | MySQL extension | |
PLUGIN_LIBRARY | Library | MySQL extension |
PLUGIN_LIBRARY_VERSION | MySQL extension | |
PLUGIN_AUTHOR | MySQL extension | |
PLUGIN_DESCRIPTION | MySQL extension | |
PLUGIN_LICENSE | MySQL extension | |
LOAD_OPTION | MySQL extension |
Notes:
The PLUGINS
table is a
nonstandard table.
PLUGIN_NAME
is the name used to refer to
the plugin in statements such as INSTALL
PLUGIN
and UNINSTALL
PLUGIN
.
PLUGIN_VERSION
is the version from the
plugin's general type descriptor.
PLUGIN_STATUS
indicates the plugin status,
one of ACTIVE
, INACTIVE
,
DISABLED
, or DELETED
.
PLUGIN_TYPE
indicates the type of plugin,
such as STORAGE ENGINE
,
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
, or
AUTHENTICATION
.
PLUGIN_TYPE_VERSION
is the version from the
plugin's type-specific descriptor.
PLUGIN_LIBRARY
is the name of the plugin
shared object file. This is the name used to refer to the
plugin file in statements such as INSTALL
PLUGIN
and UNINSTALL
PLUGIN
. This file is located in the directory named
by the plugin_dir
system
variable. If the library name is NULL
, the
plugin is compiled in and cannot be uninstalled with
UNINSTALL PLUGIN
.
PLUGIN_LIBRARY_VERSION
indicates the plugin
API interface version.
PLUGIN_AUTHOR
names the plugin author.
PLUGIN_DESCRIPTION
provides a short
description of the plugin.
PLUGIN_LICENSE
indicates how the plugin is
licensed; for example, GPL
.
LOAD_OPTION
indicates how the plugin was
loaded. The value is OFF
,
ON
, FORCE
, or
FORCE_PLUS_PERMANENT
. See
Section 5.1.7.1, “Installing and Uninstalling Plugins”. This column was added
in MySQL 5.5.7.
For plugins installed with INSTALL
PLUGIN
, the PLUGIN_NAME
and
PLUGIN_LIBRARY
values are also registered in
the mysql.plugin
table.
These statements are equivalent:
SELECT PLUGIN_NAME, PLUGIN_STATUS, PLUGIN_TYPE, PLUGIN_LIBRARY, PLUGIN_LICENSE FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PLUGINS; SHOW PLUGINS;
For information about plugin data structures that form the basis
of the information in the PLUGINS
table, see Section 22.2, “The MySQL Plugin API”.
Plugin information is also available using the
SHOW PLUGINS
statement. See
Section 12.4.5.26, “SHOW PLUGINS
Syntax”.
The PLUGINS
table provides
information about storage engines.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
ENGINE | Engine | MySQL extension |
SUPPORT | Support | MySQL extension |
COMMENT | Comment | MySQL extension |
TRANSACTIONS | Transactions | MySQL extension |
XA | XA | MySQL extension |
SAVEPOINTS | Savepoints | MySQL extension |
Notes:
The ENGINES
table is a
nonstandard table.
See also Section 12.4.5.17, “SHOW ENGINES
Syntax”.
The PARTITIONS
table provides
information about table partitions. See
Chapter 17, Partitioning, for more information about
partitioning tables.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
TABLE_CATALOG | MySQL extension | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | MySQL extension | |
TABLE_NAME | MySQL extension | |
PARTITION_NAME | MySQL extension | |
SUBPARTITION_NAME | MySQL extension | |
PARTITION_ORDINAL_POSITION | MySQL extension | |
SUBPARTITION_ORDINAL_POSITION | MySQL extension | |
PARTITION_METHOD | MySQL extension | |
SUBPARTITION_METHOD | MySQL extension | |
PARTITION_EXPRESSION | MySQL extension | |
SUBPARTITION_EXPRESSION | MySQL extension | |
PARTITION_DESCRIPTION | MySQL extension | |
TABLE_ROWS | MySQL extension | |
AVG_ROW_LENGTH | MySQL extension | |
DATA_LENGTH | MySQL extension | |
MAX_DATA_LENGTH | MySQL extension | |
INDEX_LENGTH | MySQL extension | |
DATA_FREE | MySQL extension | |
CREATE_TIME | MySQL extension | |
UPDATE_TIME | MySQL extension | |
CHECK_TIME | MySQL extension | |
CHECKSUM | MySQL extension | |
PARTITION_COMMENT | MySQL extension | |
NODEGROUP | MySQL extension | |
TABLESPACE_NAME | MySQL extension |
Notes:
The PARTITIONS
table is a
nonstandard table.
Each record in this table corresponds to an individual partition or subpartition of a partitioned table.
TABLE_CATALOG
: This column is always
def
.
TABLE_SCHEMA
: This column contains the name
of the database to which the table belongs.
TABLE_NAME
: This column contains the name
of the table containing the partition.
PARTITION_NAME
: The name of the partition.
SUBPARTITION_NAME
: If the
PARTITIONS
table record
represents a subpartition, then this column contains the name
of subpartition; otherwise it is NULL
.
PARTITION_ORDINAL_POSITION
: All partitions
are indexed in the same order as they are defined, with
1
being the number assigned to the first
partition. The indexing can change as partitions are added,
dropped, and reorganized; the number shown is this column
reflects the current order, taking into account any indexing
changes.
SUBPARTITION_ORDINAL_POSITION
:
Subpartitions within a given partition are also indexed and
reindexed in the same manner as partitions are indexed within
a table.
PARTITION_METHOD
: One of the values
RANGE
, LIST
,
HASH
, LINEAR HASH
,
KEY
, or LINEAR KEY
; that
is, one of the available partitioning types as discussed in
Section 17.2, “Partitioning Types”.
SUBPARTITION_METHOD
: One of the values
HASH
, LINEAR HASH
,
KEY
, or LINEAR KEY
; that
is, one of the available subpartitioning types as discussed in
Section 17.2.6, “Subpartitioning”.
PARTITION_EXPRESSION
: This is the
expression for the partitioning function used in the
CREATE TABLE
or
ALTER TABLE
statement that
created the table's current partitioning scheme.
For example, consider a partitioned table created in the
test
database using this statement:
CREATE TABLE tp ( c1 INT, c2 INT, c3 VARCHAR(25) ) PARTITION BY HASH(c1 + c2) PARTITIONS 4;
The PARTITION_EXPRESSION
column in a
PARTITIONS table record for a partition from this table
displays c1 + c2
, as shown here:
mysql>SELECT DISTINCT PARTITION_EXPRESSION
>FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARTITIONS
>WHERE TABLE_NAME='tp' AND TABLE_SCHEMA='test';
+----------------------+ | PARTITION_EXPRESSION | +----------------------+ | c1 + c2 | +----------------------+ 1 row in set (0.09 sec)
SUBPARTITION_EXPRESSION
: This works in the
same fashion for the subpartitioning expression that defines
the subpartitioning for a table as
PARTITION_EXPRESSION
does for the
partitioning expression used to define a table's partitioning.
If the table has no subpartitions, then this column is
NULL
.
PARTITION_DESCRIPTION
: This column is used
for RANGE and LIST partitions. For a RANGE
partition, it contains the value set in the partition's
VALUES LESS THAN
clause, which can be
either an integer or MAXVALUE
. For a
LIST
partition, this column contains the
values defined in the partition's VALUES IN
clause, which is a comma-separated list of integer values.
For partitions whose PARTITION_METHOD
is
other than RANGE
or
LIST
, this column is always
NULL
.
TABLE_ROWS
: The number of table rows in the
partition.
For partitioned InnoDB
tables,
the row count given in the TABLE_ROWS
column is only an estimated value used in SQL optimization,
and may not always be exact.
For NDB
tables, you can also
obtain this information using the ndb_desc
utility.
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
: The average length of the
rows stored in this partition or subpartition, in bytes.
This is the same as DATA_LENGTH
divided by
TABLE_ROWS
.
You can also obtain equivalent information using the ndb_desc utility.
DATA_LENGTH
: The total length of all rows
stored in this partition or subpartition, in bytes—that
is, the total number of bytes stored in the partition or
subpartition.
For NDB
tables, you can also
obtain this information using the ndb_desc
utility.
MAX_DATA_LENGTH
: The maximum number of
bytes that can be stored in this partition or subpartition.
For NDB
tables, you can also
obtain this information using the ndb_desc
utility.
INDEX_LENGTH
: The length of the index file
for this partition or subpartition, in bytes.
For partitions of NDB
tables,
whether the tables use implicit or explicit partitioning, the
INDEX_LENGTH
column value is always 0.
However, you can obtain equivalent information using the
ndb_desc utility.
DATA_FREE
: The number of bytes allocated to
the partition or subpartition but not used.
For NDB
tables, you can also
obtain this information using the ndb_desc
utility.
CREATE_TIME
: The time of the partition's or
subpartition's creation.
UPDATE_TIME
: The time that the partition or
subpartition was last modified.
CHECK_TIME
: The last time that the table to
which this partition or subpartition belongs was checked.
Some storage engines do not update this time; for tables
using these storage engines, this value is always
NULL
.
CHECKSUM
: The checksum value, if any;
otherwise, this column is NULL
.
PARTITION_COMMENT
: This column contains the
text of any comment made for the partition.
The default value for this column is an empty string.
NODEGROUP
: This is the nodegroup to which
the partition belongs. This is relevant only to MySQL Cluster
tables; otherwise the value of this column is always
0
.
TABLESPACE_NAME
: This column contains the
name of the tablespace to which the partition belongs.
Currently, the value of this column is always
DEFAULT
.
A nonpartitioned table has one record in
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PARTITIONS
;
however, the values of the PARTITION_NAME
,
SUBPARTITION_NAME
,
PARTITION_ORDINAL_POSITION
,
SUBPARTITION_ORDINAL_POSITION
,
PARTITION_METHOD
,
SUBPARTITION_METHOD
,
PARTITION_EXPRESSION
,
SUBPARTITION_EXPRESSION
, and
PARTITION_DESCRIPTION
columns are all
NULL
. (The
PARTITION_COMMENT
column in this case is
blank.)
In MySQL 5.5, there is also only one record in
the PARTITIONS
table for a table
using the NDBCLUSTER
storage
engine. The same columns are also NULL
(or
empty) as for a nonpartitioned table.
The EVENTS
table provides information
about scheduled events, which are discussed in
Section 18.4, “Using the Event Scheduler”. The SHOW Name
values
correspond to column names of the SHOW
EVENTS
statement.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
EVENT_CATALOG | def , MySQL extension | |
EVENT_SCHEMA | Db | MySQL extension |
EVENT_NAME | Name | MySQL extension |
DEFINER | Definer | MySQL extension |
TIME_ZONE | Time zone | MySQL extension |
EVENT_BODY | MySQL extension | |
EVENT_DEFINITION | MySQL extension | |
EVENT_TYPE | Type | MySQL extension |
EXECUTE_AT | Execute at | MySQL extension |
INTERVAL_VALUE | Interval value | MySQL extension |
INTERVAL_FIELD | Interval field | MySQL extension |
SQL_MODE | MySQL extension | |
STARTS | Starts | MySQL extension |
ENDS | Ends | MySQL extension |
STATUS | Status | MySQL extension |
ON_COMPLETION | MySQL extension | |
CREATED | MySQL extension | |
LAST_ALTERED | MySQL extension | |
LAST_EXECUTED | MySQL extension | |
EVENT_COMMENT | MySQL extension | |
ORIGINATOR | Originator | MySQL extension |
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT | character_set_client | MySQL extension |
COLLATION_CONNECTION | collation_connection | MySQL extension |
DATABASE_COLLATION | Database Collation | MySQL extension |
Notes:
The EVENTS
table is a nonstandard
table.
EVENT_CATALOG
: The value of this column is
always def
.
EVENT_SCHEMA
: The name of the schema
(database) to which this event belongs.
EVENT_NAME
: The name of the event.
DEFINER
: The account of the user who
created the event, in
'
format.
user_name
'@'host_name
'
TIME_ZONE
: The event time zone, which is
the time zone used for scheduling the event and that is in
effect within the event as it executes. The default value is
SYSTEM
.
EVENT_BODY
: The language used for the
statements in the event's DO
clause; in MySQL 5.5, this is always
SQL
.
This column is not to be confused with the column of the same
name (now named EVENT_DEFINITION
) that
existed in earlier MySQL versions.
EVENT_DEFINITION
: The text of the SQL
statement making up the event's
DO
clause; in other words, the
statement executed by this event.
EVENT_TYPE
: The event repetition type,
either ONE TIME
(transient) or
RECURRING
(repeating).
EXECUTE_AT
: For a one-time event, this is
the DATETIME
value specified in
the AT
clause of the
CREATE EVENT
statement used to
create the event, or of the last ALTER
EVENT
statement that modified the event. The value
shown in this column reflects the addition or subtraction of
any INTERVAL
value included in the event's
AT
clause. For example, if an event is
created using ON SCHEDULE AT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP +
'1:6' DAY_HOUR
, and the event was created at
2006-02-09 14:05:30, the value shown in this column would be
'2006-02-10 20:05:30'
.
If the event's timing is determined by an
EVERY
clause instead of an
AT
clause (that is, if the event is
recurring), the value of this column is
NULL
.
INTERVAL_VALUE
: For recurring events, this
column contains the numeric portion of the event's
EVERY
clause.
For a one-time event (that is, an event whose timing is
determined by an AT
clause), this column is
NULL
.
INTERVAL_FIELD
: For recurring events, this
column contains the units portion of the
EVERY
clause governing the timing of the
event. Thus, this column contains a value such as
'YEAR
',
'QUARTER
', 'DAY
', and so
on.
For a one-time event (that is, an event whose timing is
determined by an AT
clause), this column is
NULL
.
SQL_MODE
: The SQL mode in effect at the
time the event was created or altered.
STARTS
: For a recurring event whose
definition includes a STARTS
clause, this
column contains the corresponding
DATETIME
value. As with the
EXECUTE_AT
column, this value resolves any
expressions used.
If there is no STARTS
clause affecting the
timing of the event, this column is NULL
ENDS
: For a recurring event whose
definition includes a ENDS
clause, this
column contains the corresponding
DATETIME
value. As with the
EXECUTE_AT
column, this value resolves any
expressions used.
If there is no ENDS
clause affecting the
timing of the event, this column is NULL
.
STATUS
: One of the three values
ENABLED
, DISABLED
, or
SLAVESIDE_DISABLED
.
SLAVESIDE_DISABLED
indicates that the
creation of the event occurred on another MySQL server acting
as a replication master and was replicated to the current
MySQL server which is acting as a slave, but the event is not
presently being executed on the slave. See
Section 15.4.1.8, “Replication of Invoked Features”, for more
information.
ON_COMPLETION
: One of the two values
PRESERVE
or NOT
PRESERVE
.
CREATED
: The date and time when the event
was created. This is a DATETIME
value.
LAST_ALTERED
: The date and time when the
event was last modified. This is a
DATETIME
value. If the event
has not been modified since its creation, this column holds
the same value as the CREATED
column.
LAST_EXECUTED
: The date and time when the
event last executed. A DATETIME
value. If the event has never executed, this column is
NULL
.
LAST_EXECUTED
indicates when the event
started. As a result, the ENDS
column is
never less than LAST_EXECUTED
.
EVENT_COMMENT
: The text of a comment, if
the event has one. If not, the value of this column is an
empty string.
ORIGINATOR
: The server ID of the MySQL
server on which the event was created; used in replication.
The default value is 0.
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT
is the session value
of the character_set_client
system variable when the event was created.
COLLATION_CONNECTION
is the session value
of the collation_connection
system variable when the event was created.
DATABASE_COLLATION
is the collation of the
database with which the event is associated.
Example: Suppose that the user
jon@ghidora
creates an event named
e_daily
, and then modifies it a few minutes
later using an ALTER EVENT
statement, as shown here:
DELIMITER | CREATE EVENT e_daily ON SCHEDULE EVERY 1 DAY COMMENT 'Saves total number of sessions then clears the table each day' DO BEGIN INSERT INTO site_activity.totals (time, total) SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, COUNT(*) FROM site_activity.sessions; DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions; END | DELIMITER ; ALTER EVENT e_daily ENABLED;
(Note that comments can span multiple lines.)
This user can then run the following
SELECT
statement, and obtain the
output shown:
mysql>SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.EVENTS
>WHERE EVENT_NAME = 'e_daily'
>AND EVENT_SCHEMA = 'myschema'\G
*************************** 1. row *************************** EVENT_CATALOG: def EVENT_SCHEMA: test EVENT_NAME: e_daily DEFINER: paul@localhost TIME_ZONE: SYSTEM EVENT_BODY: SQL EVENT_DEFINITION: BEGIN INSERT INTO site_activity.totals (time, total) SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, COUNT(*) FROM site_activity.sessions; DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions; END EVENT_TYPE: RECURRING EXECUTE_AT: NULL INTERVAL_VALUE: 1 INTERVAL_FIELD: DAY SQL_MODE: STARTS: 2008-09-03 12:13:39 ENDS: NULL STATUS: ENABLED ON_COMPLETION: NOT PRESERVE CREATED: 2008-09-03 12:13:39 LAST_ALTERED: 2008-09-03 12:13:39 LAST_EXECUTED: NULL EVENT_COMMENT: Saves total number of sessions then clears the table each day ORIGINATOR: 1 CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT: latin1 COLLATION_CONNECTION: latin1_swedish_ci DATABASE_COLLATION: latin1_swedish_ci
Times in the EVENTS
table are
displayed using the event time zone or the current session time
zone, as described in Section 18.4.4, “Event Metadata”.
See also Section 12.4.5.19, “SHOW EVENTS
Syntax”.
The FILES
table provides information
about the files in which MySQL NDB
Disk Data tables are stored.
This table provides information about Disk Data
files only; you cannot use it for
determining disk space allocation or availability for individual
NDB
tables. However, it is possible to see
how much space is allocated for each
NDB
table having data stored on
disk—as well as how much remains available for storage of
of data on disk for that table—using
ndb_desc. For more information, see
Section 16.4.9, “ndb_desc — Describe NDB Tables”.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
FILE_ID | MySQL extension | |
FILE_NAME | MySQL extension | |
FILE_TYPE | MySQL extension | |
TABLESPACE_NAME | MySQL extension | |
TABLE_CATALOG | MySQL extension | |
TABLE_SCHEMA | MySQL extension | |
TABLE_NAME | MySQL extension | |
LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME | MySQL extension | |
LOGFILE_GROUP_NUMBER | MySQL extension | |
ENGINE | MySQL extension | |
FULLTEXT_KEYS | MySQL extension | |
DELETED_ROWS | MySQL extension | |
UPDATE_COUNT | MySQL extension | |
FREE_EXTENTS | MySQL extension | |
TOTAL_EXTENTS | MySQL extension | |
EXTENT_SIZE | MySQL extension | |
INITIAL_SIZE | MySQL extension | |
MAXIMUM_SIZE | MySQL extension | |
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE | MySQL extension | |
CREATION_TIME | MySQL extension | |
LAST_UPDATE_TIME | MySQL extension | |
LAST_ACCESS_TIME | MySQL extension | |
RECOVER_TIME | MySQL extension | |
TRANSACTION_COUNTER | MySQL extension | |
VERSION | MySQL extension | |
ROW_FORMAT | MySQL extension | |
TABLE_ROWS | MySQL extension | |
AVG_ROW_LENGTH | MySQL extension | |
DATA_LENGTH | MySQL extension | |
MAX_DATA_LENGTH | MySQL extension | |
INDEX_LENGTH | MySQL extension | |
DATA_FREE | MySQL extension | |
CREATE_TIME | MySQL extension | |
UPDATE_TIME | MySQL extension | |
CHECK_TIME | MySQL extension | |
CHECKSUM | MySQL extension | |
STATUS | MySQL extension | |
EXTRA | MySQL extension |
Notes:
FILE_ID
column values are auto-generated.
FILE_NAME
is the name of an
UNDO
log file created by
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
or
ALTER LOGFILE GROUP
, or of a
data file created by CREATE
TABLESPACE
or ALTER
TABLESPACE
.
FILE_TYPE
is one of the values
UNDOFILE
, DATAFILE
, or
TABLESPACE
.
TABLESPACE_NAME
is the name of the
tablespace with which the file is associated.
Currently, the value of the
TABLESPACE_CATALOG
column is always
NULL
.
TABLE_NAME
is the name of the Disk Data
table with which the file is associated, if any.
The LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME
column gives the
name of the log file group to which the log file or data file
belongs.
For an UNDO
log file, the
LOGFILE_GROUP_NUMBER
contains the
auto-generated ID number of the log file group to which the
log file belongs.
For a MySQL Cluster Disk Data log file or data file, the value
of the ENGINE
column is always
NDB
or
NDBCLUSTER
.
For a MySQL Cluster Disk Data log file or data file, the value
of the FULLTEXT_KEYS
column is always
empty.
The FREE EXTENTS
column displays the number
of extents which have not yet been used by the file. The
TOTAL EXTENTS
column show the total number
of extents allocated to the file.
The difference between these two columns is the number of extents currently in use by the file:
SELECT TOTAL_EXTENTS - FREE_EXTENTS AS extents_used FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES WHERE FILE_NAME = 'myfile.dat';
You can approximate the amount of disk space in use by the
file by multiplying this difference by the value of the
EXTENT_SIZE
column, which gives the size of
an extent for the file in bytes:
SELECT (TOTAL_EXTENTS - FREE_EXTENTS) * EXTENT_SIZE AS bytes_used FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES WHERE FILE_NAME = 'myfile.dat';
Similarly, you can estimate the amount of space that remains
available in a given file by multiplying
FREE_EXTENTS
by
EXTENT_SIZE
:
SELECT FREE_EXTENTS * EXTENT_SIZE AS bytes_free FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES WHERE FILE_NAME = 'myfile.dat';
The byte values produced by the preceding queries are
approximations only, and their precision is inversely
proportional to the value of EXTENT_SIZE
.
That is, the larger EXTENT_SIZE
becomes,
the less accurate the approximations are.
It is also important to remember that once an extent is used, it cannot be freed again without dropping the data file of which it is a part. This means that deletes from a Disk Data table do not release disk space.
The extent size can be set in a CREATE
TABLESPACE
statement. See
Section 12.1.18, “CREATE TABLESPACE
Syntax”, for more information.
The INITIAL_SIZE
column shows the size in
bytes of the file. This is the same value that was used in the
INITIAL_SIZE
clause of the
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP
,
ALTER LOGFILE GROUP
,
CREATE TABLESPACE
, or
ALTER TABLESPACE
statement used
to create the file.
For MySQL Cluster Disk Data files, the value of the
MAXIMUM_SIZE
column is always the same as
INITIAL_SIZE
, and the
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE
column is always empty.
The CREATION_TIME
column shows the date and
time when the file was created. The
LAST_UPDATE_TIME
column displays the date
and time when the file was last modified. The
LAST_ACCESSED
column provides the date and
time when the file was last accessed by the server.
Currently, the values of these columns are as reported by the
operating system, and are not supplied by the
NDB
storage engine. Where no
value is provided by the operating system, these columns
display 0000-00-00 00:00:00
.
For MySQL Cluster Disk Data files, the value of the
RECOVER_TIME
and
TRANSACTION_COUNTER
columns is always
0
.
For MySQL Cluster Disk Data files, the following columns are
always NULL
:
VERSION
ROW_FORMAT
TABLE_ROWS
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
DATA_LENGTH
MAX_DATA_LENGTH
INDEX_LENGTH
DATA_FREE
CREATE_TIME
UPDATE_TIME
CHECK_TIME
CHECKSUM
For MySQL Cluster Disk Data files, the value of the
STATUS
column is always
NORMAL
.
For MySQL Cluster Disk Data files, the
EXTRA
column shows which data node the file
belongs to, as each data node has its own copy of the file.
Suppose that you use this statement on a MySQL Cluster with
four data nodes:
CREATE LOGFILE GROUP mygroup ADD UNDOFILE 'new_undo.dat' INITIAL_SIZE 2G ENGINE NDB;
After running the CREATE LOGFILE
GROUP
statement successfully, you should see a
result similar to the one shown here for this query against
the FILES
table:
mysql>SELECT LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME, FILE_TYPE, EXTRA
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
->WHERE FILE_NAME = 'new_undo.dat';
+--------------------+-------------+----------------+ | LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME | FILE_TYPE | EXTRA | +--------------------+-------------+----------------+ | mygroup | UNDO FILE | CLUSTER_NODE=3 | | mygroup | UNDO FILE | CLUSTER_NODE=4 | | mygroup | UNDO FILE | CLUSTER_NODE=5 | | mygroup | UNDO FILE | CLUSTER_NODE=6 | +--------------------+-------------+----------------+ 4 rows in set (0.01 sec)
The FILES
table is a nonstandard
table.
An additional row is present in the
FILES
table following the
creation of a logfile group. This row has
NULL
for the value of the
FILE_NAME
column. For this row, the value
of the FILE_ID
column is always
0
, that of the FILE_TYPE
column is always UNDO FILE
, and that of the
STATUS
column is always
NORMAL
. Currently, the value of the
ENGINE
column is always
NDBCLUSTER
.
The FREE_EXTENTS
column in this row shows
the total number of free extents available to all undo files
belonging to a given log file group whose name and number are
shown in the LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME
and
LOGFILE_GROUP_NUMBER
columns, respectively.
Suppose there are no existing log file groups on your MySQL Cluster, and you create one using the following statement:
mysql>CREATE LOGFILE GROUP lg1
->ADD UNDOFILE 'undofile.dat'
->INITIAL_SIZE = 16M
->UNDO_BUFFER_SIZE = 1M
->ENGINE = NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (3.81 sec)
You can now see this NULL
row when you
query the FILES
table:
mysql>SELECT DISTINCT
->FILE_NAME AS File,
->FREE_EXTENTS AS Free,
->TOTAL_EXTENTS AS Total,
->EXTENT_SIZE AS Size,
->INITIAL_SIZE AS Initial
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES;
+--------------+---------+---------+------+----------+ | File | Free | Total | Size | Initial | +--------------+---------+---------+------+----------+ | undofile.dat | NULL | 4194304 | 4 | 16777216 | | NULL | 4184068 | NULL | 4 | NULL | +--------------+---------+---------+------+----------+ 2 rows in set (0.01 sec)
The total number of free extents available for undo logging is
always somewhat less than the sum of the
TOTAL_EXTENTS
column values for all undo
files in the log file group due to overhead required for
maintaining the undo files. This can be seen by adding a
second undo file to the log file group, then repeating the
previous query against the FILES
table:
mysql>ALTER LOGFILE GROUP lg1
->ADD UNDOFILE 'undofile02.dat'
->INITIAL_SIZE = 4M
->ENGINE = NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (1.02 sec) mysql>SELECT DISTINCT
->FILE_NAME AS File,
->FREE_EXTENTS AS Free,
->TOTAL_EXTENTS AS Total,
->EXTENT_SIZE AS Size,
->INITIAL_SIZE AS Initial
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES;
+----------------+---------+---------+------+----------+ | File | Free | Total | Size | Initial | +----------------+---------+---------+------+----------+ | undofile.dat | NULL | 4194304 | 4 | 16777216 | | undofile02.dat | NULL | 1048576 | 4 | 4194304 | | NULL | 5223944 | NULL | 4 | NULL | +----------------+---------+---------+------+----------+ 3 rows in set (0.01 sec)
The amount of free space in bytes which is available for undo logging by Disk Data tables using this log file group can be approximated by multiplying the number of free extents by the initial size:
mysql>SELECT
->FREE_EXTENTS AS 'Free Extents',
->FREE_EXTENTS * EXTENT_SIZE AS 'Free Bytes'
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
->WHERE LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME = 'lg1'
->AND FILE_NAME IS NULL;
+--------------+------------+ | Free Extents | Free Bytes | +--------------+------------+ | 5223944 | 20895776 | +--------------+------------+ 1 row in set (0.02 sec)
If you create a MySQL Cluster Disk Data table and then insert some rows into it, you can see approximately how much space remains for undo logging afterward, for example:
mysql>CREATE TABLESPACE ts1
->ADD DATAFILE 'data1.dat'
->USE LOGFILE GROUP lg1
->INITIAL_SIZE 512M
->ENGINE = NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (8.71 sec) mysql>CREATE TABLE dd (
->c1 INT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY,
->c2 INT,
->c3 DATE
->)
->TABLESPACE ts1 STORAGE DISK
->ENGINE = NDB;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (2.11 sec) mysql>INSERT INTO dd VALUES
->(NULL, 1234567890, '2007-02-02'),
->(NULL, 1126789005, '2007-02-03'),
->(NULL, 1357924680, '2007-02-04'),
->(NULL, 1642097531, '2007-02-05');
Query OK, 4 rows affected (0.01 sec) mysql>SELECT
->FREE_EXTENTS AS 'Free Extents',
->FREE_EXTENTS * EXTENT_SIZE AS 'Free Bytes'
->FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.FILES
->WHERE LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME = 'lg1'
->AND FILE_NAME IS NULL;
+--------------+------------+ | Free Extents | Free Bytes | +--------------+------------+ | 5207565 | 20830260 | +--------------+------------+ 1 row in set (0.01 sec)
An additional row is present in the
FILES
table for any MySQL Cluster
tablespace, whether or not any data files are associated with
the tablespace. This row has NULL
for the
value of the FILE_NAME
column. For this
row, the value of the FILE_ID
column is
always 0
, that of the
FILE_TYPE
column is always
TABLESPACE
, and that of the
STATUS
column is always
NORMAL
. Currently, the value of the
ENGINE
column is always
NDBCLUSTER
.
There are no SHOW
statements
associated with the FILES
table.
For additional information, and examples of creating and dropping MySQL Cluster Disk Data objects, see Section 16.5.11, “MySQL Cluster Disk Data Tables”.
The TABLESPACES
table provides
information about active tablespaces. The table was added in MySQL
5.5.3.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
TABLESPACE_NAME | MySQL extension | |
ENGINE | MySQL extension | |
TABLESPACE_TYPE | MySQL extension | |
LOGFILE_GROUP_NAME | MySQL extension | |
EXTENT_SIZE | MySQL extension | |
AUTOEXTEND_SIZE | MySQL extension | |
MAXIMUM_SIZE | MySQL extension | |
NODEGROUP_ID | MySQL extension | |
TABLESPACE_COMMENT | MySQL extension |
The PROCESSLIST
table provides
information about which threads are running.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
ID | Id | MySQL extension |
USER | User | MySQL extension |
HOST | Host | MySQL extension |
DB | db | MySQL extension |
COMMAND | Command | MySQL extension |
TIME | Time | MySQL extension |
STATE | State | MySQL extension |
INFO | Info | MySQL extension |
For an extensive description of the table columns, see
Section 12.4.5.30, “SHOW PROCESSLIST
Syntax”.
Notes:
The PROCESSLIST
table is a
nonstandard table.
Like the output from the corresponding
SHOW
statement, the
PROCESSLIST
table will only show
information about your own threads, unless you have the
PROCESS
privilege, in which
case you will see information about other threads, too. As an
anonymous user, you cannot see any rows at all.
If an SQL statement refers to
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PROCESSLIST
,
then MySQL will populate the entire table once, when statement
execution begins, so there is read consistency during the
statement. There is no read consistency for a multi-statement
transaction, though.
The following statements are equivalent:
SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PROCESSLIST SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST
The REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS
table
provides information about foreign keys.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | def | |
CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | ||
CONSTRAINT_NAME | ||
UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_CATALOG | def | |
UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA | ||
UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_NAME | ||
MATCH_OPTION | ||
UPDATE_RULE | ||
DELETE_RULE | ||
TABLE_NAME | ||
REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME |
Notes:
TABLE_NAME
has the same value as
TABLE_NAME
in
INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_CONSTRAINTS
.
CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA
and
CONSTRAINT_NAME
identify the foreign key.
UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_SCHEMA
,
UNIQUE_CONSTRAINT_NAME
, and
REFERENCED_TABLE_NAME
identify the
referenced key.
The only valid value at this time for
MATCH_OPTION
is NONE
.
The possible values for UPDATE_RULE
or
DELETE_RULE
are CASCADE
,
SET NULL
, SET DEFAULT
,
RESTRICT
, NO ACTION
.
The GLOBAL_STATUS
and SESSION_STATUS
tables provide information about server status variables. Their
contents correspond to the information produced by the
SHOW GLOBAL
STATUS
and
SHOW SESSION
STATUS
statements (see Section 12.4.5.36, “SHOW STATUS
Syntax”).
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
VARIABLE_NAME | Variable_name | |
VARIABLE_VALUE | Value |
Notes:
The VARIABLE_VALUE
column for each of these
tables is defined as VARCHAR(20480)
.
The
GLOBAL_VARIABLES
and
SESSION_VARIABLES
tables provide information about server status variables. Their
contents correspond to the information produced by the
SHOW GLOBAL
VARIABLES
and
SHOW SESSION
VARIABLES
statements (see
Section 12.4.5.40, “SHOW VARIABLES
Syntax”).
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
VARIABLE_NAME | Variable_name | |
VARIABLE_VALUE | Value |
Notes:
The VARIABLE_VALUE
column for each of these
tables is defined as VARCHAR(20480)
.
The PARAMETERS
table provides
information about stored procedure and function parameters, and
about return values for stored functions. Parameter information is
similar to the contents of the param_list
column in the mysql.proc
table.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | mysql.proc Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
SPECIFIC_CATALOG | def | |
SPECIFIC_SCHEMA | db | routine database |
SPECIFIC_NAME | name | routine name |
ORDINAL_POSITION | 1, 2, 3, ... for parameters, 0 for function RETURNS
clause | |
PARAMETER_MODE | IN , OUT , INOUT
(NULL for RETURNS ) | |
PARAMETER_NAME | parameter name (NULL for RETURNS ) | |
DATA_TYPE | same as for COLUMNS table | |
CHARACTER_MAXIMUM_LENGTH | same as for COLUMNS table | |
CHARACTER_OCTET_LENGTH | same as for COLUMNS table | |
NUMERIC_PRECISION | same as for COLUMNS table | |
NUMERIC_SCALE | same as for COLUMNS table | |
CHARACTER_SET_NAME | same as for COLUMNS table | |
COLLATION_NAME | same as for COLUMNS table | |
DTD_IDENTIFIER | same as for COLUMNS table | |
ROUTINE_TYPE | type | same as for ROUTINES table |
Notes:
The PARAMETERS
table was added in
MySQL 5.5.3.
For successive parameters of a stored procedure or function,
the ORDINAL_POSITION
values are 1, 2, 3,
and so forth. For a stored function, there is also a row that
describes the data type for the RETURNS
clause. The return value is not a true parameter, so the row
that describes it has these unique characteristics:
The ORDINAL_POSITION
value is 0.
The PARAMETER_NAME
and
PARAMETER_MODE
values are
NULL
because the return value has no
name and the mode does not apply.
The PROFILING
table provides
statement profiling information. Its contents correspond to the
information produced by the SHOW
PROFILES
and SHOW PROFILE
statements (see Section 12.4.5.32, “SHOW PROFILES
Syntax”). The table is
empty unless the profiling
session variable is set to 1.
INFORMATION_SCHEMA Name | SHOW Name | Remarks |
---|---|---|
QUERY_ID | Query_ID | |
SEQ |
| |
STATE | Status | |
DURATION | Duration | |
CPU_USER | CPU_user | |
CPU_SYSTEM | CPU_system | |
CONTEXT_VOLUNTARY | Context_voluntary | |
CONTEXT_INVOLUNTARY | Context_involuntary | |
BLOCK_OPS_IN | Block_ops_in | |
BLOCK_OPS_OUT | Block_ops_out | |
MESSAGES_SENT | Messages_sent | |
MESSAGES_RECEIVED | Messages_received | |
PAGE_FAULTS_MAJOR | Page_faults_major | |
PAGE_FAULTS_MINOR | Page_faults_minor | |
SWAPS | Swaps | |
SOURCE_FUNCTION | Source_function | |
SOURCE_FILE | Source_file | |
SOURCE_LINE | Source_line |
Notes:
QUERY_ID
is a numeric statement identifier.
SEQ
is a sequence number indicating the
display order for rows with the same
QUERY_ID
value.
STATE
is the profiling state to which the
row measurements apply.
DURATION
indicates how long statement
execution remained in the given state, in seconds.
CPU_USER
and CPU_SYSTEM
indicate user and system CPU use, in seconds.
CONTEXT_VOLUNTARY
and
CONTEXT_INVOLUNTARY
indicate how many
voluntary and involuntary context switches occurred.
BLOCK_OPS_IN
and
BLOCK_OPS_OUT
indicate the number of block
input and output operations.
MESSAGES_SENT
and
MESSAGES_RECEIVED
indicate the number of
communication messages sent and received.
PAGE_FAULTS_MAJOR
and
PAGE_FAULTS_MINOR
indicate the number of
major and minor page faults.
SWAPS
indicates how many swaps occurred.
SOURCE_FUNCTION
,
SOURCE_FILE
, and
SOURCE_LINE
provide information indicating
where in the source code the profiled state executes.
The InnoDB
tables related to the
InnoDB
storage engine help you to monitor ongoing
InnoDB
activity, to detect inefficiencies before
they turn into issues, or to troubleshoot performance and capacity
issues that do occur. As your database becomes bigger and busier,
running up against the limits of your hardware capacity, you monitor
and tune these aspects to keep the database running smoothly. The
monitoring information deals with:
InnoDB
table compression, a feature whose use
depends on a balance between I/O reduction, CPU usage, buffer
pool management, and how much compression is possible for your
data.
Transactions and locks, features that balance high performance for a single operation, against the ability to run multiple operations concurrently. (Transactions are the high-level, user-visible aspect of concurrency. Locks are the low-level mechanism that transactions use to avoid reading or writing unreliable data.)
The INNODB_CMP
and
INNODB_CMP_RESET
tables contain status
information on operations related to compressed
InnoDB
tables.
Table 19.1. Columns of INNODB_CMP
and
INNODB_CMP_RESET
Column name | Description |
---|---|
PAGE_SIZE | Compressed page size in bytes. |
COMPRESS_OPS | Number of times a B-tree page of the size PAGE_SIZE
has been compressed. Pages are compressed whenever an empty
page is created or the space for the uncompressed modification
log runs out. |
COMPRESS_OPS_OK | Number of times a B-tree page of the size PAGE_SIZE
has been successfully compressed. This count should never
exceed COMPRESS_OPS . |
COMPRESS_TIME | Total time in seconds spent in attempts to compress B-tree pages of the
size PAGE_SIZE . |
UNCOMPRESS_OPS | Number of times a B-tree page of the size PAGE_SIZE
has been uncompressed. B-tree pages are uncompressed whenever
compression fails or at first access when the uncompressed
page does not exist in the buffer pool. |
UNCOMPRESS_TIME | Total time in seconds spent in uncompressing B-tree pages of the size
PAGE_SIZE . |
Notes:
Use these tables to measure the effectiveness of
InnoDB
table compression in your database.
For usage information, see
Section 13.4.6.1.3, “Using the Compression Information Schema Tables”.
The INNODB_CMPMEM
and
INNODB_CMPMEM_RESET
tables contain status
information on compressed pages within the
InnoDB
buffer pool.
Table 19.2. Columns of INNODB_CMPMEM and INNODB_CMPMEM_RESET
Column name | Description |
---|---|
PAGE_SIZE | Block size in bytes. Each record of this table describes blocks of this size. |
PAGES_USED | Number of blocks of the size PAGE_SIZE that are
currently in use. |
PAGES_FREE | Number of blocks of the size PAGE_SIZE that are
currently available for allocation. This column shows the
external fragmentation in the memory pool. Ideally, these
numbers should be at most 1. |
RELOCATION_OPS | Number of times a block of the size PAGE_SIZE has
been relocated. The buddy system can relocate the allocated
“buddy neighbor” of a freed block when it tries
to form a bigger freed block. Reading from the table
INNODB_CMPMEM_RESET resets this count. |
RELOCATION_TIME | Total time in microseconds spent in relocating blocks of the size
PAGE_SIZE . Reading from the table
INNODB_CMPMEM_RESET resets this count. |
Notes:
Use these tables to measure the effectiveness of
InnoDB
table compression in your database.
For usage information, see
Section 13.4.6.1.3, “Using the Compression Information Schema Tables”.
The INNODB_TRX
table contains
information about every transaction currently executing inside
InnoDB
, including whether the transaction is
waiting for a lock, when the transaction started, and the SQL
statement the transaction is executing.
Table 19.3. INNODB_TRX
Columns
Column name | Description |
---|---|
TRX_ID | Unique transaction ID number, internal to InnoDB . |
TRX_WEIGHT | The weight of a transaction, reflecting (but not necessarily the exact
count of) the number of rows altered and the number of rows
locked by the transaction. To resolve a deadlock,
InnoDB selects the transaction with the
smallest weight as the “victim” to rollback.
Transactions that have changed non-transactional tables are
considered heavier than others, regardless of the number of
altered and locked rows. |
TRX_STATE | Transaction execution state. One of RUNNING ,
LOCK WAIT , ROLLING BACK
or COMMITTING . |
TRX_STARTED | Transaction start time. |
TRX_REQUESTED_LOCK_ID | ID of the lock the transaction is currently waiting for (if
TRX_STATE is LOCK WAIT ,
otherwise NULL ). Details about the lock can
be found by joining with INNODB_LOCKS on
LOCK_ID . |
TRX_WAIT_STARTED | Time when the transaction started waiting on the lock (if
TRX_STATE is LOCK WAIT ,
otherwise NULL ). |
TRX_MYSQL_THREAD_ID | MySQL thread ID. Can be used for joining with
PROCESSLIST on ID . See
Section 13.4.6.3.3, “Possible Inconsistency with PROCESSLIST ”. |
TRX_QUERY | The SQL query that is being executed by the transaction. |
TRX_OPERATION_STATE | The transaction's current operation, or NULL . |
TRX_TABLES_IN_USE | The number of InnoDB tables used while processing the current SQL statement of this transaction. |
TRX_TABLES_LOCKED | Number of InnoDB tables that currently have any locks. (Because these are row locks, not table locks, the tables can usually still be read from and written to by multiple transactions, despite some rows being locked.) |
TRX_LOCK_STRUCTS | The number of locks reserved by the transaction. |
TRX_LOCK_MEMORY_BYTES | Total size taken up by the lock structures of this transaction in memory. |
TRX_ROWS_LOCKED | Approximate number or rows locked by this transaction. The value might include delete-marked rows that are physically present but not visible to the transaction. |
TRX_ROWS_MODIFIED | The number of modified and inserted rows in this transaction. |
TRX_CONCURRENCY_TICKETS | A value indicating how much work the current transaction can do before
being swapped out, as specified by the
innodb_concurrency_tickets option. |
TRX_ISOLATION_LEVEL | The isolation level of the current transaction. |
TRX_UNIQUE_CHECKS | Whether unique checks are turned on or off for the current transaction. (They might be turned off during a bulk data load, for example.) |
TRX_FOREIGN_KEY_CHECKS | Whether foreign key checks are turned on or off for the current transaction. (They might be turned off during a bulk data load, for example.) |
TRX_LAST_FOREIGN_KEY_ERROR | Detailed error message for last FK error, or NULL . |
TRX_ADAPTIVE_HASH_LATCHED | Whether or not the adaptive hash index is locked by the current transaction. (Only a single transaction at a time can modify the adaptive hash index.) |
TRX_ADAPTIVE_HASH_TIMEOUT | Whether to relinquish the search latch immediately for the adaptive hash index, or reserve it across calls from MySQL. When there is no AHI contention, this value remains zero and statements reserve the latch until they finish. During times of contention, it counts down to zero, and statements release the latch immediately after each row lookup. |
Notes:
Use this table to help diagnose performance problems that occur during times of heavy concurrent load. For usage information, see Section 13.4.6.2.4, “Using the Transaction Information Schema Tables”.
The INNODB_LOCKS
table contains
information about each lock that an InnoDB
transaction has requested but not yet acquired, and each lock that
a transaction holds that is blocking another transaction.
Table 19.4. INNODB_LOCKS
Columns
Column name | Description |
---|---|
LOCK_ID | Unique lock ID number, internal to InnoDB . Should be
treated as an opaque string. Although
LOCK_ID currently contains
TRX_ID , the format of the data in
LOCK_ID is not guaranteed to remain the
same in future releases. You should not write programs that
parse the LOCK_ID value. |
LOCK_TRX_ID | ID of the transaction holding this lock. Details about the transaction
can be found by joining with INNODB_TRX on
TRX_ID . |
LOCK_MODE | Mode of the lock. One of S , X ,
IS , IX ,
S_GAP , X_GAP ,
IS_GAP , IX_GAP , or
AUTO_INC for shared, exclusive, intention
shared, intention exclusive row locks, shared and exclusive
gap locks, intention shared and intention exclusive gap locks,
and auto-increment table level lock, respectively. Refer to
the sections Section 13.3.9.1, “InnoDB Lock Modes” and
Section 13.3.9, “The InnoDB Transaction Model and Locking” for information on
InnoDB locking. |
LOCK_TYPE | Type of the lock. One of RECORD or
TABLE for record (row) level or table level
locks, respectively. |
LOCK_TABLE | Name of the table that has been locked or contains locked records. |
LOCK_INDEX | Name of the index if LOCK_TYPE='RECORD' , otherwise
NULL . |
LOCK_SPACE | Tablespace ID of the locked record if
LOCK_TYPE='RECORD' , otherwise
NULL . |
LOCK_PAGE | Page number of the locked record if
LOCK_TYPE='RECORD' , otherwise
NULL . |
LOCK_REC | Heap number of the locked record within the page if
LOCK_TYPE='RECORD' , otherwise
NULL . |
LOCK_DATA | Primary key of the locked record if
LOCK_TYPE='RECORD' , otherwise
NULL . This column contains the value(s) of
the primary key column(s) in the locked row, formatted as a
valid SQL string (ready to be copied to SQL commands). If
there is no primary key then the InnoDB
internal unique row ID number is used. When the page
containing the locked record is not in the buffer pool (in the
case that it was paged out to disk while the lock was held),
InnoDB does not fetch the page from disk,
to avoid unnecessary disk operations. Instead,
LOCK_DATA is set to
NULL . |
Notes:
Use this table to help diagnose performance problems that occur during times of heavy concurrent load. For usage information, see Section 13.4.6.2.4, “Using the Transaction Information Schema Tables”.
The INNODB_LOCK_WAITS
table contains
one or more rows for each blocked InnoDB
transaction, indicating the lock it has requested and any locks
that are blocking that request.
Table 19.5. INNODB_LOCK_WAITS
Columns
Column name | Description |
---|---|
REQUESTING_TRX_ID | ID of the requesting transaction. |
REQUESTED_LOCK_ID | ID of the lock for which a transaction is waiting. Details about the
lock can be found by joining with
INNODB_LOCKS on LOCK_ID . |
BLOCKING_TRX_ID | ID of the blocking transaction. |
BLOCKING_LOCK_ID | ID of a lock held by a transaction blocking another transaction from
proceeding. Details about the lock can be found by joining
with INNODB_LOCKS on
LOCK_ID . |
Notes:
Use this table to help diagnose performance problems that occur during times of heavy concurrent load. For usage information, see Section 13.4.6.2.4, “Using the Transaction Information Schema Tables”.
The following sections describe the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables associated with the
thread pool plugin. They provide information about thread pool
operation:
TP_THREAD_STATE
: Information about
thread pool thread states
TP_THREAD_GROUP_STATE
: Information
about thread pool thread group states
TP_THREAD_GROUP_STATS
: Thread group
statistics
Rows in these tables represent snapshots in time. In the case of
TP_THREAD_STATE
, all rows for a thread
group comprise a snapshot in time. Thus, the MySQL server holds the
mutex of the thread group while producing the snapshot. But it does
not hold mutexes on all thread groups at the same time, to prevent a
statement against TP_THREAD_STATE
from
blocking the entire MySQL server.
The thread pool INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables are
implemented by individual plugins and the decision whether to load
one can be made independently of the others (see
Section 7.11.6.1, “Thread Pool Components and Installation”). However, the content of
all the tables depends on the thread pool plugin being enabled. If a
table plugin is enabled but the thread pool plugin is not, the table
becomes visible and can be accessed but will be empty.
This table has one row per thread created by the thread pool to handle connections. The table has these columns:
TP_GROUP_ID
The thread group ID.
TP_THREAD_NUMBER
The ID of the thread within its thread group.
TP_GROUP_ID
and
TP_THREAD_NUMBER
together provide a unique
key within the table.
PROCESS_COUNT
The 10ms interval in which the statement that uses this thread is currently executing. 0 means no statement is executing, 1 means it is in the first 10ms, and so forth.
WAIT_TYPE
The type of wait for the thread. NULL
means
the thread is not blocked. Otherwise, the thread is blocked by
a call to thd_wait_begin()
and the value
specifies the type of wait. The
columns
of the xxx
_WAITTP_THREAD_GROUP_STATS
table accumulate counts for each wait type.
The WAIT_TYPE
value is a string that
describes the type of wait, as shown in the following table.
Table 19.6. WAIT_TYPE
Values
Wait Type | Meaning |
---|---|
THD_WAIT_SLEEP | Waiting for sleep |
THD_WAIT_DISKIO | Waiting for Disk IO |
THD_WAIT_ROW_LOCK | Waiting for row lock |
THD_WAIT_GLOBAL_LOCK | Waiting for global lock |
THD_WAIT_META_DATA_LOCK | Waiting for metadata lock |
THD_WAIT_TABLE_LOCK | Waiting for table lock |
THD_WAIT_USER_LOCK | Waiting for user lock |
THD_WAIT_BINLOG | Waiting for binlog |
THD_WAIT_GROUP_COMMIT | Waiting for group commit |
THD_WAIT_SYNC | Waiting for fsync |
This table has one row per thread group in the thread pool. Each row provides information about the current state of a group. The table has these columns:
TP_GROUP_ID
The thread group ID. This is a unique key within the table.
CONSUMER THREADS
The number of consumer threads. There is at most one thread ready to start executing if the active threads become stalled or blocked.
RESERVE_THREADS
The number of threads in the reserved state. This means that they will not be started until there is a need to wake a new thread and there is no consumer thread. This is where most threads end up when the thread group has created more threads than needed for normal operation. Often a thread group needs additional threads for a short while and then does not need them again for a while. In this case, they go into the reserved state and remain until needed again. They take up some extra memory resources, but no extra computing resources.
CONNECTION_COUNT
The number of connections using this thread group.
QUEUED_QUERIES
The number of statements waiting in the high-priority queue.
QUEUED_TRANSACTIONS
The number of statements waiting in the low-priority queue. These are the initial statements for transactions that have not started, so they also represent queued transactions.
STALL_LIMIT
The value of the
thread_pool_stall_limit
variable on the thread group. This is the same value for all
thread groups.
PRIO_KICKUP_TIMER
The value of the
thread_pool_prio_kickup_timer
on the thread group. This is the same value for all thread
groups.
ALGORITHM
The value of the
thread_pool_algorithm
on the
thread group. This is the same value for all thread groups.
THREAD_COUNT
The number of threads started in the thread pool as part of this thread group.
ACTIVE_THREAD_COUNT
The number of threads active executing statements.
MAX_THREAD_IDS_IN_GROUP
The maximum thread ID of the threads in the group. This is the
same as MAX(TP_THREAD_NUMBER)
for the threads when selected from the
TP_THREAD_GROUP_STATE
table. That
is, these two queries are equivalent:
SELECT TP_GROUP_ID, MAX_THREAD_IDS_IN_GROUP FROM TP_THREAD_GROUP_STATE; SELECT TP_GROUP_ID, MAX(TP_THREAD_NUMBER) FROM TP_THREAD_STATE GROUP BY TP_GROUP_ID;
STALLED_THREAD_COUNT
The number of stalled statements in the thread group. A stalled statement could be executing, but from a thread pool perspective it is stalled and making no progress. A long-running statement quickly ends up in this category.
WAITING_THREAD_NUMBER
If there is a thread handling the polling of statements in the thread group, this specifies the thread number within this thread group. It is possible that this thread could be executing a statement.
OLDEST_QUEUED
How long in milliseconds the oldest queued statement has been waiting for execution.
This table reports statistics per thread group. There is one row per group. The table has these columns:
TP_GROUP_ID
The thread group ID. This is a unique key within the table.
CONNECTIONS_STARTED
The number of connections started.
CONNECTIONS_CLOSED
The number of connections closed.
QUERIES_EXECUTED
The number of statements executed. This number is incremented when a statement starts executing, not when it finishes.
QUERIES_QUEUED
The number of statements received that were queued for execution. This does not count statements that the thread group was able to begin executing immediately without queuing, which can happen under the conditions described in Section 7.11.6.2, “Thread Pool Operation”.
THREADS_STARTED
The number of threads started.
PRIO_KICKUPS
The number of statements that have been moved from
low-priority queue to high-priority queue based on the value
of the
thread_pool_prio_kickup_timer
system variable. If this number increases quickly, consider
increasing the value of that variable. A quickly increasing
counter means that the priority system is not keeping
transactions from starting too early. For
InnoDB
, this most likely means
deteriorating performance due to too many concurrent
transactions..
STALLED_QUERIES_EXECUTED
The number of statements that have become defined as stalled
due to executing for a time longer than the value of the
thread_pool_stall_limit
system variable.
BECOME_CONSUMER_THREAD
The number of times thread have been assigned the consumer thread role.
BECOME_RESERVE_THREAD
The number of times threads have been assigned the reserve thread role.
BECOME_WAITING_THREAD
The number of times threads have been assigned the waiter thread role. When statements are queued, this happens very often, even in normal operation, so rapid increases in this value are normal in the case of a highly loaded system where statements are queued up.
WAKE_THREAD_STALL_CHECKER
The number of times the stall check thread decided to wake or create a thread to possibly handle some statements or take care of the waiter thread role.
SLEEP_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_SLEEP
waits. These
occur when threads go to sleep; for example, by calling the
SLEEP()
function.
DISK_IO_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_DISKIO
waits. These
occur when threads perform disk I/O that is likely to not hit
the file system cache. Such waits occur when the buffer pool
reads and writes data to disk, not for normal reads from and
writes to files.
ROW_LOCK_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_ROW_LOCK
waits for
release of a row lock by another transaction.
GLOBAL_LOCK_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_GLOBAL_LOCK
waits
for a global lock to be released.
META_DATA_LOCK_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_META_DATA_LOCK
waits
for a metadata lock to be released.
TABLE_LOCK_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_TABLE_LOCK
waits for
a table to be unlocked that the statement needs to access.
USER_LOCK_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_USER_LOCK
waits for
a special lock constructed by the user thread.
BINLOG_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_BINLOG_WAITS
waits
for the binary log to become free.
GROUP_COMMIT_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_GROUP_COMMIT
waits.
These occur when a group commit must wait for the other
parties to complete their part of a transaction.
FSYNC_WAITS
The number of THD_WAIT_SYNC
waits for a
file sync operation.
Some extensions to SHOW
statements
accompany the implementation of
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
:
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
is an information database,
so its name is included in the output from
SHOW DATABASES
. Similarly,
SHOW TABLES
can be used with
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
to obtain a list of its
tables:
mysql> SHOW TABLES FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA;
+---------------------------------------+
| Tables_in_INFORMATION_SCHEMA |
+---------------------------------------+
| CHARACTER_SETS |
| COLLATIONS |
| COLLATION_CHARACTER_SET_APPLICABILITY |
| COLUMNS |
| COLUMN_PRIVILEGES |
| ENGINES |
| EVENTS |
| FILES |
| GLOBAL_STATUS |
| GLOBAL_VARIABLES |
| KEY_COLUMN_USAGE |
| PARTITIONS |
| PLUGINS |
| PROCESSLIST |
| REFERENTIAL_CONSTRAINTS |
| ROUTINES |
| SCHEMATA |
| SCHEMA_PRIVILEGES |
| SESSION_STATUS |
| SESSION_VARIABLES |
| STATISTICS |
| TABLES |
| TABLE_CONSTRAINTS |
| TABLE_PRIVILEGES |
| TRIGGERS |
| USER_PRIVILEGES |
| VIEWS |
+---------------------------------------+
27 rows in set (0.00 sec)
SHOW COLUMNS
and
DESCRIBE
can display information
about the columns in individual
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
tables.
SHOW
statements that accept a
LIKE
clause to limit the rows
displayed also permit a WHERE
clause that
specifies more general conditions that selected rows must satisfy:
SHOW CHARACTER SET SHOW COLLATION SHOW COLUMNS SHOW DATABASES SHOW FUNCTION STATUS SHOW INDEX SHOW OPEN TABLES SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS SHOW STATUS SHOW TABLE STATUS SHOW TABLES SHOW TRIGGERS SHOW VARIABLES
The WHERE
clause, if present, is evaluated
against the column names displayed by the
SHOW
statement. For example, the
SHOW CHARACTER SET
statement
produces these output columns:
mysql> SHOW CHARACTER SET;
+----------+-----------------------------+---------------------+--------+
| Charset | Description | Default collation | Maxlen |
+----------+-----------------------------+---------------------+--------+
| big5 | Big5 Traditional Chinese | big5_chinese_ci | 2 |
| dec8 | DEC West European | dec8_swedish_ci | 1 |
| cp850 | DOS West European | cp850_general_ci | 1 |
| hp8 | HP West European | hp8_english_ci | 1 |
| koi8r | KOI8-R Relcom Russian | koi8r_general_ci | 1 |
| latin1 | cp1252 West European | latin1_swedish_ci | 1 |
| latin2 | ISO 8859-2 Central European | latin2_general_ci | 1 |
...
To use a WHERE
clause with
SHOW CHARACTER SET
, you would refer
to those column names. As an example, the following statement
displays information about character sets for which the default
collation contains the string 'japanese'
:
mysql> SHOW CHARACTER SET WHERE `Default collation` LIKE '%japanese%';
+---------+---------------------------+---------------------+--------+
| Charset | Description | Default collation | Maxlen |
+---------+---------------------------+---------------------+--------+
| ujis | EUC-JP Japanese | ujis_japanese_ci | 3 |
| sjis | Shift-JIS Japanese | sjis_japanese_ci | 2 |
| cp932 | SJIS for Windows Japanese | cp932_japanese_ci | 2 |
| eucjpms | UJIS for Windows Japanese | eucjpms_japanese_ci | 3 |
+---------+---------------------------+---------------------+--------+
This statement displays the multi-byte character sets:
mysql> SHOW CHARACTER SET WHERE Maxlen > 1;
+---------+---------------------------+---------------------+--------+
| Charset | Description | Default collation | Maxlen |
+---------+---------------------------+---------------------+--------+
| big5 | Big5 Traditional Chinese | big5_chinese_ci | 2 |
| ujis | EUC-JP Japanese | ujis_japanese_ci | 3 |
| sjis | Shift-JIS Japanese | sjis_japanese_ci | 2 |
| euckr | EUC-KR Korean | euckr_korean_ci | 2 |
| gb2312 | GB2312 Simplified Chinese | gb2312_chinese_ci | 2 |
| gbk | GBK Simplified Chinese | gbk_chinese_ci | 2 |
| utf8 | UTF-8 Unicode | utf8_general_ci | 3 |
| ucs2 | UCS-2 Unicode | ucs2_general_ci | 2 |
| cp932 | SJIS for Windows Japanese | cp932_japanese_ci | 2 |
| eucjpms | UJIS for Windows Japanese | eucjpms_japanese_ci | 3 |
+---------+---------------------------+---------------------+--------+