MySQL 9.3 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 9.3
The following example demonstrates how to use Performance Schema
statement events and stage events to retrieve data comparable to
profiling information provided by SHOW
PROFILES
and SHOW
PROFILE
statements.
The setup_actors
table can be used
to limit the collection of historical events by host, user, or
account to reduce runtime overhead and the amount of data
collected in history tables. The first step of the example shows
how to limit collection of historical events to a specific user.
Performance Schema displays event timer information in
picoseconds (trillionths of a second) to normalize timing data
to a standard unit. In the following example,
TIMER_WAIT
values are divided by
1000000000000 to show data in units of seconds. Values are also
truncated to 6 decimal places to display data in the same format
as SHOW PROFILES
and
SHOW PROFILE
statements.
Limit the collection of historical events to the user that
runs the query. By default,
setup_actors
is configured to
allow monitoring and historical event collection for all
foreground threads:
mysql> SELECT * FROM performance_schema.setup_actors;
+------+------+------+---------+---------+
| HOST | USER | ROLE | ENABLED | HISTORY |
+------+------+------+---------+---------+
| % | % | % | YES | YES |
+------+------+------+---------+---------+
Update the default row in the
setup_actors
table to disable
historical event collection and monitoring for all
foreground threads, and insert a new row that enables
monitoring and historical event collection for the user that
runs the query:
mysql>UPDATE performance_schema.setup_actors
SET ENABLED = 'NO', HISTORY = 'NO'
WHERE HOST = '%' AND USER = '%';
mysql>INSERT INTO performance_schema.setup_actors
(HOST,USER,ROLE,ENABLED,HISTORY)
VALUES('localhost','test_user','%','YES','YES');
Data in the setup_actors
table
should now appear similar to the following:
mysql> SELECT * FROM performance_schema.setup_actors;
+-----------+-----------+------+---------+---------+
| HOST | USER | ROLE | ENABLED | HISTORY |
+-----------+-----------+------+---------+---------+
| % | % | % | NO | NO |
| localhost | test_user | % | YES | YES |
+-----------+-----------+------+---------+---------+
Ensure that statement and stage instrumentation is enabled
by updating the
setup_instruments
table. Some
instruments may already be enabled by default.
mysql>UPDATE performance_schema.setup_instruments
SET ENABLED = 'YES', TIMED = 'YES'
WHERE NAME LIKE '%statement/%';
mysql>UPDATE performance_schema.setup_instruments
SET ENABLED = 'YES', TIMED = 'YES'
WHERE NAME LIKE '%stage/%';
Ensure that events_statements_*
and
events_stages_*
consumers are enabled.
Some consumers may already be enabled by default.
mysql>UPDATE performance_schema.setup_consumers
SET ENABLED = 'YES'
WHERE NAME LIKE '%events_statements_%';
mysql>UPDATE performance_schema.setup_consumers
SET ENABLED = 'YES'
WHERE NAME LIKE '%events_stages_%';
Under the user account you are monitoring, run the statement that you want to profile. For example:
mysql> SELECT * FROM employees.employees WHERE emp_no = 10001;
+--------+------------+------------+-----------+--------+------------+
| emp_no | birth_date | first_name | last_name | gender | hire_date |
+--------+------------+------------+-----------+--------+------------+
| 10001 | 1953-09-02 | Georgi | Facello | M | 1986-06-26 |
+--------+------------+------------+-----------+--------+------------+
Identify the EVENT_ID
of the statement by
querying the
events_statements_history_long
table. This step is similar to running
SHOW PROFILES
to identify the
Query_ID
. The following query produces
output similar to SHOW
PROFILES
:
mysql> SELECT EVENT_ID, TRUNCATE(TIMER_WAIT/1000000000000,6) as Duration, SQL_TEXT
FROM performance_schema.events_statements_history_long WHERE SQL_TEXT like '%10001%';
+----------+----------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| event_id | duration | sql_text |
+----------+----------+--------------------------------------------------------+
| 31 | 0.028310 | SELECT * FROM employees.employees WHERE emp_no = 10001 |
+----------+----------+--------------------------------------------------------+
Query the
events_stages_history_long
table to retrieve the statement's stage events. Stages are
linked to statements using event nesting. Each stage event
record has a NESTING_EVENT_ID
column that
contains the EVENT_ID
of the parent
statement.
mysql> SELECT event_name AS Stage, TRUNCATE(TIMER_WAIT/1000000000000,6) AS Duration
FROM performance_schema.events_stages_history_long WHERE NESTING_EVENT_ID=31;
+--------------------------------+----------+
| Stage | Duration |
+--------------------------------+----------+
| stage/sql/starting | 0.000080 |
| stage/sql/checking permissions | 0.000005 |
| stage/sql/Opening tables | 0.027759 |
| stage/sql/init | 0.000052 |
| stage/sql/System lock | 0.000009 |
| stage/sql/optimizing | 0.000006 |
| stage/sql/statistics | 0.000082 |
| stage/sql/preparing | 0.000008 |
| stage/sql/executing | 0.000000 |
| stage/sql/Sending data | 0.000017 |
| stage/sql/end | 0.000001 |
| stage/sql/query end | 0.000004 |
| stage/sql/closing tables | 0.000006 |
| stage/sql/freeing items | 0.000272 |
| stage/sql/cleaning up | 0.000001 |
+--------------------------------+----------+