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5.4.5 The Slow Query Log
The slow query log consists of SQL statements that take more than
long_query_time
seconds to
execute and require at least
min_examined_row_limit
rows to be
examined. The slow query log can be used to find queries that take
a long time to execute and are therefore candidates for
optimization. However, examining a long slow query log can be a
time-consuming task. To make this easier, you can use the
mysqldumpslow command to process a slow query
log file and summarize its contents. See
Section 4.6.9, “mysqldumpslow — Summarize Slow Query Log Files”.
The time to acquire the initial locks is not counted as execution time. mysqld writes a statement to the slow query log after it has been executed and after all locks have been released, so log order might differ from execution order.
Slow Query Log Parameters
The minimum and default values of
long_query_time
are 0 and 10,
respectively. The value can be specified to a resolution of
microseconds.
By default, administrative statements are not logged, nor are
queries that do not use indexes for lookups. This behavior can
be changed using
log_slow_admin_statements
and
log_queries_not_using_indexes
,
as described later.
By default, the slow query log is disabled. To specify the
initial slow query log state explicitly, use
--slow_query_log[={0|1}]
. With no
argument or an argument of 1,
--slow_query_log
enables the log.
With an argument of 0, this option disables the log. To specify
a log file name, use
--slow_query_log_file=
.
To specify the log destination, use the
file_name
log_output
system variable (as
described in Section 5.4.1, “Selecting General Query Log and Slow Query Log Output Destinations”).
If you specify the TABLE
log destination,
see Log Tables and “Too many open files” Errors.
If you specify no name for the slow query log file, the default
name is
.
The server creates the file in the data directory unless an
absolute path name is given to specify a different directory.
host_name
-slow.log
To disable or enable the slow query log or change the log file
name at runtime, use the global
slow_query_log
and
slow_query_log_file
system
variables. Set slow_query_log
to 0 to disable the log or to 1 to enable it. Set
slow_query_log_file
to specify
the name of the log file. If a log file already is open, it is
closed and the new file is opened.
The server writes less information to the slow query log if you
use the --log-short-format
option.
To include slow administrative statements in the slow query log,
enable the
log_slow_admin_statements
system variable. Administrative statements include
ALTER TABLE
,
ANALYZE TABLE
,
CHECK TABLE
,
CREATE INDEX
,
DROP INDEX
,
OPTIMIZE TABLE
, and
REPAIR TABLE
.
To include queries that do not use indexes for row lookups in
the statements written to the slow query log, enable the
log_queries_not_using_indexes
system variable. (Even with that variable enabled, the server
does not log queries that would not benefit from the presence of
an index due to the table having fewer than two rows.)
When queries that do not use an index are logged, the slow query
log may grow quickly. It is possible to put a rate limit on
these queries by setting the
log_throttle_queries_not_using_indexes
system variable. By default, this variable is 0, which means
there is no limit. Positive values impose a per-minute limit on
logging of queries that do not use indexes. The first such query
opens a 60-second window within which the server logs queries up
to the given limit, then suppresses additional queries. If there
are suppressed queries when the window ends, the server logs a
summary that indicates how many there were and the aggregate
time spent in them. The next 60-second window begins when the
server logs the next query that does not use indexes.
The server uses the controlling parameters in the following order to determine whether to write a query to the slow query log:
The query must either not be an administrative statement, or
log_slow_admin_statements
must be enabled.The query must have taken at least
long_query_time
seconds, orlog_queries_not_using_indexes
must be enabled and the query used no indexes for row lookups.The query must have examined at least
min_examined_row_limit
rows.The query must not be suppressed according to the
log_throttle_queries_not_using_indexes
setting.
The log_timestamps
system
variable controls the time zone of timestamps in messages
written to the slow query log file (as well as to the general
query log file and the error log). It does not affect the time
zone of general query log and slow query log messages written to
log tables, but rows retrieved from those tables can be
converted from the local system time zone to any desired time
zone with CONVERT_TZ()
or by
setting the session time_zone
system variable.
By default, a replication slave does not write replicated
queries to the slow query log. To change this, enable the
log_slow_slave_statements
system variable.
When the slow query log is enabled, the server writes output to
any destinations specified by the
log_output
system variable. If
you enable the log, the server opens the log file and writes
startup messages to it. However, further logging of queries to
the file does not occur unless the FILE
log
destination is selected. If the destination is
NONE
, the server writes no queries even if
the slow query log is enabled. Setting the log file name has no
effect on logging if FILE
is not selected as
an output destination.
If the slow query log is enabled and FILE
is
selected as an output destination, each statement written to the
log is preceded by a line that begins with a
#
character and has these fields (with all
fields on a single line):
Query_time:
duration
The statement execution time in seconds.
Lock_time:
duration
The time to acquire locks in seconds.
Rows_sent:
N
The number of rows sent to the client.
Rows_examined:
The number of rows examined by the optimizer.
Enabling the log_slow_extra
system variable (available as of MySQL 8.0.14) causes the server
to write the following extra fields to FILE
output in addition to those just listed
(TABLE
output is unaffected). Some field
descriptions refer to status variable names. Consult the status
variable descriptions for more information. However, in the slow
query log, the counters are per-statement values, not cumulative
per-session values.
Thread_id:
ID
The statement thread identifier.
Errno:
error_number
The statement error number, or 0 if no error occurred.
Killed:
N
If the statement was terminated, the error number indicating why, or 0 if the statement terminated normally.
Bytes_received:
N
The
Bytes_received
value for the statement.Bytes_sent:
N
The
Bytes_sent
value for the statement.Read_first:
N
The
Handler_read_first
value for the statement.Read_last:
N
The
Handler_read_last
value for the statement.Read_key:
N
The
Handler_read_key
value for the statement.Read_next:
N
The
Handler_read_next
value for the statement.Read_prev:
N
The
Handler_read_prev
value for the statement.Read_rnd:
N
The
Handler_read_rnd
value for the statement.Read_rnd_next:
N
The
Handler_read_rnd_next
value for the statement.Sort_merge_passes:
N
The
Sort_merge_passes
value for the statement.Sort_range_count:
N
The
Sort_range
value for the statement.Sort_rows:
N
The
Sort_rows
value for the statement.Sort_scan_count:
N
The
Sort_scan
value for the statement.Created_tmp_disk_tables:
N
The
Created_tmp_disk_tables
value for the statement.Created_tmp_tables:
N
The
Created_tmp_tables
value for the statement.Start:
timestamp
The statement execution start time.
End:
timestamp
The statement execution end time.
A given slow query log file may contain a mix of lines with and
without the extra fields added by enabling
log_slow_extra
. Log file
analyzers can determine whether a line contains the additional
fields by the field count.
Each statement written to the slow query log file is preceded by
a SET
statement that includes a timestamp. As of MySQL 8.0.14, the
timestamp indicates when the slow statement began executing.
Prior to 8.0.14, the timestamp indicates when the slow statement
was logged (which occurs after the statement finishes
executing).
Passwords in statements written to the slow query log are rewritten by the server not to occur literally in plain text. See Section 6.1.2.3, “Passwords and Logging”.
Document created the 26/06/2006, last modified the 26/10/2018
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