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25.19 The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PROCESSLIST Table
The PROCESSLIST
table provides
information about which threads are running.
The PROCESSLIST
table has these
columns:
ID
The connection identifier. This is the same type of value displayed in the
Id
column of theSHOW PROCESSLIST
statement, thePROCESSLIST_ID
column of the Performance Schemathreads
table, and returned by theCONNECTION_ID()
function.USER
The MySQL user who issued the statement. A value of
system user
refers to a nonclient thread spawned by the server to handle tasks internally. This could be the I/O or SQL thread used on replication slaves or a delayed-row handler. Forsystem user
, there is no host specified in theHost
column.unauthenticated user
refers to a thread that has become associated with a client connection but for which authentication of the client user has not yet been done.event_scheduler
refers to the thread that monitors scheduled events (see Section 24.4, “Using the Event Scheduler”).HOST
The host name of the client issuing the statement (except for
system user
, for which there is no host). The host name for TCP/IP connections is reported in
format to make it easier to determine which client is doing what.host_name
:client_port
DB
The default database, if one is selected; otherwise
NULL
.COMMAND
The type of command the thread is executing. For descriptions for thread commands, see Section 8.14, “Examining Thread Information”. The value of this column corresponds to the
COM_
commands of the client/server protocol andxxx
Com_
status variables. See Section 5.1.10, “Server Status Variables”xxx
TIME
The time in seconds that the thread has been in its current state. For a slave SQL thread, the value is the number of seconds between the timestamp of the last replicated event and the real time of the slave machine. See Section 17.2.2, “Replication Implementation Details”.
STATE
An action, event, or state that indicates what the thread is doing. Descriptions for
STATE
values can be found at Section 8.14, “Examining Thread Information”.Most states correspond to very quick operations. If a thread stays in a given state for many seconds, there might be a problem that needs to be investigated.
For the
SHOW PROCESSLIST
statement, the value ofSTATE
isNULL
.INFO
The statement the thread is executing, or
NULL
if it is not executing any statement. The statement might be the one sent to the server, or an innermost statement if the statement executes other statements. For example, if aCALL
statement executes a stored procedure that is executing aSELECT
statement, theINFO
value shows theSELECT
statement.
Notes
The
PROCESSLIST
table is a nonstandardINFORMATION_SCHEMA
table.Like the output from the
SHOW PROCESSLIST
statement, thePROCESSLIST
table shows information only about your own threads, unless you have thePROCESS
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 the
PROCESSLIST
table, MySQL populates 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.
Process information is also available from the mysqladmin
processlist command, the SHOW
PROCESSLIST
statement, and the Performance Schema
threads
table (see
Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — Client for Administering a MySQL Server”, Section 13.7.6.29, “SHOW PROCESSLIST Syntax”,
and Section 26.12.17.5, “The threads Table”). In contrast to the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PROCESSLIST
table and
SHOW PROCESSLIST
statement, which
have negative performance consequences because they require a
mutex, access to threads
does not
require a mutex and has minimal impact on server performance. The
threads
table also shows information
about background threads, which the
PROCESSLIST
table and
SHOW PROCESSLIST
do not. This means
that threads
can be used to monitor
activity the other thread information sources cannot.
The following statements are equivalent:
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