The setup_consumers
table lists
the types of consumers for which event information can be
stored and which are enabled:
mysql> SELECT * FROM performance_schema.setup_consumers;
+----------------------------------+---------+
| NAME | ENABLED |
+----------------------------------+---------+
| events_stages_current | NO |
| events_stages_history | NO |
| events_stages_history_long | NO |
| events_statements_current | YES |
| events_statements_history | YES |
| events_statements_history_long | NO |
| events_transactions_current | YES |
| events_transactions_history | YES |
| events_transactions_history_long | NO |
| events_waits_current | NO |
| events_waits_history | NO |
| events_waits_history_long | NO |
| global_instrumentation | YES |
| thread_instrumentation | YES |
| statements_digest | YES |
+----------------------------------+---------+
The consumer settings in the
setup_consumers
table form a
hierarchy from higher levels to lower. For detailed
information about the effect of enabling different consumers,
see Section 29.4.7, “Pre-Filtering by Consumer”.
Modifications to the
setup_consumers
table affect
monitoring immediately.
The setup_consumers
table has
these columns:
NAME
The consumer name.
ENABLED
Whether the consumer is enabled. The value is
YES
orNO
. This column can be modified. If you disable a consumer, the server does not spend time adding event information to it.
The setup_consumers
table has
these indexes:
Primary key on (
NAME
)
TRUNCATE TABLE
is not permitted
for the setup_consumers
table.