The most common task when managing a replication process is to ensure that replication is taking place and that there have been no errors between the replica and the source.
The SHOW REPLICA STATUS
statement, which you must execute on each replica, provides
information about the configuration and status of the connection
between the replica server and the source server. From MySQL
8.0.22, SHOW SLAVE STATUS
is
deprecated, and SHOW REPLICA
STATUS
is available to use instead. The Performance
Schema has replication tables that provide this information in a
more accessible form. See
Section 29.12.11, “Performance Schema Replication Tables”.
The replication heartbeat information shown in the Performance
Schema replication tables lets you check that the replication
connection is active even if the source has not sent events to
the replica recently. The source sends a heartbeat signal to a
replica if there are no updates to, and no unsent events in, the
binary log for a longer period than the heartbeat interval. The
MASTER_HEARTBEAT_PERIOD
setting on the source
(set by the CHANGE MASTER TO
statement) specifies the frequency of the heartbeat, which
defaults to half of the connection timeout interval for the
replica (specified by the system variable
replica_net_timeout
or
slave_net_timeout
). The
replication_connection_status
Performance Schema table shows when the most recent heartbeat
signal was received by a replica, and how many heartbeat signals
it has received.
If you are using the SHOW REPLICA
STATUS
statement to check on the status of an
individual replica, the statement provides the following
information:
mysql> SHOW REPLICA STATUS\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Replica_IO_State: Waiting for source to send event
Source_Host: 127.0.0.1
Source_User: root
Source_Port: 13000
Connect_Retry: 1
Source_Log_File: master-bin.000001
Read_Source_Log_Pos: 927
Relay_Log_File: slave-relay-bin.000002
Relay_Log_Pos: 1145
Relay_Source_Log_File: master-bin.000001
Replica_IO_Running: Yes
Replica_SQL_Running: Yes
Replicate_Do_DB:
Replicate_Ignore_DB:
Replicate_Do_Table:
Replicate_Ignore_Table:
Replicate_Wild_Do_Table:
Replicate_Wild_Ignore_Table:
Last_Errno: 0
Last_Error:
Skip_Counter: 0
Exec_Source_Log_Pos: 927
Relay_Log_Space: 1355
Until_Condition: None
Until_Log_File:
Until_Log_Pos: 0
Source_SSL_Allowed: No
Source_SSL_CA_File:
Source_SSL_CA_Path:
Source_SSL_Cert:
Source_SSL_Cipher:
Source_SSL_Key:
Seconds_Behind_Source: 0
Source_SSL_Verify_Server_Cert: No
Last_IO_Errno: 0
Last_IO_Error:
Last_SQL_Errno: 0
Last_SQL_Error:
Replicate_Ignore_Server_Ids:
Source_Server_Id: 1
Source_UUID: 73f86016-978b-11ee-ade5-8d2a2a562feb
Source_Info_File: mysql.slave_master_info
SQL_Delay: 0
SQL_Remaining_Delay: NULL
Replica_SQL_Running_State: Replica has read all relay log; waiting for more updates
Source_Retry_Count: 10
Source_Bind:
Last_IO_Error_Timestamp:
Last_SQL_Error_Timestamp:
Source_SSL_Crl:
Source_SSL_Crlpath:
Retrieved_Gtid_Set: 73f86016-978b-11ee-ade5-8d2a2a562feb:1-3
Executed_Gtid_Set: 73f86016-978b-11ee-ade5-8d2a2a562feb:1-3
Auto_Position: 1
Replicate_Rewrite_DB:
Channel_Name:
Source_TLS_Version:
Source_public_key_path:
Get_Source_public_key: 0
Network_Namespace:
The key fields from the status report to examine are:
Replica_IO_State
: The current status of the replica. See Section 10.14.5, “Replication I/O (Receiver) Thread States”, and Section 10.14.6, “Replication SQL Thread States”, for more information.Replica_IO_Running
: Whether the I/O (receiver) thread for reading the source's binary log is running. Normally, you want this to beYes
unless you have not yet started replication or have explicitly stopped it withSTOP REPLICA
.Replica_SQL_Running
: Whether the SQL thread for executing events in the relay log is running. As with the I/O thread, this should normally beYes
.Last_IO_Error
,Last_SQL_Error
: The last errors registered by the I/O (receiver) and SQL (applier) threads when processing the relay log. Ideally these should be blank, indicating no errors.Seconds_Behind_Source
: The number of seconds that the replication SQL (applier) thread is behind processing the source binary log. A high number (or an increasing one) can indicate that the replica is unable to handle events from the source in a timely fashion.A value of 0 for
Seconds_Behind_Source
can usually be interpreted as meaning that the replica has caught up with the source, but there are some cases where this is not strictly true. For example, this can occur if the network connection between source and replica is broken but the replication I/O (receiver) thread has not yet noticed this; that is, the time period set byreplica_net_timeout
orslave_net_timeout
has not yet elapsed.It is also possible that transient values for
Seconds_Behind_Source
may not reflect the situation accurately. When the replication SQL (applier) thread has caught up on I/O,Seconds_Behind_Source
displays 0; but when the replication I/O (receiver) thread is still queuing up a new event,Seconds_Behind_Source
may show a large value until the replication applier thread finishes executing the new event. This is especially likely when the events have old timestamps; in such cases, if you executeSHOW REPLICA STATUS
several times in a relatively short period, you may see this value change back and forth repeatedly between 0 and a relatively large value.
Several pairs of fields provide information about the progress of the replica in reading events from the source binary log and processing them in the relay log:
(
Master_Log_file
,Read_Master_Log_Pos
): Coordinates in the source binary log indicating how far the replication I/O (receiver) thread has read events from that log.(
Relay_Master_Log_File
,Exec_Master_Log_Pos
): Coordinates in the source binary log indicating how far the replication SQL (applier) thread has executed events received from that log.(
Relay_Log_File
,Relay_Log_Pos
): Coordinates in the replica relay log indicating how far the replication SQL (applier) thread has executed the relay log. These correspond to the preceding coordinates, but are expressed in replica relay log coordinates rather than source binary log coordinates.
On the source, you can check the status of connected replicas
using SHOW PROCESSLIST
to examine
the list of running processes. Replica connections have
Binlog Dump
in the Command
field:
mysql> SHOW PROCESSLIST \G;
*************************** 4. row ***************************
Id: 10
User: root
Host: replica1:58371
db: NULL
Command: Binlog Dump
Time: 777
State: Has sent all binlog to slave; waiting for binlog to be updated
Info: NULL
Because it is the replica that drives the replication process, very little information is available in this report.
For replicas that were started with the
--report-host
option and are
connected to the source, the SHOW
REPLICAS
(or before MySQL 8.0.22,
SHOW SLAVE HOSTS
) statement on
the source shows basic information about the replicas. The
output includes the ID of the replica server, the value of the
--report-host
option, the
connecting port, and source ID:
mysql> SHOW REPLICAS;
+-----------+----------+------+-------------------+-----------+
| Server_id | Host | Port | Rpl_recovery_rank | Source_id |
+-----------+----------+------+-------------------+-----------+
| 10 | replica1 | 3306 | 0 | 1 |
+-----------+----------+------+-------------------+-----------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)