The EVENTS table provides information
      about Event Manager events, which are discussed in
      Using the Event Scheduler.
    
      The EVENTS table has these columns:
- EVENT_CATALOG- The name of the catalog to which the event belongs. This value is always - def.
- EVENT_SCHEMA- The name of the schema (database) to which the event belongs. 
- EVENT_NAME- The name of the event. 
- DEFINER- The account named in the - DEFINERclause (often the user who created the event), in- 'format.- user_name'@'- host_name'
- TIME_ZONE- The event time zone, which is the time zone used for scheduling the event and that is in effect within the event as it executes. The default value is - SYSTEM.
- EVENT_BODY- The language used for the statements in the event's - DOclause. The value is always- SQL.
- EVENT_DEFINITION- The text of the SQL statement making up the event's - DOclause; in other words, the statement executed by this event.
- EVENT_TYPE- The event repetition type, either - ONE TIME(transient) or- RECURRING(repeating).
- EXECUTE_AT- For a one-time event, this is the - DATETIMEvalue specified in the- ATclause of the- CREATE EVENTstatement used to create the event, or of the last- ALTER EVENTstatement that modified the event. The value shown in this column reflects the addition or subtraction of any- INTERVALvalue included in the event's- ATclause. For example, if an event is created using- ON SCHEDULE AT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP + '1:6' DAY_HOUR, and the event was created at 2018-02-09 14:05:30, the value shown in this column would be- '2018-02-10 20:05:30'. If the event's timing is determined by an- EVERYclause instead of an- ATclause (that is, if the event is recurring), the value of this column is- NULL.
- INTERVAL_VALUE- For a recurring event, the number of intervals to wait between event executions. For a transient event, the value is always - NULL.
- INTERVAL_FIELD- The time units used for the interval which a recurring event waits before repeating. For a transient event, the value is always - NULL.
- SQL_MODE- The SQL mode in effect when the event was created or altered, and under which the event executes. For the permitted values, see Server SQL Modes. 
- STARTS- The start date and time for a recurring event. This is displayed as a - DATETIMEvalue, and is- NULLif no start date and time are defined for the event. For a transient event, this column is always- NULL. For a recurring event whose definition includes a- STARTSclause, this column contains the corresponding- DATETIMEvalue. As with the- EXECUTE_ATcolumn, this value resolves any expressions used. If there is no- STARTSclause affecting the timing of the event, this column is- NULL
- ENDS- For a recurring event whose definition includes a - ENDSclause, this column contains the corresponding- DATETIMEvalue. As with the- EXECUTE_ATcolumn, this value resolves any expressions used. If there is no- ENDSclause affecting the timing of the event, this column is- NULL.
- STATUS- The event status. One of - ENABLED,- DISABLED, or- SLAVESIDE_DISABLED.- SLAVESIDE_DISABLEDindicates that the creation of the event occurred on another MySQL server acting as a replication source and replicated to the current MySQL server which is acting as a replica, but the event is not presently being executed on the replica. For more information, see Replication of Invoked Features. information.
- ON_COMPLETION- One of the two values - PRESERVEor- NOT PRESERVE.
- CREATED- The date and time when the event was created. This is a - TIMESTAMPvalue.
- LAST_ALTERED- The date and time when the event was last modified. This is a - TIMESTAMPvalue. If the event has not been modified since its creation, this value is the same as the- CREATEDvalue.
- LAST_EXECUTED- The date and time when the event last executed. This is a - DATETIMEvalue. If the event has never executed, this column is- NULL.- LAST_EXECUTEDindicates when the event started. As a result, the- ENDScolumn is never less than- LAST_EXECUTED.
- EVENT_COMMENT- The text of the comment, if the event has one. If not, this value is empty. 
- ORIGINATOR- The server ID of the MySQL server on which the event was created; used in replication. This value may be updated by - ALTER EVENTto the server ID of the server on which that statement occurs, if executed on a replication source. The default value is 0.
- CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT- The session value of the - character_set_clientsystem variable when the event was created.
- COLLATION_CONNECTION- The session value of the - collation_connectionsystem variable when the event was created.
- DATABASE_COLLATION- The collation of the database with which the event is associated. 
Notes
- EVENTSis a nonstandard- INFORMATION_SCHEMAtable.
- Times in the - EVENTStable are displayed using the event time zone, the current session time zone, or UTC, as described in Event Metadata.
- For more information about - SLAVESIDE_DISABLEDand the- ORIGINATORcolumn, see Replication of Invoked Features.
Example
      Suppose that the user 'jon'@'ghidora' creates
      an event named e_daily, and then modifies it a
      few minutes later using an ALTER
      EVENT statement, as shown here:
    
DELIMITER |
CREATE EVENT e_daily
    ON SCHEDULE
      EVERY 1 DAY
    COMMENT 'Saves total number of sessions then clears the table each day'
    DO
      BEGIN
        INSERT INTO site_activity.totals (time, total)
          SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, COUNT(*)
            FROM site_activity.sessions;
        DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions;
      END |
DELIMITER ;
ALTER EVENT e_daily
    ENABLE;(Note that comments can span multiple lines.)
      This user can then run the following
      SELECT statement, and obtain the
      output shown:
    
mysql> SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.EVENTS
       WHERE EVENT_NAME = 'e_daily'
       AND EVENT_SCHEMA = 'myschema'\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
       EVENT_CATALOG: def
        EVENT_SCHEMA: myschema
          EVENT_NAME: e_daily
             DEFINER: jon@ghidora
           TIME_ZONE: SYSTEM
          EVENT_BODY: SQL
    EVENT_DEFINITION: BEGIN
        INSERT INTO site_activity.totals (time, total)
          SELECT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, COUNT(*)
            FROM site_activity.sessions;
        DELETE FROM site_activity.sessions;
      END
          EVENT_TYPE: RECURRING
          EXECUTE_AT: NULL
      INTERVAL_VALUE: 1
      INTERVAL_FIELD: DAY
            SQL_MODE: ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY,STRICT_TRANS_TABLES,
                      NO_ZERO_IN_DATE,NO_ZERO_DATE,
                      ERROR_FOR_DIVISION_BY_ZERO,
                      NO_AUTO_CREATE_USER,NO_ENGINE_SUBSTITUTION
              STARTS: 2018-08-08 11:06:34
                ENDS: NULL
              STATUS: ENABLED
       ON_COMPLETION: NOT PRESERVE
             CREATED: 2018-08-08 11:06:34
        LAST_ALTERED: 2018-08-08 11:06:34
       LAST_EXECUTED: 2018-08-08 16:06:34
       EVENT_COMMENT: Saves total number of sessions then clears the
                      table each day
          ORIGINATOR: 1
CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT: utf8
COLLATION_CONNECTION: utf8_general_ci
  DATABASE_COLLATION: latin1_swedish_ci
      Event information is also available from the
      SHOW EVENTS statement. See
      SHOW EVENTS Statement. The following statements are
      equivalent:
    
SELECT
    EVENT_SCHEMA, EVENT_NAME, DEFINER, TIME_ZONE, EVENT_TYPE, EXECUTE_AT,
    INTERVAL_VALUE, INTERVAL_FIELD, STARTS, ENDS, STATUS, ORIGINATOR,
    CHARACTER_SET_CLIENT, COLLATION_CONNECTION, DATABASE_COLLATION
  FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.EVENTS
  WHERE table_schema = 'db_name'
  [AND column_name LIKE 'wild']
SHOW EVENTS
  [FROM db_name]
  [LIKE 'wild']