Query Analyzer data is automatically collected and displayed by monitoring MySQL Server 5.6.14 or greater, using the Performance Schema Statement Digests feature (Performance Schema Statement Digests and Sampling) added in MySQL 5.6.
It is not possible to retrieve statement digest data from MySQL server versions prior to MySQL 5.6.14.
Collecting Query Analyzer data from Performance Schema provides data about how statements generate their result sets:
- Table Lock time 
- How many rows were examined versus returned 
- How many temporary tables were created, and whether any were created on disk 
- Whether range scans were done, and in what form they were done 
- Whether sorting happened, how many rows were sorted, and what form the sort took 
    MySQL Enterprise Monitor Agent polls the
    performance_schema.events_statements_summary_by_digest
    table (every minute, by default) and continually computes the deltas
    for each of the normalized statements that are exposed during the
    snapshot window. This is dependent on the Performance Schema setup
    having the "statements_digest" consumer enabled within
    performance_schema.setup_consumers, which is
    enabled by default in MySQL 5.6:
  
mysql> SELECT * FROM performance_schema.setup_consumers WHERE name = 'statements_digest';
+-------------------+---------+
| NAME              | ENABLED |
+-------------------+---------+
| statements_digest | YES     |
+-------------------+---------+If this is not enabled, then enable it with:
UPDATE performance_schema.setup_consumers SET enabled = 'YES' WHERE name = 'statements_digest';
      MySQL Enterprise Monitor Agent does not TRUNCATE the
      performance_schema.events_statements_summary_by_digest
      table each time it reads from it, as it is possible there may be
      other processes/tools consuming this data. Because of this, the
      Max Latency statistic that is reported per a normalized statement
      within Query Analyzer is actually the maximum since either the
      MySQL Server started, or since a TRUNCATE TABLE
      performance_schema.events_statements_summary_by_digest
      was executed.
The maximum space available for digest computation is 1024 bytes by default; queries exceeding this length are truncated.
      As of MySQL 5.7.8, and later, and 5.6.26, and later, this value
      can be changed at server startup by setting
      the performance_schema_max_digest_length system
      variable. In MySQL 5.6.24, 5.6.24, 5.7.6, and 5.7.7,
      use max_digest_length instead.
      For MySQL 5.7 versions prior to 5.7.6, the value cannot be
      changed. Nor can it be changed for MySQL 5.6 versions prior to
      5.6.24.
    The
    performance_schema.events_statements_summary_by_digest
    table is a sized table in memory within the Performance Schema, and
    its size is auto-configured. To check the current size:
  
mysql> SHOW GLOBAL VARIABLES LIKE 'performance_schema_digests_size';
+---------------------------------+-------+
| Variable_name                   | Value |
+---------------------------------+-------+
| performance_schema_digests_size | 5000  |
+---------------------------------+-------+
    If your application executes more than this number of normalized
    statements, then it is possible that you may begin losing some
    statement instrumentation. You can monitor this situation with the
    Performance_schema_digest_lost
    variable:
  
mysql> SHOW GLOBAL STATUS LIKE 'Performance_schema_digest_lost';
+--------------------------------+-------+
| Variable_name                  | Value |
+--------------------------------+-------+
| Performance_schema_digest_lost | 0     |
+--------------------------------+-------+
    If you detect that this counter variable is growing, consider
    increasing the
    performance_schema_digests_size
    system variable. It is also possible that your statement profile has
    changed over time, and you are now executing different statements
    than were originally tracked (this is especially possible in very
    long running instances). In this case, you can simply TRUNCATE TABLE
    performance_schema.events_statements_summary_by_digest, and the
    Query Analyzer collection automatically starts again.
  
    If the Example Query feature is enabled, Query
    Analyzer attempts to get an example of the longest running statement
    during the snapshot interval by doing a LEFT JOIN with a
    groupwise-max on the
    performance_schema.events_statements_summary_by_digest
    table to the
    performance_schema.events_statements_history_long
    table. Using this method does not guarantee that an example
    statement is always provided because, by default, the
    events_statements_history_long table is
    a ring buffer of the last 1000 statements executed. Data is
    collected in this way from Performance Schema to minimize load on
    the monitored instance rather than polling the
    performance_schema.events_statements_history_long
    table at too high a frequently to try and gather statistics.
      A small subset (approximately 2MB of data) of the snapshot of
      known prior values is retained in-memory, and the rest is spooled
      to disk. The spool is stored in
      $MYSQL_AGENT_HOME/spool/queryAnalysis.
    The Example Query feature requires that the
    events_statements_history_long table is enabled
    within
    performance_schema.setup_consumers
    (this is disabled by default within MySQL 5.6):
  
mysql> SELECT * FROM performance_schema.setup_consumers where name = 
'events_statements_history_long';
+--------------------------------+---------+
| NAME                           | ENABLED |
+--------------------------------+---------+
| events_statements_history_long | NO      |
+--------------------------------+---------+If this is not enabled, then enable it with:
UPDATE performance_schema.setup_consumers SET enabled = 'YES' WHERE name = 
'events_statements_history_long';
    When Example Query and Example
    Explain are enabled, the MySQL Enterprise Monitor Agent attempts to run
    an EXPLAIN for each example statement that is
    discovered and ran for longer than the Auto-Explain
    Threshold. Due to the way that Performance Schema exposes
    normalized statements, truncating any normalized statement that is
    longer than 1024 bytes due to memory concerns within the MySQL
    Server means it is possible that an EXPLAIN may
    fail because the truncated statements do not parse correctly when
    running the EXPLAIN.