The built-in MySQL Shell report thread
provides detailed information about a specific thread in the
connected MySQL server. The report works with servers running
all supported MySQL 5.7 and MySQL 8.0 versions. If any item of
information is not available in the MySQL Server version of the
target server, the report leaves it out.
The thread
report provides information for
the selected thread and its activity, drawn from various sources
including MySQL's Performance Schema. By default, the report
shows information on the thread used by the current connection,
or you can identify a thread by its ID or by the connection ID.
You can select one or more categories of information, or view
all of the available information about the thread. For details
of the report-specific options and the information that you can
include in the report, issue one of the following MySQL Shell
commands to view the report help:
\help thread
\show thread --help
In addition to the report-specific options, the
thread
report accepts most of the standard
options for the \show
and
\watch
commands, as described in
Section 10.1.5, “Running MySQL Shell Reports”. The exception is
the --vertical
(or -E
)
option for the \show
command, which is not
accepted. The thread
report has a custom
output format that includes vertical listings and tables
presented in different sections, and you cannot change this
output format.
The threads
report uses MySQL Server's
format_statement()
function (see
The format_statement() Function). Any truncated
statements displayed in the report are truncated according to
the setting for the statement_truncate_len
option in MySQL Server's
sys_config
table, which defaults
to 64 characters.
The following list summarizes the capabilities provided by the
report-specific options for the threads
report. See the report help for full details and the short forms
of the options:
-
--tid
,--cid
Identify the thread ID or connection ID on which you want to report.
-
--general
Show basic information about the thread. This information is returned by default if you do not use any of the following options.
-
--brief
Show a brief description of the thread on one line.
-
--client
Show information about the client connection and client session.
-
--innodb
Show information about the current InnoDB transaction using the thread, if any.
-
--locks
Show information about locks blocking and blocked by the thread.
-
--prep-stmts
Show information about the prepared statements allocated for the thread.
-
--status
Show information about the session status variables for the thread. You can specify a list of prefixes to match, in which case only matching variables are displayed.
-
--vars
Show information about the session system variables for the thread. You can specify a list of prefixes to match, in which case only matching variables are displayed.
-
--user-vars
Show information about the user-defined variables for the thread. You can specify a list of prefixes to match, in which case only matching variables are displayed.
-
--all
Show all of the above information, except for the brief description.
For example, the following command runs the
thread
report for the thread with thread ID
53, and returns general information about the thread, details of
the client connection, and information about any locks that the
thread is blocking or is blocked by:
mysql-py> \show thread --tid 53 --general --client --locks