MySQL Server has several logs that can help you find out what activity is taking place.
Log Type | Information Written to Log |
---|---|
Error log | Problems encountered starting, running, or stopping mysqld |
General query log | Established client connections and statements received from clients |
Binary log | Statements that change data (also used for replication) |
Relay log | Data changes received from a replication source server |
Slow query log | Queries that took more than
long_query_time seconds to
execute |
DDL log (metadata log) | Metadata operations performed by DDL statements |
By default, no logs are enabled, except the error log on Windows. (The DDL log is always created when required, and has no user-configurable options; see Section 5.4.6, “The DDL Log”.) The following log-specific sections provide information about the server options that enable logging.
By default, the server writes files for all enabled logs in the data
directory. You can force the server to close and reopen the log
files (or in some cases switch to a new log file) by flushing the
logs. Log flushing occurs when you issue a
FLUSH LOGS
statement; execute
mysqladmin with a flush-logs
or refresh
argument; or execute
mysqldump with a
--flush-logs
option. See
Section 13.7.6.3, “FLUSH Statement”, Section 4.5.2, “mysqladmin — A MySQL Server Administration Program”, and
Section 4.5.4, “mysqldump — A Database Backup Program”. In addition, the binary log is flushed
when its size reaches the value of the
max_binlog_size
system variable.
You can control the general query and slow query logs during runtime. You can enable or disable logging, or change the log file name. You can tell the server to write general query and slow query entries to log tables, log files, or both. For details, see Section 5.4.1, “Selecting General Query Log and Slow Query Log Output Destinations”, Section 5.4.3, “The General Query Log”, and Section 5.4.5, “The Slow Query Log”.
The relay log is used only on replicas, to hold data changes from the replication source server that must also be made on the replica. For discussion of relay log contents and configuration, see Section 16.2.4.1, “The Relay Log”.
For information about log maintenance operations such as expiration of old log files, see Section 5.4.7, “Server Log Maintenance”.
For information about keeping logs secure, see Section 6.1.2.3, “Passwords and Logging”.