The following list shows the most common states you may see in
the State
column for the Binlog
Dump
thread of the replication source. If you see no
Binlog Dump
threads on a source, this means
that replication is not running; that is, that no replicas are
currently connected.
In MySQL 8.0, incompatible changes were made to instrumentation
names. Monitoring tools that work with these instrumentation
names might be impacted. If the incompatible changes have an
impact for you, set the
terminology_use_previous
system
variable to BEFORE_8_0_26
to make MySQL
Server use the old versions of the names for the objects
specified in the previous list. This enables monitoring tools
that rely on the old names to continue working until they can be
updated to use the new names.
Set the
terminology_use_previous
system
variable with session scope to support individual functions, or
global scope to be a default for all new sessions. When global
scope is used, the slow query log contains the old versions of
the names.
Finished reading one binlog; switching to next binlog
The thread has finished reading a binary log file and is opening the next one to send to the replica.
Master has sent all binlog to slave; waiting for more updates
Source has sent all binlog to replica; waiting for more updates
The thread has read all remaining updates from the binary logs and sent them to the replica. The thread is now idle, waiting for new events to appear in the binary log resulting from new updates occurring on the source.
Sending binlog event to replica
Binary logs consist of events, where an event is usually an update plus some other information. The thread has read an event from the binary log and is now sending it to the replica.
Waiting to finalize termination
A very brief state that occurs as the thread is stopping.