The locks_per_fragment table provides
information about counts of lock claim requests, and the
outcomes of these requests on a per-fragment basis, serving as a
companion table to
operations_per_fragment and
memory_per_fragment. This
table also shows the total time spent waiting for locks
successfully and unsuccessfully since fragment or table
creation, or since the most recent restart.
The locks_per_fragment table contains the
following columns:
fq_nameFully qualified table name
parent_fq_nameFully qualified name of parent object
typeTable type; see text for possible values
table_idTable ID
node_idReporting node ID
block_instanceLDM instance ID
fragment_numFragment identifier
ex_reqExclusive lock requests started
ex_imm_okExclusive lock requests immediately granted
ex_wait_okExclusive lock requests granted following wait
ex_wait_failExclusive lock requests not granted
sh_reqShared lock requests started
sh_imm_okShared lock requests immediately granted
sh_wait_okShared lock requests granted following wait
sh_wait_failShared lock requests not granted
wait_ok_millisTime spent waiting for lock requests that were granted, in milliseconds
wait_fail_millisTime spent waiting for lock requests that failed, in milliseconds
Notes
block_instance refers to an instance of a
kernel block. Together with the block name, this number can be
used to look up a given instance in the
threadblocks table.
fq_name is a fully qualified database object
name in
database/schema/name
format, such as test/def/t1 or
sys/def/10/b$unique.
parent_fq_name is the fully qualified name of
this object's parent object (table).
table_id is the table's internal ID
generated by NDB. This is the same internal
table ID shown in other ndbinfo tables; it is
also visible in the output of
ndb_show_tables.
The type column shows the type of table. This
is always one of System table, User
table, Unique hash index,
Hash index, Unique ordered
index, Ordered index, Hash
index trigger, Subscription
trigger, Read only constraint,
Index trigger, Reorganize
trigger, Tablespace, Log
file group, Data file,
Undo file, Hash map,
Foreign key definition, Foreign key
parent trigger, Foreign key child
trigger, or Schema transaction.
The values shown in all of the columns
ex_req, ex_req_imm_ok,
ex_wait_ok, ex_wait_fail,
sh_req, sh_req_imm_ok,
sh_wait_ok, and
sh_wait_fail represent cumulative numbers of
requests since the table or fragment was created, or since the
last restart of this node, whichever of these occurred later.
This is also true for the time values shown in the
wait_ok_millis and
wait_fail_millis columns.
Every lock request is considered either to be in progress, or to have completed in some way (that is, to have succeeded or failed). This means that the following relationships are true:
ex_req >= (ex_req_imm_ok + ex_wait_ok + ex_wait_fail)
sh_req >= (sh_req_imm_ok + sh_wait_ok + sh_wait_fail)The number of requests currently in progress is the current number of incomplete requests, which can be found as shown here:
[exclusive lock requests in progress] =
ex_req - (ex_req_imm_ok + ex_wait_ok + ex_wait_fail)
[shared lock requests in progress] =
sh_req - (sh_req_imm_ok + sh_wait_ok + sh_wait_fail)A failed wait indicates an aborted transaction, but the abort may or may not be caused by a lock wait timeout. You can obtain the total number of aborts while waiting for locks as shown here:
[aborts while waiting for locks] = ex_wait_fail + sh_wait_fail