The data_locks table shows data
locks held and requested. For information about which lock
requests are blocked by which held locks, see
Section 29.12.13.2, “The data_lock_waits Table”.
Example data lock information:
mysql> SELECT * FROM performance_schema.data_locks\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
ENGINE: INNODB
ENGINE_LOCK_ID: 139664434886512:1059:139664350547912
ENGINE_TRANSACTION_ID: 2569
THREAD_ID: 46
EVENT_ID: 12
OBJECT_SCHEMA: test
OBJECT_NAME: t1
PARTITION_NAME: NULL
SUBPARTITION_NAME: NULL
INDEX_NAME: NULL
OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGIN: 139664350547912
LOCK_TYPE: TABLE
LOCK_MODE: IX
LOCK_STATUS: GRANTED
LOCK_DATA: NULL
*************************** 2. row ***************************
ENGINE: INNODB
ENGINE_LOCK_ID: 139664434886512:2:4:1:139664350544872
ENGINE_TRANSACTION_ID: 2569
THREAD_ID: 46
EVENT_ID: 12
OBJECT_SCHEMA: test
OBJECT_NAME: t1
PARTITION_NAME: NULL
SUBPARTITION_NAME: NULL
INDEX_NAME: GEN_CLUST_INDEX
OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGIN: 139664350544872
LOCK_TYPE: RECORD
LOCK_MODE: X
LOCK_STATUS: GRANTED
LOCK_DATA: supremum pseudo-recordUnlike most Performance Schema data collection, there are no instruments for controlling whether data lock information is collected or system variables for controlling data lock table sizes. The Performance Schema collects information that is already available in the server, so there is no memory or CPU overhead to generate this information or need for parameters that control its collection.
Use the data_locks table to help
diagnose performance problems that occur during times of heavy
concurrent load. For InnoDB, see the
discussion of this topic at
Section 17.15.2, “InnoDB INFORMATION_SCHEMA Transaction and Locking Information”.
The data_locks table has these
columns:
ENGINEThe storage engine that holds or requested the lock.
ENGINE_LOCK_IDThe ID of the lock held or requested by the storage engine. Tuples of (
ENGINE_LOCK_ID,ENGINE) values are unique.Lock ID formats are internal and subject to change at any time. Applications should not rely on lock IDs having a particular format.
ENGINE_TRANSACTION_IDThe storage engine internal ID of the transaction that requested the lock. This can be considered the owner of the lock, although the lock might still be pending, not actually granted yet (
LOCK_STATUS='WAITING').If the transaction has not yet performed any write operation (is still considered read only), the column contains internal data that users should not try to interpret. Otherwise, the column is the transaction ID.
For
InnoDB, to obtain details about the transaction, join this column with theTRX_IDcolumn of theINFORMATION_SCHEMAINNODB_TRXtable.THREAD_IDThe thread ID of the session that created the lock. To obtain details about the thread, join this column with the
THREAD_IDcolumn of the Performance Schemathreadstable.THREAD_IDcan be used together withEVENT_IDto determine the event during which the lock data structure was created in memory. (This event might have occurred before this particular lock request occurred, if the data structure is used to store multiple locks.)EVENT_IDThe Performance Schema event that caused the lock. Tuples of (
THREAD_ID,EVENT_ID) values implicitly identify a parent event in other Performance Schema tables:The parent wait event in the
events_waits_tablesxxxThe parent stage event in the
events_stages_tablesxxxThe parent statement event in the
events_statements_tablesxxxThe parent transaction event in the
events_transactions_currenttable
To obtain details about the parent event, join the
THREAD_IDandEVENT_IDcolumns with the columns of like name in the appropriate parent event table. See Section 29.19.2, “Obtaining Parent Event Information”.OBJECT_SCHEMAThe schema that contains the locked table.
OBJECT_NAMEThe name of the locked table.
PARTITION_NAMEThe name of the locked partition, if any;
NULLotherwise.SUBPARTITION_NAMEThe name of the locked subpartition, if any;
NULLotherwise.INDEX_NAMEThe name of the locked index, if any;
NULLotherwise.In practice,
InnoDBalways creates an index (GEN_CLUST_INDEX), soINDEX_NAMEis non-NULLforInnoDBtables.OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINThe address in memory of the lock.
LOCK_TYPEThe type of lock.
The value is storage engine dependent. For
InnoDB, permitted values areRECORDfor a row-level lock,TABLEfor a table-level lock.LOCK_MODEHow the lock is requested.
The value is storage engine dependent. For
InnoDB, permitted values areS[,GAP],X[,GAP],IS[,GAP],IX[,GAP],AUTO_INC, andUNKNOWN. Lock modes other thanAUTO_INCandUNKNOWNindicate gap locks, if present. For information aboutS,X,IS,IX, and gap locks, refer to Section 17.7.1, “InnoDB Locking”.LOCK_STATUSThe status of the lock request.
The value is storage engine dependent. For
InnoDB, permitted values areGRANTED(lock is held) andWAITING(lock is being waited for).LOCK_DATAThe data associated with the lock, if any. The value is storage engine dependent. For
InnoDB, a value is shown if theLOCK_TYPEisRECORD, otherwise the value isNULL. Primary key values of the locked record are shown for a lock placed on the primary key index. Secondary index values of the locked record are shown with primary key values appended for a lock placed on a secondary index. If there is no primary key,LOCK_DATAshows either the key values of a selected unique index or the uniqueInnoDBinternal row ID number, according to the rules governingInnoDBclustered index use (see Section 17.6.2.1, “Clustered and Secondary Indexes”).LOCK_DATAreports “supremum pseudo-record” for a lock taken on a supremum pseudo-record. If the page containing the locked record is not in the buffer pool because it was written to disk while the lock was held,InnoDBdoes not fetch the page from disk. Instead,LOCK_DATAreportsNULL.
The data_locks table has these
indexes:
Primary key on (
ENGINE_LOCK_ID,ENGINE)Index on (
ENGINE_TRANSACTION_ID,ENGINE)Index on (
THREAD_ID,EVENT_ID)Index on (
OBJECT_SCHEMA,OBJECT_NAME,PARTITION_NAME,SUBPARTITION_NAME)
TRUNCATE TABLE is not permitted
for the data_locks table.