To obtain the execution plan for an explainable statement executing in a named connection, use this statement:
EXPLAIN [options] FOR CONNECTION connection_id;
EXPLAIN FOR CONNECTION
returns
the EXPLAIN
information that is
currently being used to execute a query in a given connection.
Because of changes to data (and supporting statistics) it may
produce a different result from running
EXPLAIN
on the equivalent query
text. This difference in behavior can be useful in diagnosing
more transient performance problems. For example, if you are
running a statement in one session that is taking a long time to
complete, using EXPLAIN FOR
CONNECTION
in another session may yield useful
information about the cause of the delay.
connection_id
is the connection
identifier, as obtained from the
INFORMATION_SCHEMA
PROCESSLIST
table or the
SHOW PROCESSLIST
statement. If
you have the PROCESS
privilege,
you can specify the identifier for any connection. Otherwise,
you can specify the identifier only for your own connections. In
all cases, you must have sufficient privileges to explain the
query on the specified connection.
If the named connection is not executing a statement, the result
is empty. Otherwise, EXPLAIN FOR CONNECTION
applies only if the statement being executed in the named
connection is explainable. This includes
SELECT
,
DELETE
,
INSERT
,
REPLACE
, and
UPDATE
. (However,
EXPLAIN FOR CONNECTION
does not work for
prepared statements, even prepared statements of those types.)
If the named connection is executing an explainable statement,
the output is what you would obtain by using
EXPLAIN
on the statement itself.
If the named connection is executing a statement that is not
explainable, an error occurs. For example, you cannot name the
connection identifier for your current session because
EXPLAIN
is not explainable:
mysql> SELECT CONNECTION_ID();
+-----------------+
| CONNECTION_ID() |
+-----------------+
| 373 |
+-----------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> EXPLAIN FOR CONNECTION 373;
ERROR 1889 (HY000): EXPLAIN FOR CONNECTION command is supported
only for SELECT/UPDATE/INSERT/DELETE/REPLACE
The Com_explain_other
status variable
indicates the number of
EXPLAIN FOR
CONNECTION
statements executed.