The PROFILING
table provides
statement profiling information. Its contents correspond to the
information produced by the SHOW
PROFILE
and SHOW PROFILES
statements (see Section 15.7.7.31, “SHOW PROFILE Statement”). The table is
empty unless the profiling
session variable is set to 1.
This table is deprecated; expect it to be removed in a future MySQL release. Use the Performance Schema instead; see Section 29.19.1, “Query Profiling Using Performance Schema”.
The PROFILING
table has these
columns:
QUERY_ID
A numeric statement identifier.
SEQ
A sequence number indicating the display order for rows with the same
QUERY_ID
value.STATE
The profiling state to which the row measurements apply.
DURATION
How long statement execution remained in the given state, in seconds.
CPU_USER
,CPU_SYSTEM
User and system CPU use, in seconds.
CONTEXT_VOLUNTARY
,CONTEXT_INVOLUNTARY
How many voluntary and involuntary context switches occurred.
BLOCK_OPS_IN
,BLOCK_OPS_OUT
The number of block input and output operations.
MESSAGES_SENT
,MESSAGES_RECEIVED
The number of communication messages sent and received.
PAGE_FAULTS_MAJOR
,PAGE_FAULTS_MINOR
The number of major and minor page faults.
SWAPS
How many swaps occurred.
SOURCE_FUNCTION
,SOURCE_FILE
, andSOURCE_LINE
Information indicating where in the source code the profiled state executes.
Notes
PROFILING
is a nonstandardINFORMATION_SCHEMA
table.
Profiling information is also available from the
SHOW PROFILE
and
SHOW PROFILES
statements. See
Section 15.7.7.31, “SHOW PROFILE Statement”. For example, the following queries
are equivalent:
SHOW PROFILE FOR QUERY 2;
SELECT STATE, FORMAT(DURATION, 6) AS DURATION
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PROFILING
WHERE QUERY_ID = 2 ORDER BY SEQ;