The cluster_operations table provides a
        per-operation (stateful primary key op) view of all activity in
        the NDB Cluster from the point of view of the local data
        management (LQH) blocks (see
        The DBLQH Block).
      
        The cluster_operations table contains the
        following columns:
- node_id- Node ID of reporting LQH block 
- block_instance- LQH block instance 
- transid- Transaction ID 
- operation_type- Operation type (see text for possible values) 
- state- Operation state (see text for possible values) 
- tableid- Table ID 
- fragmentid- Fragment ID 
- client_node_id- Client node ID 
- client_block_ref- Client block reference 
- tc_node_id- Transaction coordinator node ID 
- tc_block_no- Transaction coordinator block number 
- tc_block_instance- Transaction coordinator block instance 
Notes
        The transaction ID is a unique 64-bit number which can be
        obtained using the NDB API's
        getTransactionId()
        method. (Currently, the MySQL Server does not expose the NDB API
        transaction ID of an ongoing transaction.)
      
        The operation_type column can take any one of
        the values READ, READ-SH,
        READ-EX, INSERT,
        UPDATE, DELETE,
        WRITE, UNLOCK,
        REFRESH, SCAN,
        SCAN-SH, SCAN-EX, or
        <unknown>.
      
        The state column can have any one of the
        values ABORT_QUEUED,
        ABORT_STOPPED, COMMITTED,
        COMMIT_QUEUED,
        COMMIT_STOPPED,
        COPY_CLOSE_STOPPED,
        COPY_FIRST_STOPPED,
        COPY_STOPPED, COPY_TUPKEY,
        IDLE, LOG_ABORT_QUEUED,
        LOG_COMMIT_QUEUED,
        LOG_COMMIT_QUEUED_WAIT_SIGNAL,
        LOG_COMMIT_WRITTEN,
        LOG_COMMIT_WRITTEN_WAIT_SIGNAL,
        LOG_QUEUED, PREPARED,
        PREPARED_RECEIVED_COMMIT,
        SCAN_CHECK_STOPPED,
        SCAN_CLOSE_STOPPED,
        SCAN_FIRST_STOPPED,
        SCAN_RELEASE_STOPPED,
        SCAN_STATE_USED,
        SCAN_STOPPED, SCAN_TUPKEY,
        STOPPED, TC_NOT_CONNECTED,
        WAIT_ACC, WAIT_ACC_ABORT,
        WAIT_AI_AFTER_ABORT,
        WAIT_ATTR, WAIT_SCAN_AI,
        WAIT_TUP, WAIT_TUPKEYINFO,
        WAIT_TUP_COMMIT, or
        WAIT_TUP_TO_ABORT. (If the MySQL Server is
        running with
        ndbinfo_show_hidden enabled,
        you can view this list of states by selecting from the
        ndb$dblqh_tcconnect_state table, which is
        normally hidden.)
      
        You can obtain the name of an NDB table from
        its table ID by checking the output of
        ndb_show_tables.
      
        The fragid is the same as the partition
        number seen in the output of ndb_desc
        --extra-partition-info (short
        form -p).
      
        In client_node_id and
        client_block_ref, client
        refers to an NDB Cluster API or SQL node (that is, an NDB API
        client or a MySQL Server attached to the cluster).
      
        The block_instance and
        tc_block_instance column provide,
        respectively, the DBLQH and
        DBTC block instance numbers.
        You can use these along with the block names to obtain
        information about specific threads from the
        threadblocks table.