Connection attributes are key-value pairs that application
programs can pass to the server at connect time. For
applications based on the C API implemented by the
libmysqlclient
client library, the
mysql_options()
and
mysql_options4()
functions
define the connection attribute set. Other MySQL Connectors may
provide their own attribute-definition methods.
These Performance Schema tables expose attribute information:
session_account_connect_attrs
: Connection attributes for the current session, and other sessions associated with the session accountsession_connect_attrs
: Connection attributes for all sessions
In addition, connect events written to the audit log may include connection attributes. See Section 8.4.5.4, “Audit Log File Formats”.
Attribute names that begin with an underscore
(_
) are reserved for internal use and should
not be created by application programs. This convention permits
new attributes to be introduced by MySQL without colliding with
application attributes, and enables application programs to
define their own attributes that do not collide with internal
attributes.
Available Connection Attributes
The set of connection attributes visible within a given connection varies depending on factors such as your platform, MySQL Connector used to establish the connection, or client program.
The libmysqlclient
client library sets these
attributes:
_client_name
: The client name (libmysql
for the client library)._client_version
: The client library version._os
: The operating system (for example,Linux
,Win64
)._pid
: The client process ID._platform
: The machine platform (for example,x86_64
)._thread
: The client thread ID (Windows only).
Other MySQL Connectors may define their own connection attributes.
MySQL Connector/C++ defines these attributes for applications that use X DevAPI or X DevAPI for C:
_client_license
: The connector license (for exampleGPL-2.0
)._client_name
: The connector name (mysql-connector-cpp
)._client_version
: The connector version._os
: The operating system (for example,Linux
,Win64
)._pid
: The client process ID._platform
: The machine platform (for example,x86_64
)._source_host
: The host name of the machine on which the client is running._thread
: The client thread ID (Windows only).
MySQL Connector/J defines these attributes:
_client_name
: The client name_client_version
: The client library version_os
: The operating system (for example,Linux
,Win64
)_client_license
: The connector license type_platform
: The machine platform (for example,x86_64
)_runtime_vendor
: The Java runtime environment (JRE) vendor_runtime_version
: The Java runtime environment (JRE) version
MySQL Connector/NET defines these attributes:
_client_version
: The client library version._os
: The operating system (for example,Linux
,Win64
)._pid
: The client process ID._platform
: The machine platform (for example,x86_64
)._program_name
: The client name._thread
: The client thread ID (Windows only).
The Connector/Python implementation defines these attributes; some values and attributes depend on the Connector/Python implementation (pure python or c-ext):
_client_license
: The license type of the connector;GPL-2.0
orCommercial
. (pure python only)_client_name
: Set tomysql-connector-python
(pure python) orlibmysql
(c-ext)_client_version
: The connector version (pure python) or mysqlclient library version (c-ext)._os
: The operating system with the connector (for example,Linux
,Win64
)._pid
: The process identifier on the source machine (for example,26955
)_platform
: The machine platform (for example,x86_64
)._source_host
: The host name of the machine on which the connector is connecting from._connector_version
: The connector version (for example,9.1.0
) (c-ext only)._connector_license
: The license type of the connector;GPL-2.0
orCommercial
(c-ext only)._connector_name
: Always set tomysql-connector-python
(c-ext only).
PHP defines attributes that depend on how it was compiled:
Compiled using
libmysqlclient
: The standardlibmysqlclient
attributes, described previously.Compiled using
mysqlnd
: Only the_client_name
attribute, with a value ofmysqlnd
.
Many MySQL client programs set a program_name
attribute with a value equal to the client name. For example,
mysqladmin and mysqldump
set program_name
to
mysqladmin
and mysqldump
,
respectively. MySQL Shell sets program_name
to mysqlsh
.
Some MySQL client programs define additional attributes:
-
mysql connection attributes for which the value is empty are not sent.
-
_client_role
:binary_log_listener
Replica connections:
program_name
:mysqld
_client_role
:binary_log_listener
_client_replication_channel_name
: The channel name.
FEDERATED
storage engine connections:program_name
:mysqld
_client_role
:federated_storage
Connection Attribute Limits
There are limits on the amount of connection attribute data transmitted from client to server:
A fixed limit imposed by the client prior to connect time.
A fixed limit imposed by the server at connect time.
A configurable limit imposed by the Performance Schema at connect time.
For connections initiated using the C API, the
libmysqlclient
library imposes a limit of
64KB on the aggregate size of connection attribute data on the
client side: Calls to
mysql_options()
that cause this
limit to be exceeded produce a
CR_INVALID_PARAMETER_NO
error.
Other MySQL Connectors may impose their own client-side limits
on how much connection attribute data can be transmitted to the
server.
On the server side, these size checks on connection attribute data occur:
The server imposes a limit of 64KB on the aggregate size of connection attribute data it accepts. If a client attempts to send more than 64KB of attribute data, the server rejects the connection. Otherwise, the server considers the attribute buffer valid and tracks the size of the longest such buffer in the
Performance_schema_session_connect_attrs_longest_seen
status variable.For accepted connections, the Performance Schema checks aggregate attribute size against the value of the
performance_schema_session_connect_attrs_size
system variable. If attribute size exceeds this value, these actions take place:The Performance Schema truncates the attribute data and increments the
Performance_schema_session_connect_attrs_lost
status variable, which indicates the number of connections for which attribute truncation occurred.The Performance Schema writes a message to the error log if the
log_error_verbosity
system variable is greater than 1:Connection attributes of length N were truncated (N bytes lost) for connection N, user user_name@host_name (as user_name), auth: {yes|no}
The information in the warning message is intended to help DBAs identify clients for which attribute truncation occurred.
A
_truncated
attribute is added to the session attributes with a value indicating how many bytes were lost, if the attribute buffer has sufficient space. This enables the Performance Schema to expose per-connection truncation information in the connection attribute tables. This information can be examined without having to check the error log.