The SHOW PROCESSLIST
statement
provides information that tells you what is happening on the
source and on the replica regarding replication. For information
on source states, see Section 10.14.4, “Replication Source Thread States”.
For replica states, see
Section 10.14.5, “Replication I/O (Receiver) Thread States”, and
Section 10.14.6, “Replication SQL Thread States”.
The following example illustrates how the three main replication
threads, the binary log dump thread, replication I/O (receiver)
thread, and replication SQL (applier) thread, show up in the
output from SHOW PROCESSLIST
.
On the source server, the output from SHOW
PROCESSLIST
looks like this:
mysql> SHOW PROCESSLIST\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Id: 2
User: root
Host: localhost:32931
db: NULL
Command: Binlog Dump
Time: 94
State: Has sent all binlog to slave; waiting for binlog to
be updated
Info: NULL
Here, thread 2 is a Binlog Dump
thread that
services a connected replica. The State
information indicates that all outstanding updates have been
sent to the replica and that the source is waiting for more
updates to occur. If you see no Binlog Dump
threads on a source server, this means that replication is not
running; that is, no replicas are currently connected.
On a replica server, the output from SHOW
PROCESSLIST
looks like this:
mysql> SHOW PROCESSLIST\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
Id: 10
User: system user
Host:
db: NULL
Command: Connect
Time: 11
State: Waiting for master to send event
Info: NULL
*************************** 2. row ***************************
Id: 11
User: system user
Host:
db: NULL
Command: Connect
Time: 11
State: Has read all relay log; waiting for the slave I/O
thread to update it
Info: NULL
The State
information indicates that thread
10 is the replication I/O (receiver) thread that is
communicating with the source server, and thread 11 is the
replication SQL (applier) thread that is processing the updates
stored in the relay logs. At the time that
SHOW PROCESSLIST
was run, both
threads were idle, waiting for further updates.
The value in the Time
column can show how
late the replica is compared to the source. See
Section A.14, “MySQL 9.1 FAQ: Replication”. If sufficient time elapses
on the source side without activity on the Binlog
Dump
thread, the source determines that the replica is
no longer connected. As for any other client connection, the
timeouts for this depend on the values of
net_write_timeout
and
net_retry_count
; for more information about
these, see Section 7.1.8, “Server System Variables”.
The SHOW REPLICA STATUS
statement
provides additional information about replication processing on
a replica server. See
Section 19.1.7.1, “Checking Replication Status”.
You can also retrieve information on the source's
Binlog Dump
threads with the following:
SELECT * FROM performance_schema.threads WHERE PROCESSLIST_COMMAND LIKE "Binlog Dump%"
Binlog Dump%
is used to retrieve either
Binlog Dump
or Binlog Dump
GTID
, depending on which mode binlog dumping is in.