The server_locks table is similar in
        structure to the cluster_locks table, and
        provides a subset of the information found in the latter table,
        but which is specific to the SQL node (MySQL server) where it
        resides. (The cluster_locks table provides
        information about all locks in the cluster.) More precisely,
        server_locks contains information about locks
        requested by threads belonging to the current
        mysqld instance, and serves as a companion
        table to server_operations.
        This may be useful for correlating locking patterns with
        specific MySQL user sessions, queries, or use cases.
      
        The server_locks table contains the following
        columns:
- mysql_connection_id- MySQL connection ID 
- node_id- ID of reporting node 
- block_instance- ID of reporting LDM instance 
- tableid- ID of table containing this row 
- fragmentid- ID of fragment containing locked row 
- rowid- ID of locked row 
- transid- Transaction ID 
- mode- Lock request mode 
- state- Lock state 
- detail- Whether this is first holding lock in row lock queue 
- op- Operation type 
- duration_millis- Milliseconds spent waiting or holding lock 
- lock_num- ID of lock object 
- waiting_for- Waiting for lock with this ID 
Notes
        The mysql_connection_id column shows the
        MySQL connection or thread ID as shown by
        SHOW PROCESSLIST.
      
        block_instance refers to an instance of a
        kernel block. Together with the block name, this number can be
        used to look up a given instance in the
        threadblocks table.
      
        The tableid is assigned to the table by
        NDB; the same ID is used for this table in
        other ndbinfo tables, as well as in the
        output of ndb_show_tables.
      
        The transaction ID shown in the transid
        column is the identifier generated by the NDB API for the
        transaction requesting or holding the current lock.
      
        The mode column shows the lock mode, which is
        always one of S (shared lock) or
        X (exclusive lock). If a transaction has an
        exclusive lock on a given row, all other locks on that row have
        the same transaction ID.
      
        The state column shows the lock state. Its
        value is always one of H (holding) or
        W (waiting). A waiting lock request waits for
        a lock held by a different transaction.
      
        The detail column indicates whether this lock
        is the first holding lock in the affected row's lock queue,
        in which case it contains a * (asterisk
        character); otherwise, this column is empty. This information
        can be used to help identify the unique entries in a list of
        lock requests.
      
        The op column shows the type of operation
        requesting the lock. This is always one of the values
        READ, INSERT,
        UPDATE, DELETE,
        SCAN, or REFRESH.
      
        The duration_millis column shows the number
        of milliseconds for which this lock request has been waiting or
        holding the lock. This is reset to 0 when a lock is granted for
        a waiting request.
      
        The lock ID (lockid column) is unique to this
        node and block instance.
      
        If the lock_state column's value is
        W, this lock is waiting to be granted, and
        the waiting_for column shows the lock ID of
        the lock object this request is waiting for. Otherwise,
        waiting_for is empty.
        waiting_for can refer only to locks on the
        same row (as identified by node_id,
        block_instance, tableid,
        fragmentid, and rowid).