When a client connects to the MySQL server, it does so under a particular user name and from a particular host. The Performance Schema provides statistics about these connections, tracking them per account (user and host combination) as well as separately per user name and host name, using these tables:
The meaning of “account” in the connection tables
is similar to its meaning in the MySQL grant tables in the
mysql system database, in the sense that the
term refers to a combination of user and host values. They
differ in that, for grant tables, the host part of an account
can be a pattern, whereas for Performance Schema tables, the
host value is always a specific nonpattern host name.
Each connection table has CURRENT_CONNECTIONS
and TOTAL_CONNECTIONS columns to track the
current and total number of connections per “tracking
value” on which its statistics are based. The tables
differ in what they use for the tracking value. The
accounts table has
USER and HOST columns to
track connections per user and host combination. The
users and
hosts tables have a
USER and HOST column,
respectively, to track connections per user name and host name.
The Performance Schema also counts internal threads and threads
for user sessions that failed to authenticate, using rows with
USER and HOST column
values of NULL.
Suppose that clients named user1 and
user2 each connect one time from
hosta and hostb. The
Performance Schema tracks the connections as follows:
The
accountstable has four rows, for theuser1/hosta,user1/hostb,user2/hosta, anduser2/hostbaccount values, each row counting one connection per account.The
hoststable has two rows, forhostaandhostb, each row counting two connections per host name.The
userstable has two rows, foruser1anduser2, each row counting two connections per user name.
When a client connects, the Performance Schema determines which
row in each connection table applies, using the tracking value
appropriate to each table. If there is no such row, one is
added. Then the Performance Schema increments by one the
CURRENT_CONNECTIONS and
TOTAL_CONNECTIONS columns in that row.
When a client disconnects, the Performance Schema decrements by
one the CURRENT_CONNECTIONS column in the row
and leaves the TOTAL_CONNECTIONS column
unchanged.
TRUNCATE TABLE is permitted for
connection tables. It has these effects:
Rows are removed for accounts, hosts, or users that have no current connections (rows with
CURRENT_CONNECTIONS = 0).Nonremoved rows are reset to count only current connections: For rows with
CURRENT_CONNECTIONS > 0,TOTAL_CONNECTIONSis reset toCURRENT_CONNECTIONS.Summary tables that depend on the connection table are implicitly truncated, as described later in this section.
The Performance Schema maintains summary tables that aggregate
connection statistics for various event types by account, host,
or user. These tables have
_summary_by_account,
_summary_by_host, or
_summary_by_user in the name. To identify
them, use this query:
mysql> SELECT TABLE_NAME FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLES
WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA = 'performance_schema'
AND TABLE_NAME REGEXP '_summary_by_(account|host|user)'
ORDER BY TABLE_NAME;
+------------------------------------------------------+
| TABLE_NAME |
+------------------------------------------------------+
| events_errors_summary_by_account_by_error |
| events_errors_summary_by_host_by_error |
| events_errors_summary_by_user_by_error |
| events_stages_summary_by_account_by_event_name |
| events_stages_summary_by_host_by_event_name |
| events_stages_summary_by_user_by_event_name |
| events_statements_summary_by_account_by_event_name |
| events_statements_summary_by_host_by_event_name |
| events_statements_summary_by_user_by_event_name |
| events_transactions_summary_by_account_by_event_name |
| events_transactions_summary_by_host_by_event_name |
| events_transactions_summary_by_user_by_event_name |
| events_waits_summary_by_account_by_event_name |
| events_waits_summary_by_host_by_event_name |
| events_waits_summary_by_user_by_event_name |
| memory_summary_by_account_by_event_name |
| memory_summary_by_host_by_event_name |
| memory_summary_by_user_by_event_name |
+------------------------------------------------------+For details about individual connection summary tables, consult the section that describes tables for the summarized event type:
Wait event summaries: Section 29.12.20.1, “Wait Event Summary Tables”
Stage event summaries: Section 29.12.20.2, “Stage Summary Tables”
Statement event summaries: Section 29.12.20.3, “Statement Summary Tables”
Transaction event summaries: Section 29.12.20.5, “Transaction Summary Tables”
Memory event summaries: Section 29.12.20.10, “Memory Summary Tables”
Error event summaries: Section 29.12.20.11, “Error Summary Tables”
TRUNCATE TABLE is permitted for
connection summary tables. It removes rows for accounts, hosts,
or users with no connections, and resets the summary columns to
zero for the remaining rows. In addition, each summary table
that is aggregated by account, host, user, or thread is
implicitly truncated by truncation of the connection table on
which it depends. The following table describes the relationship
between connection table truncation and implicitly truncated
tables.
Table 29.2 Implicit Effects of Connection Table Truncation
| Truncated Connection Table | Implicitly Truncated Summary Tables |
|---|---|
accounts |
Tables with names containing _summary_by_account,
_summary_by_thread |
hosts |
Tables with names containing _summary_by_account,
_summary_by_host,
_summary_by_thread |
users |
Tables with names containing _summary_by_account,
_summary_by_user,
_summary_by_thread |
Truncating a _summary_global summary table
also implicitly truncates its corresponding connection and
thread summary tables. For example, truncating
events_waits_summary_global_by_event_name
implicitly truncates the wait event summary tables that are
aggregated by account, host, user, or thread.