The events_waits_current table
contains current wait events. The table stores one row per
thread showing the current status of the thread's most recent
monitored wait event, so there is no system variable for
configuring the table size.
Of the tables that contain wait event rows,
events_waits_current is the most
fundamental. Other tables that contain wait event rows are
logically derived from the current events. For example, the
events_waits_history and
events_waits_history_long tables
are collections of the most recent wait events that have
ended, up to a maximum number of rows per thread and globally
across all threads, respectively.
For more information about the relationship between the three wait event tables, see Section 29.9, “Performance Schema Tables for Current and Historical Events”.
For information about configuring whether to collect wait events, see Section 29.12.4, “Performance Schema Wait Event Tables”.
The events_waits_current table
has these columns:
THREAD_ID,EVENT_IDThe thread associated with the event and the thread current event number when the event starts. The
THREAD_IDandEVENT_IDvalues taken together uniquely identify the row. No two rows have the same pair of values.END_EVENT_IDThis column is set to
NULLwhen the event starts and updated to the thread current event number when the event ends.EVENT_NAMEThe name of the instrument that produced the event. This is a
NAMEvalue from thesetup_instrumentstable. Instrument names may have multiple parts and form a hierarchy, as discussed in Section 29.6, “Performance Schema Instrument Naming Conventions”.SOURCEThe name of the source file containing the instrumented code that produced the event and the line number in the file at which the instrumentation occurs. This enables you to check the source to determine exactly what code is involved. For example, if a mutex or lock is being blocked, you can check the context in which this occurs.
TIMER_START,TIMER_END,TIMER_WAITTiming information for the event. The unit for these values is picoseconds (trillionths of a second). The
TIMER_STARTandTIMER_ENDvalues indicate when event timing started and ended.TIMER_WAITis the event elapsed time (duration).If an event has not finished,
TIMER_ENDis the current timer value andTIMER_WAITis the time elapsed so far (TIMER_END−TIMER_START).If an event is produced from an instrument that has
TIMED = NO, timing information is not collected, andTIMER_START,TIMER_END, andTIMER_WAITare allNULL.For discussion of picoseconds as the unit for event times and factors that affect time values, see Section 29.4.1, “Performance Schema Event Timing”.
SPINSFor a mutex, the number of spin rounds. If the value is
NULL, the code does not use spin rounds or spinning is not instrumented.OBJECT_SCHEMA,OBJECT_NAME,OBJECT_TYPE,OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINThese columns identify the object “being acted on.” What that means depends on the object type.
For a synchronization object (
cond,mutex,rwlock):OBJECT_SCHEMA,OBJECT_NAME, andOBJECT_TYPEareNULL.OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINis the address of the synchronization object in memory.
For a file I/O object:
OBJECT_SCHEMAisNULL.OBJECT_NAMEis the file name.OBJECT_TYPEisFILE.OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINis an address in memory.
For a socket object:
OBJECT_NAMEis theIP:PORTvalue for the socket.OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINis an address in memory.
For a table I/O object:
OBJECT_SCHEMAis the name of the schema that contains the table.OBJECT_NAMEis the table name.OBJECT_TYPEisTABLEfor a persistent base table orTEMPORARY TABLEfor a temporary table.OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINis an address in memory.
An
OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINvalue itself has no meaning, except that different values indicate different objects.OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINcan be used for debugging. For example, it can be used withGROUP BY OBJECT_INSTANCE_BEGINto see whether the load on 1,000 mutexes (that protect, say, 1,000 pages or blocks of data) is spread evenly or just hitting a few bottlenecks. This can help you correlate with other sources of information if you see the same object address in a log file or another debugging or performance tool.INDEX_NAMEThe name of the index used.
PRIMARYindicates the table primary index.NULLmeans that no index was used.NESTING_EVENT_IDThe
EVENT_IDvalue of the event within which this event is nested.NESTING_EVENT_TYPEThe nesting event type. The value is
TRANSACTION,STATEMENT,STAGE, orWAIT.OPERATIONThe type of operation performed, such as
lock,read, orwrite.NUMBER_OF_BYTESThe number of bytes read or written by the operation. For table I/O waits (events for the
wait/io/table/sql/handlerinstrument),NUMBER_OF_BYTESindicates the number of rows. If the value is greater than 1, the event is for a batch I/O operation. The following discussion describes the difference between exclusively single-row reporting and reporting that reflects batch I/O.MySQL executes joins using a nested-loop implementation. The job of the Performance Schema instrumentation is to provide row count and accumulated execution time per table in the join. Assume a join query of the following form that is executed using a table join order of
t1,t2,t3:SELECT ... FROM t1 JOIN t2 ON ... JOIN t3 ON ...Table “fanout” is the increase or decrease in number of rows from adding a table during join processing. If the fanout for table
t3is greater than 1, the majority of row-fetch operations are for that table. Suppose that the join accesses 10 rows fromt1, 20 rows fromt2per row fromt1, and 30 rows fromt3per row of tablet2. With single-row reporting, the total number of instrumented operations is:10 + (10 * 20) + (10 * 20 * 30) = 6210A significant reduction in the number of instrumented operations is achievable by aggregating them per scan (that is, per unique combination of rows from
t1andt2). With batch I/O reporting, the Performance Schema produces an event for each scan of the innermost tablet3rather than for each row, and the number of instrumented row operations reduces to:10 + (10 * 20) + (10 * 20) = 410That is a reduction of 93%, illustrating how the batch-reporting strategy significantly reduces Performance Schema overhead for table I/O by reducing the number of reporting calls. The tradeoff is lesser accuracy for event timing. Rather than time for an individual row operation as in per-row reporting, timing for batch I/O includes time spent for operations such as join buffering, aggregation, and returning rows to the client.
For batch I/O reporting to occur, these conditions must be true:
Query execution accesses the innermost table of a query block (for a single-table query, that table counts as innermost)
Query execution does not request a single row from the table (so, for example,
eq_refaccess prevents use of batch reporting)Query execution does not evaluate a subquery containing table access for the table
FLAGSReserved for future use.
The events_waits_current table
has these indexes:
Primary key on (
THREAD_ID,EVENT_ID)
TRUNCATE TABLE is permitted for
the events_waits_current table.
It removes the rows.