The Performance Schema instruments waits, which are events that take time. Within the event hierarchy, wait events nest within stage events, which nest within statement events, which nest within transaction events.
These tables store wait events:
- events_waits_current: The current wait event for each thread.
- events_waits_history: The most recent wait events that have ended per thread.
- events_waits_history_long: The most recent wait events that have ended globally (across all threads).
The following sections describe the wait event tables. There are also summary tables that aggregate information about wait events; see Section 29.12.20.1, “Wait Event Summary Tables”.
For more information about the relationship between the three wait event tables, see Section 29.9, “Performance Schema Tables for Current and Historical Events”.
Configuring Wait Event Collection
To control whether to collect wait events, set the state of the relevant instruments and consumers:
- The - setup_instrumentstable contains instruments with names that begin with- wait. Use these instruments to enable or disable collection of individual wait event classes.
- The - setup_consumerstable contains consumer values with names corresponding to the current and historical wait event table names. Use these consumers to filter collection of wait events.
Some wait instruments are enabled by default; others are disabled. For example:
mysql> SELECT NAME, ENABLED, TIMED
       FROM performance_schema.setup_instruments
       WHERE NAME LIKE 'wait/io/file/innodb%';
+-------------------------------------------------+---------+-------+
| NAME                                            | ENABLED | TIMED |
+-------------------------------------------------+---------+-------+
| wait/io/file/innodb/innodb_tablespace_open_file | YES     | YES   |
| wait/io/file/innodb/innodb_data_file            | YES     | YES   |
| wait/io/file/innodb/innodb_log_file             | YES     | YES   |
| wait/io/file/innodb/innodb_temp_file            | YES     | YES   |
| wait/io/file/innodb/innodb_arch_file            | YES     | YES   |
| wait/io/file/innodb/innodb_clone_file           | YES     | YES   |
+-------------------------------------------------+---------+-------+
mysql> SELECT NAME, ENABLED, TIMED
       FROM performance_schema.setup_instruments
       WHERE NAME LIKE 'wait/io/socket/%';
+----------------------------------------+---------+-------+
| NAME                                   | ENABLED | TIMED |
+----------------------------------------+---------+-------+
| wait/io/socket/sql/server_tcpip_socket | NO      | NO    |
| wait/io/socket/sql/server_unix_socket  | NO      | NO    |
| wait/io/socket/sql/client_connection   | NO      | NO    |
+----------------------------------------+---------+-------+The wait consumers are disabled by default:
mysql> SELECT *
       FROM performance_schema.setup_consumers
       WHERE NAME LIKE 'events_waits%';
+---------------------------+---------+
| NAME                      | ENABLED |
+---------------------------+---------+
| events_waits_current      | NO      |
| events_waits_history      | NO      |
| events_waits_history_long | NO      |
+---------------------------+---------+
        To control wait event collection at server startup, use lines
        like these in your my.cnf file:
- Enable: - [mysqld] performance-schema-instrument='wait/%=ON' performance-schema-consumer-events-waits-current=ON performance-schema-consumer-events-waits-history=ON performance-schema-consumer-events-waits-history-long=ON
- Disable: - [mysqld] performance-schema-instrument='wait/%=OFF' performance-schema-consumer-events-waits-current=OFF performance-schema-consumer-events-waits-history=OFF performance-schema-consumer-events-waits-history-long=OFF
        To control wait event collection at runtime, update the
        setup_instruments and
        setup_consumers tables:
- Enable: - UPDATE performance_schema.setup_instruments SET ENABLED = 'YES', TIMED = 'YES' WHERE NAME LIKE 'wait/%'; UPDATE performance_schema.setup_consumers SET ENABLED = 'YES' WHERE NAME LIKE 'events_waits%';
- Disable: - UPDATE performance_schema.setup_instruments SET ENABLED = 'NO', TIMED = 'NO' WHERE NAME LIKE 'wait/%'; UPDATE performance_schema.setup_consumers SET ENABLED = 'NO' WHERE NAME LIKE 'events_waits%';
To collect only specific wait events, enable only the corresponding wait instruments. To collect wait events only for specific wait event tables, enable the wait instruments but only the wait consumers corresponding to the desired tables.
For additional information about configuring event collection, see Section 29.3, “Performance Schema Startup Configuration”, and Section 29.4, “Performance Schema Runtime Configuration”.