This table contains information about NDB transporters. For
        similar information about individual transporters, see the
        transporter_details table.
      
        The transporters table contains the following
        columns:
- node_id- This data node's unique node ID in the cluster 
- remote_node_id- The remote data node's node ID 
- status- Status of the connection 
- remote_address- Name or IP address of the remote host 
- bytes_sent- Number of bytes sent using this connection 
- bytes_received- Number of bytes received using this connection 
- connect_count- Number of times connection established on this transporter 
- overloaded- 1 if this transporter is currently overloaded, otherwise 0 
- overload_count- Number of times this transporter has entered overload state since connecting 
- slowdown- 1 if this transporter is in slowdown state, otherwise 0 
- slowdown_count- Number of times this transporter has entered slowdown state since connecting 
- encrypted- If this transporter is connected using TLS, this column is - 1, otherwise it is- 0.
Notes
        For each running data node in the cluster, the
        transporters table displays a row showing the
        status of each of that node's connections with all nodes in
        the cluster, including itself. This
        information is shown in the table's
        status column, which can have any one of
        the following values: CONNECTING,
        CONNECTED, DISCONNECTING,
        or DISCONNECTED.
      
        Connections to API and management nodes which are configured but
        not currently connected to the cluster are shown with status
        DISCONNECTED. Rows where the
        node_id is that of a data node which is not
        currently connected are not shown in this table. (This is
        similar omission of disconnected nodes in the
        ndbinfo.nodes table.
      
        The remote_address is the host name or
        address for the node whose ID is shown in the
        remote_node_id column. The
        bytes_sent from this node and
        bytes_received by this node are the numbers,
        respectively, of bytes sent and received by the node using this
        connection since it was established. For nodes whose status is
        CONNECTING or
        DISCONNECTED, these columns always display
        0.
      
        Assume you have a 5-node cluster consisting of 2 data nodes, 2
        SQL nodes, and 1 management node, as shown in the output of the
        SHOW command in the
        ndb_mgm client:
      
ndb_mgm> SHOW
Connected to Management Server at: localhost:1186 (using cleartext)
Cluster Configuration
---------------------
[ndbd(NDB)]     2 node(s)
id=1    @10.100.10.1  (9.5.0-ndb-9.5.0, Nodegroup: 0, *)
id=2    @10.100.10.2  (9.5.0-ndb-9.5.0, Nodegroup: 0)
[ndb_mgmd(MGM)] 1 node(s)
id=10   @10.100.10.10  (9.5.0-ndb-9.5.0)
[mysqld(API)]   2 node(s)
id=20   @10.100.10.20  (9.5.0-ndb-9.5.0)
id=21   @10.100.10.21  (9.5.0-ndb-9.5.0)
        There are 10 rows in the transporters
        table—5 for the first data node, and 5 for the
        second—assuming that all data nodes are running, as shown
        here:
      
+---------+----------------+------------+----------------+------------+----------------+---------------+------------+----------------+----------+----------------+-----------+
| node_id | remote_node_id | status     | remote_address | bytes_sent | bytes_received | connect_count | overloaded | overload_count | slowdown | slowdown_count | encrypted |
+---------+----------------+------------+----------------+------------+----------------+---------------+------------+----------------+----------+----------------+-----------+
|       5 |              6 | CONNECTED  | 127.0.0.1      |   15509748 |       15558204 |             1 |          0 |              0 |        0 |              0 |         0 |
|       5 |             50 | CONNECTED  | 127.0.0.1      |    1058220 |         284316 |             1 |          0 |              0 |        0 |              0 |         0 |
|       5 |            100 | CONNECTED  | 127.0.0.1      |     574796 |         402208 |             1 |          0 |              0 |        0 |              0 |         0 |
|       5 |            101 | CONNECTING | -              |          0 |              0 |             0 |          0 |              0 |        0 |              0 |         0 |
|       6 |              5 | CONNECTED  | 127.0.0.1      |   15558204 |       15509748 |             1 |          0 |              0 |        0 |              0 |         0 |
|       6 |             50 | CONNECTED  | 127.0.0.1      |    1054548 |         283812 |             1 |          0 |              0 |        0 |              0 |         0 |
|       6 |            100 | CONNECTED  | 127.0.0.1      |     529948 |         397444 |             1 |          0 |              0 |        0 |              0 |         0 |
|       6 |            101 | CONNECTING | -              |          0 |              0 |             0 |          0 |              0 |        0 |              0 |         0 |
+---------+----------------+------------+----------------+------------+----------------+---------------+------------+----------------+----------+----------------+-----------+mysql> SELECT node_id, remote_node_id, status
    ->   FROM ndbinfo.transporters;
+---------+----------------+---------------+
| node_id | remote_node_id | status        |
+---------+----------------+---------------+
|       1 |              1 | DISCONNECTED  |
|       1 |              2 | CONNECTED     |
|       1 |             10 | CONNECTED     |
|       1 |             20 | CONNECTED     |
|       1 |             21 | CONNECTED     |
|       2 |              1 | CONNECTED     |
|       2 |              2 | DISCONNECTED  |
|       2 |             10 | CONNECTED     |
|       2 |             20 | CONNECTED     |
|       2 |             21 | CONNECTED     |
+---------+----------------+---------------+
10 rows in set (0.04 sec)
        If you shut down one of the data nodes in this cluster using the
        command 2 STOP in the
        ndb_mgm client, then repeat the previous
        query (again using the mysql client), this
        table now shows only 5 rows—1 row for each connection from
        the remaining management node to another node, including both
        itself and the data node that is currently offline—and
        displays CONNECTING for the status of each
        remaining connection to the data node that is currently offline,
        as shown here:
      
mysql> SELECT node_id, remote_node_id, status
    ->   FROM ndbinfo.transporters;
+---------+----------------+---------------+
| node_id | remote_node_id | status        |
+---------+----------------+---------------+
|       1 |              1 | DISCONNECTED  |
|       1 |              2 | CONNECTING    |
|       1 |             10 | CONNECTED     |
|       1 |             20 | CONNECTED     |
|       1 |             21 | CONNECTED     |
+---------+----------------+---------------+
5 rows in set (0.02 sec)
        The connect_count,
        overloaded,
        overload_count, slowdown,
        and slowdown_count counters are reset on
        connection, and retain their values after the remote node
        disconnects. The bytes_sent and
        bytes_received counters are also reset on
        connection, and so retain their values following disconnection
        (until the next connection resets them).
      
        The overload state referred to by the
        overloaded and
        overload_count columns occurs when this
        transporter's send buffer contains more than
        OVerloadLimit bytes
        (default is 80% of
        SendBufferMemory, that
        is, 0.8 * 2097152 = 1677721 bytes). When a given transporter is
        in a state of overload, any new transaction that tries to use
        this transporter fails with Error 1218 (Send Buffers
        overloaded in NDB kernel). This affects both scans
        and primary key operations.
      
        The slowdown state referenced by the
        slowdown and
        slowdown_count columns of this table occurs
        when the transporter's send buffer contains more than 60%
        of the overload limit (equal to 0.6 * 2097152 = 1258291 bytes by
        default). In this state, any new scan using this transporter has
        its batch size reduced to minimize the load on the transporter.
      
Common causes of send buffer slowdown or overloading include the following:
- Data size, in particular the quantity of data stored in - TEXTcolumns or- BLOBcolumns (or both types of columns)
- Having a data node (ndbd or ndbmtd) on the same host as an SQL node that is engaged in binary logging 
- Large number of rows per transaction or transaction batch 
- Configuration issues such as insufficient - SendBufferMemory
- Hardware issues such as insufficient RAM or poor network connectivity 
See also Section 25.4.3.14, “Configuring NDB Cluster Send Buffer Parameters”.
        If TLS is used for the connection, the
        encrypted column is 1, as
        shown here:
      
mysql> SELECT node_id, remote_node_id, status, encrypted 
    -> FROM ndbinfo.transporters;
+---------+----------------+------------+-----------+
| node_id | remote_node_id | status     | encrypted |
+---------+----------------+------------+-----------+
|       5 |              6 | CONNECTED  |         1 |
|       5 |             50 | CONNECTED  |         1 |
|       5 |            100 | CONNECTED  |         1 |
|       5 |            101 | CONNECTING |         0 |
|       6 |              5 | CONNECTED  |         1 |
|       6 |             50 | CONNECTED  |         1 |
|       6 |            100 | CONNECTED  |         1 |
|       6 |            101 | CONNECTING |         0 |
+---------+----------------+------------+-----------+
8 rows in set (0.04 sec)
        Otherwise, the value of this column is 0.
      
        The certificates table can be
        used to obtain certificate information about each node connected
        using link encryption.
      
For more information, see Section 25.6.19.5, “TLS Link Encryption for NDB Cluster”.