The variables_info table shows,
for each system variable, the source from which it was most
recently set, and its range of values.
The variables_info table has
these columns:
VARIABLE_NAMEThe variable name.
VARIABLE_SOURCEThe source from which the variable was most recently set:
COMMAND_LINEThe variable was set on the command line.
COMPILEDThe variable has its compiled-in default value.
COMPILEDis the value used for variables not set any other way.DYNAMICThe variable was set at runtime. This includes variables set within files specified using the
init_filesystem variable.EXPLICITThe variable was set from an option file named with the
--defaults-fileoption.EXTRAThe variable was set from an option file named with the
--defaults-extra-fileoption.GLOBALThe variable was set from a global option file. This includes option files not covered by
EXPLICIT,EXTRA,LOGIN,PERSISTED,SERVER, orUSER.LOGINThe variable was set from a user-specific login path file (
~/.mylogin.cnf).PERSISTEDThe variable was set from a server-specific
mysqld-auto.cnfoption file. No row has this value if the server was started withpersisted_globals_loaddisabled.SERVERThe variable was set from a server-specific
option file. For details about how$MYSQL_HOME/my.cnfMYSQL_HOMEis set, see Section 6.2.2.2, “Using Option Files”.USERThe variable was set from a user-specific
~/.my.cnfoption file.
VARIABLE_PATHIf the variable was set from an option file,
VARIABLE_PATHis the path name of that file. Otherwise, the value is the empty string.MIN_VALUEThe minimum permitted value for the variable. For a variable whose type is not numeric, this is always 0.
This column is deprecated, and subject to removal in a future release; instead, use the
MIN_VALUEcolumn of thevariables_metadatatable to obtain this information.MAX_VALUEThe maximum permitted value for the variable. For a variable whose type is not numeric, this is always 0.
This column is deprecated, and subject to removal in a future release; instead, use the
MAX_VALUEcolumn of thevariables_metadatatable to obtain this information.SET_TIMEThe time at which the variable was most recently set. The default is the time at which the server initialized global system variables during startup.
SET_USER,SET_HOSTThe user name and host name of the client user that most recently set the variable. If a client connects as
user17from hosthost34.example.comusing the account'user17'@'%.example.com,SET_USERandSET_HOSTareuser17andhost34.example.com, respectively. For proxy user connections, these values correspond to the external (proxy) user, not the proxied user against which privilege checking is performed. The default for each column is the empty string, indicating that the variable has not been set since server startup.
The variables_info table has no
indexes.
TRUNCATE TABLE is not permitted
for the variables_info table.
If a variable with a VARIABLE_SOURCE value
other than DYNAMIC is set at runtime,
VARIABLE_SOURCE becomes
DYNAMIC and
VARIABLE_PATH becomes the empty string.
A system variable that has only a session value (such as
debug_sync) cannot be set at
startup or persisted. For session-only system variables,
VARIABLE_SOURCE can be only
COMPILED or DYNAMIC.
If a system variable has an unexpected
VARIABLE_SOURCE value, consider your server
startup method. For example, mysqld_safe
reads option files and passes certain options it finds there
as part of the command line that it uses to start
mysqld. Consequently, some system variables
that you set in option files might display in
variables_info as
COMMAND_LINE, rather than as
GLOBAL or SERVER as you
might otherwise expect.
Some sample queries that use the
variables_info table, with
representative output:
Display variables set on the command line:
mysql> SELECT VARIABLE_NAME FROM performance_schema.variables_info WHERE VARIABLE_SOURCE = 'COMMAND_LINE' ORDER BY VARIABLE_NAME; +---------------+ | VARIABLE_NAME | +---------------+ | basedir | | datadir | | log_error | | pid_file | | plugin_dir | | port | +---------------+Display variables set from persistent storage:
mysql> SELECT VARIABLE_NAME FROM performance_schema.variables_info WHERE VARIABLE_SOURCE = 'PERSISTED' ORDER BY VARIABLE_NAME; +--------------------------+ | VARIABLE_NAME | +--------------------------+ | event_scheduler | | max_connections | | validate_password.policy | +--------------------------+Join
variables_infowith theglobal_variablestable to display the current values of persisted variables, together with their range of values:mysql> SELECT VI.VARIABLE_NAME, GV.VARIABLE_VALUE, VI.MIN_VALUE,VI.MAX_VALUE FROM performance_schema.variables_info AS VI INNER JOIN performance_schema.global_variables AS GV USING(VARIABLE_NAME) WHERE VI.VARIABLE_SOURCE = 'PERSISTED' ORDER BY VARIABLE_NAME; +--------------------------+----------------+-----------+-----------+ | VARIABLE_NAME | VARIABLE_VALUE | MIN_VALUE | MAX_VALUE | +--------------------------+----------------+-----------+-----------+ | event_scheduler | ON | 0 | 0 | | max_connections | 200 | 1 | 100000 | | validate_password.policy | STRONG | 0 | 0 | +--------------------------+----------------+-----------+-----------+