SHOW [EXTENDED] {INDEX | INDEXES | KEYS}
    {FROM | IN} tbl_name
    [{FROM | IN} db_name]
    [WHERE expr]
        SHOW INDEX returns table index
        information. The format resembles that of the
        SQLStatistics call in ODBC. This statement
        requires some privilege for any column in the table.
      
mysql> SHOW INDEX FROM City\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
        Table: city
   Non_unique: 0
     Key_name: PRIMARY
 Seq_in_index: 1
  Column_name: ID
    Collation: A
  Cardinality: 4188
     Sub_part: NULL
       Packed: NULL
         Null:
   Index_type: BTREE
      Comment:
Index_comment:
      Visible: YES
   Expression: NULL
*************************** 2. row ***************************
        Table: city
   Non_unique: 1
     Key_name: CountryCode
 Seq_in_index: 1
  Column_name: CountryCode
    Collation: A
  Cardinality: 232
     Sub_part: NULL
       Packed: NULL
         Null:
   Index_type: BTREE
      Comment:
Index_comment:
      Visible: YES
   Expression: NULL
        An alternative to tbl_name
        FROM db_namedb_name.tbl_name.
        These two statements are equivalent:
      
SHOW INDEX FROM mytable FROM mydb;
SHOW INDEX FROM mydb.mytable;
        The optional EXTENDED keyword causes the
        output to include information about hidden indexes that MySQL
        uses internally and are not accessible by users.
      
        The WHERE clause can be given to select rows
        using more general conditions, as discussed in
        Section 28.8, “Extensions to SHOW Statements”.
      
        SHOW INDEX returns the following
        fields:
- Table- The name of the table. 
- Non_unique- 0 if the index cannot contain duplicates, 1 if it can. 
- Key_name- The name of the index. If the index is the primary key, the name is always - PRIMARY.
- Seq_in_index- The column sequence number in the index, starting with 1. 
- Column_name- The column name. See also the description for the - Expressioncolumn.
- Collation- How the column is sorted in the index. This can have values - A(ascending),- D(descending), or- NULL(not sorted).
- Cardinality- An estimate of the number of unique values in the index. To update this number, run - ANALYZE TABLEor (for- MyISAMtables) myisamchk -a.- Cardinalityis counted based on statistics stored as integers, so the value is not necessarily exact even for small tables. The higher the cardinality, the greater the chance that MySQL uses the index when doing joins.
- Sub_part- The index prefix. That is, the number of indexed characters if the column is only partly indexed, - NULLif the entire column is indexed.Note- Prefix limits are measured in bytes. However, prefix lengths for index specifications in - CREATE TABLE,- ALTER TABLE, and- CREATE INDEXstatements are interpreted as number of characters for nonbinary string types (- CHAR,- VARCHAR,- TEXT) and number of bytes for binary string types (- BINARY,- VARBINARY,- BLOB). Take this into account when specifying a prefix length for a nonbinary string column that uses a multibyte character set.- For additional information about index prefixes, see Section 10.3.5, “Column Indexes”, and Section 15.1.18, “CREATE INDEX Statement”. 
- Packed- Indicates how the key is packed. - NULLif it is not.
- Null- Contains - YESif the column may contain- NULLvalues and- ''if not.
- Index_type- The index method used ( - BTREE,- FULLTEXT,- HASH,- RTREE).
- Comment- Information about the index not described in its own column, such as - disabledif the index is disabled.
- Index_comment- Any comment provided for the index with a - COMMENTattribute when the index was created.
- Visible- Whether the index is visible to the optimizer. See Section 10.3.12, “Invisible Indexes”. 
- Expression- MySQL supports functional key parts (see Functional Key Parts); this affects both the - Column_nameand- Expressioncolumns:- For a nonfunctional key part, - Column_nameindicates the column indexed by the key part and- Expressionis- NULL.
- For a functional key part, - Column_namecolumn is- NULLand- Expressionindicates the expression for the key part.
 
        Information about table indexes is also available from the
        INFORMATION_SCHEMA
        STATISTICS table. See
        Section 28.3.40, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA STATISTICS Table”. The
        extended information about hidden indexes is available only
        using SHOW EXTENDED INDEX; it cannot be
        obtained from the STATISTICS table.
      
        You can list a table's indexes with the mysqlshow -k
        db_name
        tbl_name command.
      
        SHOW INDEX includes the table's
        generated invisible key, if it has one, by default. You can
        cause this information to be suppressed in the statement's
        output by setting
        show_gipk_in_create_table_and_information_schema
        = OFF. For more information, see
        Section 15.1.24.11, “Generated Invisible Primary Keys”.