SHOW PROFILE [type [, type] ... ]
    [FOR QUERY n]
    [LIMIT row_count [OFFSET offset]]
type: {
    ALL
  | BLOCK IO
  | CONTEXT SWITCHES
  | CPU
  | IPC
  | MEMORY
  | PAGE FAULTS
  | SOURCE
  | SWAPS
}
        The SHOW PROFILE and
        SHOW PROFILES statements display
        profiling information that indicates resource usage for
        statements executed during the course of the current session.
          The SHOW PROFILE and
          SHOW PROFILES statements are
          deprecated; expect them to be removed in a future MySQL
          release. Use the
          Performance Schema
          instead; see
          Section 29.19.1, “Query Profiling Using Performance Schema”.
        To control profiling, use the
        profiling session variable,
        which has a default value of 0 (OFF). Enable
        profiling by setting profiling
        to 1 or ON:
      
mysql> SET profiling = 1;
        SHOW PROFILES displays a list of
        the most recent statements sent to the server. The size of the
        list is controlled by the
        profiling_history_size session
        variable, which has a default value of 15. The maximum value is
        100. Setting the value to 0 has the practical effect of
        disabling profiling.
      
        All statements are profiled except SHOW
        PROFILE and SHOW
        PROFILES, so neither of those statements appears in
        the profile list. Malformed statements are profiled. For
        example, SHOW PROFILING is an illegal
        statement, and a syntax error occurs if you try to execute it,
        but it shows up in the profiling list.
      
        SHOW PROFILE displays detailed
        information about a single statement. Without the FOR
        QUERY  clause, the output
        pertains to the most recently executed statement. If
        nFOR QUERY  is
        included, nSHOW PROFILE displays
        information for statement n. The
        values of n correspond to the
        Query_ID values displayed by
        SHOW PROFILES.
      
        The LIMIT
         clause may be
        given to limit the output to
        row_countrow_count rows. If
        LIMIT is given, OFFSET
         may be added to
        begin the output offsetoffset rows into the
        full set of rows.
      
        By default, SHOW PROFILE displays
        Status and Duration
        columns. The Status values are like the
        State values displayed by
        SHOW PROCESSLIST, although there
        might be some minor differences in interpretation for the two
        statements for some status values (see
        Section 10.14, “Examining Server Thread (Process) Information”).
      
        Optional type values may be specified
        to display specific additional types of information:
- ALLdisplays all information
- BLOCK IOdisplays counts for block input and output operations
- CONTEXT SWITCHESdisplays counts for voluntary and involuntary context switches
- CPUdisplays user and system CPU usage times
- IPCdisplays counts for messages sent and received
- MEMORYis not currently implemented
- PAGE FAULTSdisplays counts for major and minor page faults
- SOURCEdisplays the names of functions from the source code, together with the name and line number of the file in which the function occurs
- SWAPSdisplays swap counts
Profiling is enabled per session. When a session ends, its profiling information is lost.
mysql> SELECT @@profiling;
+-------------+
| @@profiling |
+-------------+
|           0 |
+-------------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> SET profiling = 1;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1;
Query OK, 0 rows affected, 1 warning (0.00 sec)
mysql> CREATE TABLE T1 (id INT);
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.01 sec)
mysql> SHOW PROFILES;
+----------+----------+--------------------------+
| Query_ID | Duration | Query                    |
+----------+----------+--------------------------+
|        0 | 0.000088 | SET PROFILING = 1        |
|        1 | 0.000136 | DROP TABLE IF EXISTS t1  |
|        2 | 0.011947 | CREATE TABLE t1 (id INT) |
+----------+----------+--------------------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> SHOW PROFILE;
+----------------------+----------+
| Status               | Duration |
+----------------------+----------+
| checking permissions | 0.000040 |
| creating table       | 0.000056 |
| After create         | 0.011363 |
| query end            | 0.000375 |
| freeing items        | 0.000089 |
| logging slow query   | 0.000019 |
| cleaning up          | 0.000005 |
+----------------------+----------+
7 rows in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> SHOW PROFILE FOR QUERY 1;
+--------------------+----------+
| Status             | Duration |
+--------------------+----------+
| query end          | 0.000107 |
| freeing items      | 0.000008 |
| logging slow query | 0.000015 |
| cleaning up        | 0.000006 |
+--------------------+----------+
4 rows in set (0.00 sec)
mysql> SHOW PROFILE CPU FOR QUERY 2;
+----------------------+----------+----------+------------+
| Status               | Duration | CPU_user | CPU_system |
+----------------------+----------+----------+------------+
| checking permissions | 0.000040 | 0.000038 |   0.000002 |
| creating table       | 0.000056 | 0.000028 |   0.000028 |
| After create         | 0.011363 | 0.000217 |   0.001571 |
| query end            | 0.000375 | 0.000013 |   0.000028 |
| freeing items        | 0.000089 | 0.000010 |   0.000014 |
| logging slow query   | 0.000019 | 0.000009 |   0.000010 |
| cleaning up          | 0.000005 | 0.000003 |   0.000002 |
+----------------------+----------+----------+------------+
7 rows in set (0.00 sec)
          Profiling is only partially functional on some architectures.
          For values that depend on the getrusage()
          system call, NULL is returned on systems
          such as Windows that do not support the call. In addition,
          profiling is per process and not per thread. This means that
          activity on threads within the server other than your own may
          affect the timing information that you see.
        Profiling information is also available from the
        INFORMATION_SCHEMA
        PROFILING table. See
        Section 28.3.29, “The INFORMATION_SCHEMA PROFILING Table”. For
        example, the following queries are equivalent:
      
SHOW PROFILE FOR QUERY 2;
SELECT STATE, FORMAT(DURATION, 6) AS DURATION
FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.PROFILING
WHERE QUERY_ID = 2 ORDER BY SEQ;