The INNODB_METRICS table provides a
wide variety of InnoDB performance information,
complementing the specific focus areas of the Performance Schema
tables for InnoDB. With simple queries, you can
check the overall health of the system. With more detailed
queries, you can diagnose issues such as performance bottlenecks,
resource shortages, and application issues.
Each monitor represents a point within the
InnoDB source code that is instrumented to
gather counter information. Each counter can be started, stopped,
and reset. You can also perform these actions for a group of
counters using their common module name.
By default, relatively little data is collected. To start, stop,
and reset counters, set one of the system variables
innodb_monitor_enable,
innodb_monitor_disable,
innodb_monitor_reset, or
innodb_monitor_reset_all, using
the name of the counter, the name of the module, a wildcard match
for such a name using the “%” character, or the
special keyword all.
For usage information, see Section 17.15.6, “InnoDB INFORMATION_SCHEMA Metrics Table”.
The INNODB_METRICS table has these
columns:
NAMEA unique name for the counter.
SUBSYSTEMThe aspect of
InnoDBthat the metric applies to.COUNTThe value since the counter was enabled.
MAX_COUNTThe maximum value since the counter was enabled.
MIN_COUNTThe minimum value since the counter was enabled.
AVG_COUNTThe average value since the counter was enabled.
COUNT_RESETThe counter value since it was last reset. (The
_RESETcolumns act like the lap counter on a stopwatch: you can measure the activity during some time interval, while the cumulative figures are still available inCOUNT,MAX_COUNT, and so on.)MAX_COUNT_RESETThe maximum counter value since it was last reset.
MIN_COUNT_RESETThe minimum counter value since it was last reset.
AVG_COUNT_RESETThe average counter value since it was last reset.
TIME_ENABLEDThe timestamp of the last start.
TIME_DISABLEDThe timestamp of the last stop.
TIME_ELAPSEDThe elapsed time in seconds since the counter started.
TIME_RESETThe timestamp of the last reset.
STATUSWhether the counter is still running (
enabled) or stopped (disabled).TYPEWhether the item is a cumulative counter, or measures the current value of some resource.
COMMENTThe counter description.
Example
mysql> SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INNODB_METRICS WHERE NAME='dml_inserts'\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
NAME: dml_inserts
SUBSYSTEM: dml
COUNT: 3
MAX_COUNT: 3
MIN_COUNT: NULL
AVG_COUNT: 0.046153846153846156
COUNT_RESET: 3
MAX_COUNT_RESET: 3
MIN_COUNT_RESET: NULL
AVG_COUNT_RESET: NULL
TIME_ENABLED: 2014-12-04 14:18:28
TIME_DISABLED: NULL
TIME_ELAPSED: 65
TIME_RESET: NULL
STATUS: enabled
TYPE: status_counter
COMMENT: Number of rows inserted
Notes
You must have the
PROCESSprivilege to query this table.Use the
INFORMATION_SCHEMACOLUMNStable or theSHOW COLUMNSstatement to view additional information about the columns of this table, including data types and default values.Transaction counter
COUNTvalues may differ from the number of transaction events reported in Performance SchemaEVENTS_TRANSACTIONS_SUMMARYtables.InnoDBcounts only those transactions that it executes, whereas Performance Schema collects events for all non-aborted transactions initiated by the server, including empty transactions.