Of the logs the MySQL server maintains, one is the error log
to which it writes diagnostic messages (see
Section 7.4.2, “The Error Log”). Typically, the server writes
diagnostics to a file on the server host or to a system log
service. Depending on error log configuration, the server can
also write the most recent error events to the Performance
Schema error_log table. Granting
the SELECT privilege for the
error_log table thus gives
clients and applications access to error log contents using
SQL queries, enabling DBAs to provide access to the log
without the need to permit direct file system access on the
server host.
The error_log table supports
focused queries based on its more structured columns. It also
includes the full text of error messages to support more
free-form analysis.
The table implementation uses a fixed-size, in-memory ring buffer, with old events automatically discarded as necessary to make room for new ones.
Example error_log contents:
mysql> SELECT * FROM performance_schema.error_log\G
*************************** 1. row ***************************
LOGGED: 2020-08-06 09:25:00.338624
THREAD_ID: 0
PRIO: System
ERROR_CODE: MY-010116
SUBSYSTEM: Server
DATA: mysqld (mysqld 9.5.0) starting as process 96344
*************************** 2. row ***************************
LOGGED: 2020-08-06 09:25:00.363521
THREAD_ID: 1
PRIO: System
ERROR_CODE: MY-013576
SUBSYSTEM: InnoDB
DATA: InnoDB initialization has started.
...
*************************** 65. row ***************************
LOGGED: 2020-08-06 09:25:02.936146
THREAD_ID: 0
PRIO: Warning
ERROR_CODE: MY-010068
SUBSYSTEM: Server
DATA: CA certificate /var/mysql/sslinfo/cacert.pem is self signed.
...
*************************** 89. row ***************************
LOGGED: 2020-08-06 09:25:03.112801
THREAD_ID: 0
PRIO: System
ERROR_CODE: MY-013292
SUBSYSTEM: Server
DATA: Admin interface ready for connections, address: '127.0.0.1' port: 33062
The error_log table has the
following columns. As indicated in the descriptions, all but
the DATA column correspond to fields of the
underlying error event structure, which is described in
Section 7.4.2.3, “Error Event Fields”.
LOGGEDThe event timestamp, with microsecond precision.
LOGGEDcorresponds to thetimefield of error events, although with certain potential differences:timevalues in the error log are displayed according to thelog_timestampssystem variable setting; see Early-Startup Logging Output Format.The
LOGGEDcolumn stores values using theTIMESTAMPdata type, for which values are stored in UTC but displayed when retrieved in the current session time zone; see Section 13.2.2, “The DATE, DATETIME, and TIMESTAMP Types”.
To display
LOGGEDvalues in the same time zone as displayed in the error log file, first set the session time zone as follows:SET @@session.time_zone = @@global.log_timestamps;If the
log_timestampsvalue isUTCand your system does not have named time zone support installed (see Section 7.1.15, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”), set the time zone like this:SET @@session.time_zone = '+00:00';THREAD_IDThe MySQL thread ID.
THREAD_IDcorresponds to thethreadfield of error events.Within the Performance Schema, the
THREAD_IDcolumn in theerror_logtable is most similar to thePROCESSLIST_IDcolumn of thethreadstable:For foreground threads,
THREAD_IDandPROCESSLIST_IDrepresent a connection identifier. This is the same value displayed in theIDcolumn of theINFORMATION_SCHEMAPROCESSLISTtable, displayed in theIdcolumn ofSHOW PROCESSLISToutput, and returned by theCONNECTION_ID()function within the thread.For background threads,
THREAD_IDis 0 andPROCESSLIST_IDisNULL.
Many Performance Schema tables other than
error_loghas a column namedTHREAD_ID, but in those tables, theTHREAD_IDcolumn is a value assigned internally by the Performance Schema.PRIOThe event priority. Permitted values are
System,Error,Warning,Note. ThePRIOcolumn is based on thelabelfield of error events, which itself is based on the underlying numericpriofield value.ERROR_CODEThe numeric event error code.
ERROR_CODEcorresponds to theerror_codefield of error events.SUBSYSTEMThe subsystem in which the event occurred.
SUBSYSTEMcorresponds to thesubsystemfield of error events.DATAThe text representation of the error event. The format of this value depends on the format produced by the log sink component that generates the
error_logrow. For example, if the log sink islog_sink_internalorlog_sink_json,DATAvalues represent error events in traditional or JSON format, respectively. (See Section 7.4.2.9, “Error Log Output Format”.)Because the error log can be reconfigured to change the log sink component that supplies rows to the
error_logtable, and because different sinks produce different output formats, it is possible for rows written to theerror_logtable at different times to have differentDATAformats.
The error_log table has these
indexes:
Primary key on (
LOGGED)Index on (
THREAD_ID)Index on (
PRIO)Index on (
ERROR_CODE)Index on (
SUBSYSTEM)
TRUNCATE TABLE is not permitted
for the error_log table.
The Performance Schema
error_log table is populated by
error log sink components that write to the table in
addition to writing formatted error events to the error log.
Performance Schema support by log sinks has two parts:
A log sink can write new error events to the
error_logtable as they occur.A log sink can provide a parser for extraction of previously written error messages. This enables a server instance to read messages written to an error log file by the previous instance and store them in the
error_logtable. Messages written during shutdown by the previous instance may be useful for diagnosing why shutdown occurred.
Currently, the traditional-format
log_sink_internal and JSON-format
log_sink_json sinks support writing new
events to the error_log table
and provide a parser for reading previously written error
log files.
The log_error_services
system variable controls which log components to enable for
error logging. Its value is a pipeline of log filter and log
sink components to be executed in left-to-right order when
error events occur. The
log_error_services value
pertains to populating the
error_log table as follows:
At startup, the server examines the
log_error_servicesvalue and chooses from it the leftmost log sink that satisfies these conditions:If no log sink satisfies those conditions, the
error_logtable remains empty. Otherwise, if the sink provides a parser and log configuration enables a previously written error log file to be found, the server uses the sink parser to read the last part of the file and writes the old events it contains to the table. The sink then writes new error events to the table as they occur.At runtime, if the value of
log_error_serviceschanges, the server again examines it, this time looking for the leftmost enabled log sink that supports theerror_logtable, regardless of whether it provides a parser.If no such log sink exists, no additional error events are written to the
error_logtable. Otherwise, the newly configured sink writes new error events to the table as they occur.
Any configuration that affects output written to the error
log affects error_log table
contents. This includes settings such as those for
verbosity, message suppression, and message filtering. It
also applies to information read at startup from a previous
log file. For example, messages not written during a
previous server instance configured with low verbosity do
not become available if the file is read by a current
instance configured with higher verbosity.
The error_log table is a view
on a fixed-size, in-memory ring buffer, with old events
automatically discarded as necessary to make room for new
ones. As shown in the following table, several status
variables provide information about ongoing
error_log operation.
| Status Variable | Meaning |
|---|---|
Error_log_buffered_bytes |
Bytes used in table |
Error_log_buffered_events |
Events present in table |
Error_log_expired_events |
Events discarded from table |
Error_log_latest_write |
Time of last write to table |