Pre-filtering limits which event information is collected and is
independent of any particular user. By contrast, post-filtering is
performed by individual users through the use of queries with
appropriate WHERE
clauses that restrict what
event information to select from the events available after
pre-filtering has been applied.
In Section 26.4.3, “Event Pre-Filtering”, an example
showed how to pre-filter for file instruments. If the event tables
contain both file and nonfile information, post-filtering is
another way to see information only for file events. Add a
WHERE
clause to queries to restrict event
selection appropriately:
mysql> SELECT THREAD_ID, NUMBER_OF_BYTES
FROM performance_schema.events_waits_history
WHERE EVENT_NAME LIKE 'wait/io/file/%'
AND NUMBER_OF_BYTES IS NOT NULL;
+-----------+-----------------+
| THREAD_ID | NUMBER_OF_BYTES |
+-----------+-----------------+
| 11 | 66 |
| 11 | 47 |
| 11 | 139 |
| 5 | 24 |
| 5 | 834 |
+-----------+-----------------+
Most Performance Schema tables have indexes, which gives the
optimizer access to execution plans other than full table scans.
These indexes also improve performance for related objects, such
as sys
schema views that use those
tables. For more information, see
Section 8.2.4, “Optimizing Performance Schema Queries”.