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- 26.12.1 Performance Schema Table Index
- 26.12.2 Performance Schema Setup Tables
- 26.12.3 Performance Schema Instance Tables
- 26.12.4 Performance Schema Wait Event Tables
- 26.12.5 Performance Schema Stage Event Tables
- 26.12.6 Performance Schema Statement Event Tables
- 26.12.7 Performance Schema Transaction Tables
- 26.12.8 Performance Schema Connection Tables
- 26.12.9 Performance Schema Connection Attribute Tables
- 26.12.10 Performance Schema User-Defined Variable Tables
- 26.12.11 Performance Schema Replication Tables
- 26.12.12 Performance Schema Lock Tables
- 26.12.13 Performance Schema System Variable Tables
- 26.12.14 Performance Schema Status Variable Tables
- 26.12.15 Performance Schema Thread Pool Tables
- 26.12.16 Performance Schema Summary Tables
- 26.12.17 Performance Schema Miscellaneous Tables
Tables in the performance_schema
database can
be grouped as follows:
Setup tables. These tables are used to configure and display monitoring characteristics.
Current events tables. The
events_waits_current
table contains the most recent event for each thread. Other similar tables contain current events at different levels of the event hierarchy:events_stages_current
for stage events,events_statements_current
for statement events, andevents_transactions_current
for transaction events.History tables. These tables have the same structure as the current events tables, but contain more rows. For example, for wait events,
events_waits_history
table contains the most recent 10 events per thread.events_waits_history_long
contains the most recent 10,000 events. Other similar tables exist for stage, statement, and transaction histories.To change the sizes of the history tables, set the appropriate system variables at server startup. For example, to set the sizes of the wait event history tables, set
performance_schema_events_waits_history_size
andperformance_schema_events_waits_history_long_size
.Summary tables. These tables contain information aggregated over groups of events, including those that have been discarded from the history tables.
Instance tables. These tables document what types of objects are instrumented. An instrumented object, when used by the server, produces an event. These tables provide event names and explanatory notes or status information.
Miscellaneous tables. These do not fall into any of the other table groups.