Provided by: percona-toolkit_3.1+dfsg-1.1_all bug

NAME

       pt-mysql-summary - Summarize MySQL information nicely.

SYNOPSIS

       Usage: pt-mysql-summary [OPTIONS]

       pt-mysql-summary conveniently summarizes the status and configuration of a MySQL database server so that
       you can learn about it at a glance.  It is not a tuning tool or diagnosis tool.  It produces a report
       that is easy to diff and can be pasted into emails without losing the formatting.  It should work well on
       any modern UNIX systems.

RISKS

       Percona Toolkit is mature, proven in the real world, and well tested, but all database tools can pose a
       risk to the system and the database server.  Before using this tool, please:

       •   Read the tool's documentation

       •   Review the tool's known "BUGS"

       •   Test the tool on a non-production server

       •   Backup your production server and verify the backups

DESCRIPTION

       pt-mysql-summary works by connecting to a MySQL database server and querying it for status and
       configuration information.  It saves these bits of data into files in a temporary directory, and then
       formats them neatly with awk and other scripting languages.

       To use, simply execute it.  Optionally add a double dash and then the same command-line options you would
       use to connect to MySQL, such as the following:

         pt-mysql-summary --user=root

       The tool interacts minimally with the server upon which it runs.  It assumes that you'll run it on the
       same server you're inspecting, and therefore it assumes that it will be able to find the my.cnf
       configuration file, for example.  However, it should degrade gracefully if this is not the case.  Note,
       however, that its output does not indicate which information comes from the MySQL database and which
       comes from the host operating system, so it is possible for confusing output to be generated if you run
       the tool on one server and connect to a MySQL database server running on another server.

OUTPUT

       Many of the outputs from this tool are deliberately rounded to show their magnitude but not the exact
       detail.  This is called fuzzy-rounding. The idea is that it does not matter whether a server is running
       918 queries per second or 921 queries per second; such a small variation is insignificant, and only makes
       the output hard to compare to other servers.  Fuzzy-rounding rounds in larger increments as the input
       grows.  It begins by rounding to the nearest 5, then the nearest 10, nearest 25, and then repeats by a
       factor of 10 larger (50, 100, 250), and so on, as the input grows.

       The following is a sample of the report that the tool produces:

         # Percona Toolkit MySQL Summary Report #######################
                       System time | 2012-03-30 18:46:05 UTC
                                     (local TZ: EDT -0400)
         # Instances ##################################################
           Port  Data Directory             Nice OOM Socket
           ===== ========================== ==== === ======
           12345 /tmp/12345/data            0    0   /tmp/12345.sock
           12346 /tmp/12346/data            0    0   /tmp/12346.sock
           12347 /tmp/12347/data            0    0   /tmp/12347.sock

       The first two sections show which server the report was generated on and which MySQL instances are
       running on the server. This is detected from the output of "ps" and does not always detect all instances
       and parameters, but often works well.  From this point forward, the report will be focused on a single
       MySQL instance, although several instances may appear in the above paragraph.

         # Report On Port 12345 #######################################
                              User | msandbox@%
                              Time | 2012-03-30 14:46:05 (EDT)
                          Hostname | localhost.localdomain
                           Version | 5.5.20-log MySQL Community Server (GPL)
                          Built On | linux2.6 i686
                           Started | 2012-03-28 23:33 (up 1+15:12:09)
                         Databases | 4
                           Datadir | /tmp/12345/data/
                         Processes | 2 connected, 2 running
                       Replication | Is not a slave, has 1 slaves connected
                           Pidfile | /tmp/12345/data/12345.pid (exists)

       This section is a quick summary of the MySQL instance: version, uptime, and other very basic parameters.
       The Time output is generated from the MySQL server, unlike the system date and time printed earlier, so
       you can see whether the database and operating system times match.

         # Processlist ################################################

           Command                        COUNT(*) Working SUM(Time) MAX(Time)
           ------------------------------ -------- ------- --------- ---------
           Binlog Dump                           1       1    150000    150000
           Query                                 1       1         0         0

           User                           COUNT(*) Working SUM(Time) MAX(Time)
           ------------------------------ -------- ------- --------- ---------
           msandbox                              2       2    150000    150000

           Host                           COUNT(*) Working SUM(Time) MAX(Time)
           ------------------------------ -------- ------- --------- ---------
           localhost                             2       2    150000    150000

           db                             COUNT(*) Working SUM(Time) MAX(Time)
           ------------------------------ -------- ------- --------- ---------
           NULL                                  2       2    150000    150000

           State                          COUNT(*) Working SUM(Time) MAX(Time)
           ------------------------------ -------- ------- --------- ---------
           Master has sent all binlog to         1       1    150000    150000
           NULL                                  1       1         0         0

       This section is a summary of the output from SHOW PROCESSLIST. Each sub-section is aggregated by a
       different item, which is shown as the first column heading.  When summarized by Command, every row in
       SHOW PROCESSLIST is included, but otherwise, rows whose Command is Sleep are excluded from the SUM and
       MAX columns, so they do not skew the numbers too much. In the example shown, the server is idle except
       for this tool itself, and one connected replica, which is executing Binlog Dump.

       The columns are the number of rows included, the number that are not in Sleep status, the sum of the Time
       column, and the maximum Time column. The numbers are fuzzy-rounded.

         # Status Counters (Wait 10 Seconds) ##########################
         Variable                            Per day  Per second     10 secs
         Binlog_cache_disk_use                     4
         Binlog_cache_use                         80
         Bytes_received                     15000000         175         200
         Bytes_sent                         15000000         175        2000
         Com_admin_commands                        1
         ...................(many lines omitted)............................
         Threads_created                          40                       1
         Uptime                                90000           1           1

       This section shows selected counters from two snapshots of SHOW GLOBAL STATUS, gathered approximately 10
       seconds apart and fuzzy-rounded. It includes only items that are incrementing counters; it does not
       include absolute numbers such as the Threads_running status variable, which represents a current value,
       rather than an accumulated number over time.

       The first column is the variable name, and the second column is the counter from the first snapshot
       divided by 86400 (the number of seconds in a day), so you can see the magnitude of the counter's change
       per day. 86400 fuzzy-rounds to 90000, so the Uptime counter should always be about 90000.

       The third column is the value from the first snapshot, divided by Uptime and then fuzzy-rounded, so it
       represents approximately how quickly the counter is growing per-second over the uptime of the server.

       The third column is the incremental difference from the first and second snapshot, divided by the
       difference in uptime and then fuzzy-rounded. Therefore, it shows how quickly the counter is growing per
       second at the time the report was generated.

         # Table cache ################################################
                              Size | 400
                             Usage | 15%

       This section shows the size of the table cache, followed by the percentage of the table cache in use. The
       usage is fuzzy-rounded.

         # Key Percona Server features ################################
               Table & Index Stats | Not Supported
              Multiple I/O Threads | Enabled
              Corruption Resilient | Not Supported
               Durable Replication | Not Supported
              Import InnoDB Tables | Not Supported
              Fast Server Restarts | Not Supported
                  Enhanced Logging | Not Supported
              Replica Perf Logging | Not Supported
               Response Time Hist. | Not Supported
                   Smooth Flushing | Not Supported
               HandlerSocket NoSQL | Not Supported
                    Fast Hash UDFs | Unknown

       This section shows features that are available in Percona Server and whether they are enabled or not. In
       the example shown, the server is standard MySQL, not Percona Server, so the features are generally not
       supported.

         # Plugins ####################################################
                InnoDB compression | ACTIVE

       This feature shows specific plugins and whether they are enabled.

         # Query cache ################################################
                  query_cache_type | ON
                              Size | 0.0
                             Usage | 0%
                  HitToInsertRatio | 0%

       This section shows whether the query cache is enabled and its size, followed by the percentage of the
       cache in use and the hit-to-insert ratio. The latter two are fuzzy-rounded.

         # Schema #####################################################

           Database           Tables Views SPs Trigs Funcs   FKs Partn
           mysql                  24
           performance_schema     17
           sakila                 16     7   3     6     3    22

           Database           MyISAM CSV PERFORMANCE_SCHEMA InnoDB
           mysql                  22   2
           performance_schema                            17
           sakila                  8                            15

           Database           BTREE FULLTEXT
           mysql                 31
           performance_schema
           sakila                63        1

                                c   t   s   e   l   d   i   t   m   v   s
                                h   i   e   n   o   a   n   i   e   a   m
                                a   m   t   u   n   t   t   n   d   r   a
                                r   e       m   g   e       y   i   c   l
                                    s           b   t       i   u   h   l
                                    t           l   i       n   m   a   i
                                    a           o   m       t   t   r   n
                                    m           b   e           e       t
                                    p                           x
                                                                t
           Database           === === === === === === === === === === ===
           mysql               61  10   6  78   5   4  26   3   4   5   3
           performance_schema               5          16          33
           sakila               1  15   1   3       4   3  19      42  26

       If you specify "--databases" or "--all-databases", the tool will print the above section. This summarizes
       the number and type of objects in the databases. It is generated by running "mysqldump --no-data", not by
       querying the INFORMATION_SCHEMA, which can freeze a busy server.

       The first sub-report in the section is the count of objects by type in each database: tables, views, and
       so on. The second one shows how many tables use various storage engines in each database. The third sub-
       report shows the number of each type of indexes in each database.

       The last section shows the number of columns of various data types in each database. For compact display,
       the column headers are formatted vertically, so you need to read downwards from the top. In this example,
       the first column is "char" and the second column is "timestamp". This example is truncated so it does not
       wrap on a terminal.

       All of the numbers in this portion of the output are exact, not fuzzy-rounded.

         # Noteworthy Technologies ####################################
                Full Text Indexing | Yes
                  Geospatial Types | No
                      Foreign Keys | Yes
                      Partitioning | No
                InnoDB Compression | Yes
                               SSL | No
              Explicit LOCK TABLES | No
                    Delayed Insert | No
                   XA Transactions | No
                       NDB Cluster | No
               Prepared Statements | No
          Prepared statement count | 0

       This section shows some specific technologies used on this server. Some of them are detected from the
       schema dump performed for the previous sections; others can be detected by looking at SHOW GLOBAL STATUS.

         # InnoDB #####################################################
                           Version | 1.1.8
                  Buffer Pool Size | 16.0M
                  Buffer Pool Fill | 100%
                 Buffer Pool Dirty | 0%
                    File Per Table | OFF
                         Page Size | 16k
                     Log File Size | 2 * 5.0M = 10.0M
                   Log Buffer Size | 8M
                      Flush Method |
               Flush Log At Commit | 1
                        XA Support | ON
                         Checksums | ON
                       Doublewrite | ON
                   R/W I/O Threads | 4 4
                      I/O Capacity | 200
                Thread Concurrency | 0
               Concurrency Tickets | 500
                Commit Concurrency | 0
               Txn Isolation Level | REPEATABLE-READ
                 Adaptive Flushing | ON
               Adaptive Checkpoint |
                    Checkpoint Age | 0
                      InnoDB Queue | 0 queries inside InnoDB, 0 queries in queue
                Oldest Transaction | 0 Seconds
                  History List Len | 209
                        Read Views | 1
                  Undo Log Entries | 1 transactions, 1 total undo, 1 max undo
                 Pending I/O Reads | 0 buf pool reads, 0 normal AIO,
                                     0 ibuf AIO, 0 preads
                Pending I/O Writes | 0 buf pool (0 LRU, 0 flush list, 0 page);
                                     0 AIO, 0 sync, 0 log IO (0 log, 0 chkp);
                                     0 pwrites
               Pending I/O Flushes | 0 buf pool, 0 log
                Transaction States | 1xnot started

       This section shows important configuration variables for the InnoDB storage engine. The buffer pool fill
       percent and dirty percent are fuzzy-rounded. The last few lines are derived from the output of SHOW
       INNODB STATUS. It is likely that this output will change in the future to become more useful.

         # MyISAM #####################################################
                         Key Cache | 16.0M
                          Pct Used | 10%
                         Unflushed | 0%

       This section shows the size of the MyISAM key cache, followed by the percentage of the cache in use and
       percentage unflushed (fuzzy-rounded).

         # Security ###################################################
                             Users | 2 users, 0 anon, 0 w/o pw, 0 old pw
                     Old Passwords | OFF

       This section is generated from queries to tables in the mysql system database.  It shows how many users
       exist, and various potential security risks such as old-style passwords and users without passwords.

         # Binary Logging #############################################
                           Binlogs | 1
                        Zero-Sized | 0
                        Total Size | 21.8M
                     binlog_format | STATEMENT
                  expire_logs_days | 0
                       sync_binlog | 0
                         server_id | 12345
                      binlog_do_db |
                  binlog_ignore_db |

       This section shows configuration and status of the binary logs. If there are zero-sized binary logs, then
       it is possible that the binlog index is out of sync with the binary logs that actually exist on disk.

         # Noteworthy Variables #######################################
              Auto-Inc Incr/Offset | 1/1
            default_storage_engine | InnoDB
                        flush_time | 0
                      init_connect |
                         init_file |
                          sql_mode |
                  join_buffer_size | 128k
                  sort_buffer_size | 2M
                  read_buffer_size | 128k
              read_rnd_buffer_size | 256k
                bulk_insert_buffer | 0.00
               max_heap_table_size | 16M
                    tmp_table_size | 16M
                max_allowed_packet | 1M
                      thread_stack | 192k
                               log | OFF
                         log_error | /tmp/12345/data/mysqld.log
                      log_warnings | 1
                  log_slow_queries | ON
         log_queries_not_using_indexes | OFF
                 log_slave_updates | ON

       This section shows several noteworthy server configuration variables that might be important to know
       about when working with this server.

         # Configuration File #########################################
                       Config File | /tmp/12345/my.sandbox.cnf
         [client]
         user                                = msandbox
         password                            = msandbox
         port                                = 12345
         socket                              = /tmp/12345/mysql_sandbox12345.sock
         [mysqld]
         port                                = 12345
         socket                              = /tmp/12345/mysql_sandbox12345.sock
         pid-file                            = /tmp/12345/data/mysql_sandbox12345.pid
         basedir                             = /home/baron/5.5.20
         datadir                             = /tmp/12345/data
         key_buffer_size                     = 16M
         innodb_buffer_pool_size             = 16M
         innodb_data_home_dir                = /tmp/12345/data
         innodb_log_group_home_dir           = /tmp/12345/data
         innodb_data_file_path               = ibdata1:10M:autoextend
         innodb_log_file_size                = 5M
         log-bin                             = mysql-bin
         relay_log                           = mysql-relay-bin
         log_slave_updates
         server-id                           = 12345
         report-host                         = 127.0.0.1
         report-port                         = 12345
         log-error                           = mysqld.log
         innodb_lock_wait_timeout            = 3
         # The End ####################################################

       This section shows a pretty-printed version of the my.cnf file, with comments removed and with whitespace
       added to align things for easy reading. The tool tries to detect the my.cnf file by looking at the output
       of ps, and if it does not find the location of the file there, it tries common locations until it finds a
       file. Note that this file might not actually correspond with the server from which the report was
       generated. This can happen when the tool isn't run on the same server it's reporting on, or when
       detecting the location of the configuration file fails.

OPTIONS

       All options after -- are passed to "mysql".

       --all-databases
           mysqldump and summarize all databases.  See "--databases".

       --ask-pass
           Prompt for a password when connecting to MySQL.

       --config
           type: string

           Read this comma-separated list of config files.  If specified, this must be the first option on the
           command line.

       --databases
           type: string

           mysqldump and summarize this comma-separated list of databases.  Specify "--all-databases" instead if
           you want to dump and summary all databases.

       --defaults-file
           short form: -F; type: string

           Only read mysql options from the given file.  You must give an absolute pathname.

       --help
           Print help and exit.

       --host
           short form: -h; type: string

           Host to connect to.

       --list-encrypted-tables
           default: false

           Include a list of the encrypted tables in all databases. This can cause slowdowns since querying
           Information Schema tables can be slow.

       --password
           short form: -p; type: string

           Password to use when connecting.  If password contains commas they must be escaped with a backslash:
           "exam\,ple"

       --port
           short form: -P; type: int

           Port number to use for connection.

       --read-samples
           type: string

           Create a report from the files found in this directory.

       --save-samples
           type: string

           Save the data files used to generate the summary in this directory.

       --sleep
           type: int; default: 10

           Seconds to sleep when gathering status counters.

       --socket
           short form: -S; type: string

           Socket file to use for connection.

       --user
           short form: -u; type: string

           User for login if not current user.

       --version
           Print tool's version and exit.

ENVIRONMENT

       This tool does not use any environment variables.

SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

       This tool requires Bash v3 or newer, Perl 5.8 or newer, and binutils.  These are generally already
       provided by most distributions.  On BSD systems, it may require a mounted procfs.

BUGS

       For a list of known bugs, see <http://www.percona.com/bugs/pt-mysql-summary>.

       Please report bugs at <https://jira.percona.com/projects/PT>.  Include the following information in your
       bug report:

       •   Complete command-line used to run the tool

       •   Tool "--version"

       •   MySQL version of all servers involved

       •   Output from the tool including STDERR

       •   Input files (log/dump/config files, etc.)

       If possible, include debugging output by running the tool with "PTDEBUG"; see "ENVIRONMENT".

DOWNLOADING

       Visit <http://www.percona.com/software/percona-toolkit/> to download the latest release of Percona
       Toolkit.  Or, get the latest release from the command line:

          wget percona.com/get/percona-toolkit.tar.gz

          wget percona.com/get/percona-toolkit.rpm

          wget percona.com/get/percona-toolkit.deb

       You can also get individual tools from the latest release:

          wget percona.com/get/TOOL

       Replace "TOOL" with the name of any tool.

AUTHORS

       Baron Schwartz, Brian Fraser, and Daniel Nichter

ABOUT PERCONA TOOLKIT

       This tool is part of Percona Toolkit, a collection of advanced command-line tools for MySQL developed by
       Percona.  Percona Toolkit was forked from two projects in June, 2011: Maatkit and Aspersa.  Those
       projects were created by Baron Schwartz and primarily developed by him and Daniel Nichter.  Visit
       <http://www.percona.com/software/> to learn about other free, open-source software from Percona.

COPYRIGHT, LICENSE, AND WARRANTY

       This program is copyright 2011-2018 Percona LLC and/or its affiliates, 2010-2011 Baron Schwartz.

       THIS PROGRAM IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT
       LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
       General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, version 2; OR the Perl Artistic
       License.  On UNIX and similar systems, you can issue `man perlgpl' or `man perlartistic' to read these
       licenses.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write
       to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA.

VERSION

       pt-mysql-summary 3.1.0