Provided by: percona-toolkit_2.2.16-1_all bug

NAME

       pt-kill - Kill MySQL queries that match certain criteria.

SYNOPSIS

       Usage: pt-kill [OPTIONS] [DSN]

       pt-kill kills MySQL connections.  pt-kill connects to MySQL and gets queries from SHOW PROCESSLIST if no
       FILE is given.  Else, it reads queries from one or more FILE which contains the output of SHOW
       PROCESSLIST.  If FILE is -, pt-kill reads from STDIN.

       Kill queries running longer than 60s:

         pt-kill --busy-time 60 --kill

       Print, do not kill, queries running longer than 60s:

         pt-kill --busy-time 60 --print

       Check for sleeping processes and kill them all every 10s:

         pt-kill --match-command Sleep --kill --victims all --interval 10

       Print all login processes:

         pt-kill --match-state login --print --victims all

       See which queries in the processlist right now would match:

          mysql -e "SHOW PROCESSLIST" > proclist.txt
          pt-kill --test-matching proclist.txt --busy-time 60 --print

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-kill captures queries from SHOW PROCESSLIST, filters them, and then either kills or prints them.  This
       is  also  known as a "slow query sniper" in some circles.  The idea is to watch for queries that might be
       consuming too many resources, and kill them.

       For brevity, we talk about killing queries, but they may just be printed (or some  other  future  action)
       depending on what options are given.

       Normally pt-kill connects to MySQL to get queries from SHOW PROCESSLIST.  Alternatively, it can read SHOW
       PROCESSLIST  output  from  files.   In  this  case, pt-kill does not connect to MySQL and "--kill" has no
       effect.  You should use "--print"  instead  when  reading  files.   The  ability  to  read  a  file  with
       "--test-matching" allows you to capture SHOW PROCESSLIST and test it later with pt-kill to make sure that
       your  matches  kill  the proper queries.  There are a lot of special rules to follow, such as "don't kill
       replication threads," so be careful not to kill something important!

       Two important options to know are  "--busy-time"  and  "--victims".   First,  whereas  most  match/filter
       options  match  their corresponding value from SHOW PROCESSLIST (e.g. "--match-command" matches a query's
       Command value), the Time value is matched by "--busy-time".  See also "--interval".

       Second, "--victims" controls which matching queries from each class are killed.  By default, the matching
       query with the highest Time value is killed (the oldest query).  See the next section, "GROUP, MATCH  AND
       KILL", for more details.

       Usually  you  need  to  specify  at  least one "--match" option, else no queries will match.  Or, you can
       specify "--match-all" to match all queries that aren't ignored by an "--ignore" option.

GROUP, MATCH AND KILL

       Queries pass through several steps to determine which exactly will be killed (or printed--whatever action
       is specified).  Understanding these steps will help you match precisely the queries you want.

       The first step is grouping queries into classes.  The "--group-by" option controls grouping.  By default,
       this option has no value so all queries are grouped into one default class.  All types  of  matching  and
       filtering  (the  next  step) are applied per-class.  Therefore, you may need to group queries in order to
       match/filter some classes but not others.

       The second step is matching.  Matching implies filtering since if a query doesn't match some criteria, it
       is removed from its class.  Matching happens for each class.  First,  queries  are  filtered  from  their
       class  by  the various "Query Matches" options like "--match-user".  Then, entire classes are filtered by
       the various "Class Matches" options like "--query-count".

       The third step is victim selection, that is, which matching queries in  each  class  to  kill.   This  is
       controlled  by  the "--victims" option.  Although many queries in a class may match, you may only want to
       kill the oldest query, or all queries, etc.

       The forth and final step is to take some action on all matching queries from all classes.  The  "Actions"
       options specify which actions will be taken.  At this step, there are no more classes, just a single list
       of queries to kill, print, etc.

OUTPUT

       If  only "--kill" is given, then there is no output.  If only "--print" is given, then a timestamped KILL
       statement if printed for every query that would have been killed, like:

         # 2009-07-15T15:04:01 KILL 8 (Query 42 sec) SELECT * FROM huge_table

       The line shows a timestamp, the query's Id (8), its Time (42 sec) and its Info (usually the query SQL).

       If both "--kill" and "--print" are given, then matching queries are killed and a line for each  like  the
       one above is printed.

       Any  command  executed by "--execute-command" is responsible for its own output and logging.  After being
       executed, pt-kill has no control or interaction with the command.

OPTIONS

       Specify at least one of "--kill", "--kill-query", "--print", "--execute-command" or "--stop".

       "--any-busy-time" and "--each-busy-time" are mutually exclusive.

       "--kill" and "--kill-query" are mutually exclusive.

       "--daemonize" and "--test-matching" are mutually exclusive.

       This tool accepts additional command-line arguments.  Refer to the "SYNOPSIS" and usage  information  for
       details.

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

       --charset
           short form: -A; type: string

           Default  character  set.   If  the  value  is utf8, sets Perl's binmode on STDOUT to utf8, passes the
           mysql_enable_utf8 option to DBD::mysql, and runs SET NAMES UTF8 after connecting to MySQL.  Any other
           value sets binmode on STDOUT without the utf8 layer, and runs SET NAMES after connecting to MySQL.

       --config
           type: Array

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

       --create-log-table
           Create the "--log-dsn" table if it does not exist.

           This  option causes the table specified by "--log-dsn" to be created with the default structure shown
           in the documentation for that option.

       --daemonize
           Fork to the background and detach from the shell.  POSIX operating systems only.

       --database
           short form: -D; type: string

           The database to use for the connection.

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

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

       --filter
           type: string

           Discard events for which this Perl code doesn't return true.

           This option is a string of Perl code or a file  containing  Perl  code  that  gets  compiled  into  a
           subroutine  with  one  argument:  $event.  This is a hashref.  If the given value is a readable file,
           then pt-kill reads the entire file and uses its contents as the code.  The file should not contain  a
           shebang (#!/usr/bin/perl) line.

           If  the code returns true, the chain of callbacks continues; otherwise it ends.  The code is the last
           statement in the subroutine other than "return $event".  The subroutine template is:

             sub { $event = shift; filter && return $event; }

           Filters given on the command line are wrapped  inside  parentheses  like  like  "(  filter  )".   For
           complex,  multi-line  filters,  you  must put the code inside a file so it will not be wrapped inside
           parentheses.  Either way, the filter must produce syntactically valid code given the  template.   For
           example, an if-else branch given on the command line would not be valid:

             --filter 'if () { } else { }'  # WRONG

           Since it's given on the command line, the if-else branch would be wrapped inside parentheses which is
           not syntactically valid.  So to accomplish something more complex like this would require putting the
           code in a file, for example filter.txt:

             my $event_ok; if (...) { $event_ok=1; } else { $event_ok=0; } $event_ok

           Then specify "--filter filter.txt" to read the code from filter.txt.

           If  the  filter code won't compile, pt-kill will die with an error.  If the filter code does compile,
           an error may still occur at runtime if the code tries to do something wrong (like  pattern  match  an
           undefined value).  pt-kill does not provide any safeguards so code carefully!

           It is permissible for the code to have side effects (to alter $event).

       --group-by
           type: string

           Apply  matches  to each class of queries grouped by this SHOW PROCESSLIST column.  In addition to the
           basic columns of SHOW PROCESSLIST (user, host, command, state,  etc.),  queries  can  be  matched  by
           "fingerprint" which abstracts the SQL query in the "Info" column.

           By  default,  queries  are not grouped, so matches and actions apply to all queries.  Grouping allows
           matches and actions to apply to classes of similar queries, if any queries in the class match.

           For example, detecting cache stampedes (see "all-but-oldest" under "--victims" for an explanation  of
           that  term)  requires  that  queries  are  grouped  by  the "arg" attribute.  This creates classes of
           identical queries (stripped of comments).  So queries "SELECT c FROM t WHERE id=1" and "SELECT c FROM
           t WHERE id=1" are grouped into the same class, but query c<"SELECT c  FROM  t  WHERE  id=3">  is  not
           identical  to  the  first  two  queries  so  it  is grouped into another class. Then when "--victims"
           "all-but-oldest" is specified, all but the oldest query in each class is killed  for  each  class  of
           queries that matches the match criteria.

       --help
           Show help and exit.

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

           Connect to host.

       --interval
           type: time

           How  often to check for queries to kill.  If "--busy-time" is not given, then the default interval is
           30 seconds.  Else the  default  is  half  as  often  as  "--busy-time".   If  both  "--interval"  and
           "--busy-time" are given, then the explicit "--interval" value is used.

           See also "--run-time".

       --log
           type: string

           Print all output to this file when daemonized.

       --log-dsn
           type: DSN

           Store each query killed in this DSN.

           The  argument specifies a table to store all killed queries.  The DSN passed in must have the databse
           (D) and table (t) options. The table must have at least the following  columns.   You  can  add  more
           columns for your own special purposes, but they won't be used by pt-kill.  The following CREATE TABLE
           definition is also used for "--create-log-table".  MAGIC_create_log_table:

              CREATE TABLE kill_log (
                 kill_id     int(10) unsigned NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
                 server_id   bigint(4) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
                 timestamp   DATETIME,
                 reason      TEXT,
                 kill_error  TEXT,
                 Id          bigint(4) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
                 User        varchar(16) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
                 Host        varchar(64) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
                 db          varchar(64) DEFAULT NULL,
                 Command     varchar(16) NOT NULL DEFAULT '',
                 Time        int(7) NOT NULL DEFAULT '0',
                 State       varchar(64) DEFAULT NULL,
                 Info        longtext,
                 Time_ms     bigint(21) DEFAULT '0', # NOTE, TODO: currently not used
                 PRIMARY KEY (kill_id)
              ) DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8

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

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

       --pid
           type: string

           Create the given PID file.  The tool won't start if the PID  file  already  exists  and  the  PID  it
           contains  is different than the current PID.  However, if the PID file exists and the PID it contains
           is no longer running, the tool will overwrite the PID file with the current PID.   The  PID  file  is
           removed automatically when the tool exits.

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

           Port number to use for connection.

       --query-id
           Prints  an  ID  of the query that was just killed. This is equivalent to the "ID" output of pt-query-
           digest. This allows cross-referencing the output of both tools.

           Example:

              Query ID 0xE9800998ECF8427E

           Note that this is a digest (or hash) of the query's "fingerprint", so queries of the  same  form  but
           with different values will have the same ID.  See pt-query-digest for more information.

       --rds
           Denotes  the  instance in question is on Amazon RDS. By default pt-kill runs the MySQL command "kill"
           for "--kill" and "kill query" "--kill-query".  On RDS these two commands are not  available  and  are
           replaced  by  function  calls.  This option modifies "--kill" to use "CALL mysql.rds_kill(thread-id)"
           instead and "--kill-query" to use "CALL mysql.rds_kill_query(thread-id)"

       --run-time
           type: time

           How long to run before exiting.  By default pt-kill runs forever, or until its process is  killed  or
           stopped  by  the  creation of a "--sentinel" file.  If this option is specified, pt-kill runs for the
           specified amount of time and sleeps "--interval" seconds between each check of the PROCESSLIST.

       --sentinel
           type: string; default: /tmp/pt-kill-sentinel

           Exit if this file exists.

           The presence of the file specified by "--sentinel" will cause all running  instances  of  pt-kill  to
           exit.  You might find this handy to stop cron jobs gracefully if necessary.  See also "--stop".

       --set-vars
           type: Array

           Set the MySQL variables in this comma-separated list of "variable=value" pairs.

           By default, the tool sets:

              wait_timeout=10000

           Variables specified on the command line override these defaults.  For example, specifying "--set-vars
           wait_timeout=500" overrides the defaultvalue of 10000.

           The tool prints a warning and continues if a variable cannot be set.

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

           Socket file to use for connection.

       --stop
           Stop running instances by creating the "--sentinel" file.

           Causes  pt-kill to create the sentinel file specified by "--sentinel" and exit.  This should have the
           effect of stopping all running instances which are watching the same sentinel file.

       --[no]strip-comments
           default: yes

           Remove SQL comments from queries in the Info column of the PROCESSLIST.

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

           User for login if not current user.

       --version
           Show version and exit.

       --[no]version-check
           default: yes

           Check for the latest version of Percona Toolkit, MySQL, and other programs.

           This is a standard "check for updates automatically" feature, with two additional  features.   First,
           the  tool  checks  the  version of other programs on the local system in addition to its own version.
           For example, it checks the version of every MySQL server it connects to, Perl, and  the  Perl  module
           DBD::mysql.   Second, it checks for and warns about versions with known problems.  For example, MySQL
           5.5.25 had a critical bug and was re-released as 5.5.25a.

           Any updates or known problems are printed to STDOUT before the tool's normal  output.   This  feature
           should never interfere with the normal operation of the tool.

           For more information, visit <https://www.percona.com/version-check>.

       --victims
           type: string; default: oldest

           Which   of   the   matching  queries  in  each  class  will  be  killed.   After  classes  have  been
           matched/filtered, this option specifies which of the matching queries in each class  will  be  killed
           (or printed, etc.).  The following values are possible:

           oldest
               Only  kill  the single oldest query.  This is to prevent killing queries that aren't really long-
               running, they're just long-waiting.  This sorts matching queries by Time and kills the  one  with
               the highest Time value.

           all Kill all queries in the class.

           all-but-oldest
               Kill all but the oldest query.  This is the inverse of the "oldest" value.

               This  value  can  be  used  to  prevent  "cache stampedes", the condition where several identical
               queries are executed and create a backlog while the first query attempts to  finish.   Since  all
               queries  are  identical,  all but the first query are killed so that it can complete and populate
               the cache.

       --wait-after-kill
           type: time

           Wait after killing a query, before looking for more to kill.  The purpose of this is to give  blocked
           queries  a  chance  to  execute, so we don't kill a query that's blocking a bunch of others, and then
           kill the others immediately afterwards.

       --wait-before-kill
           type: time

           Wait before killing a query.  The purpose of this is to give "--execute-command" a chance to see  the
           matching query and gather other MySQL or system information before it's killed.

   QUERY MATCHES
       These  options  filter  queries  from  their  classes.  If a query does not match, it is removed from its
       class.  The "--ignore" options take precedence.  The matches for command, db, host,  etc.  correspond  to
       the columns returned by SHOW PROCESSLIST: Command, db, Host, etc.  All pattern matches are case-sensitive
       by default, but they can be made case-insensitive by specifying a regex pattern like "(?i-xsm:select)".

       See also "GROUP, MATCH AND KILL".

       --busy-time
           type: time; group: Query Matches

           Match queries that have been running for longer than this time.  The queries must be in Command=Query
           status.  This matches a query's Time value as reported by SHOW PROCESSLIST.

       --idle-time
           type: time; group: Query Matches

           Match  queries  that  have  been  idle/sleeping  for  longer  than this time.  The queries must be in
           Command=Sleep status.  This matches a query's Time value as reported by SHOW PROCESSLIST.

       --ignore-command
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Ignore queries whose Command matches this Perl regex.

           See "--match-command".

       --ignore-db
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Ignore queries whose db (database) matches this Perl regex.

           See "--match-db".

       --ignore-host
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Ignore queries whose Host matches this Perl regex.

           See "--match-host".

       --ignore-info
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Ignore queries whose Info (query) matches this Perl regex.

           See "--match-info".

       --[no]ignore-self
           default: yes; group: Query Matches

           Don't kill pt-kill's own connection.

       --ignore-state
           type: string; group: Query Matches; default: Locked

           Ignore queries whose State matches this Perl regex.  The default is to keep threads from being killed
           if they are locked waiting for another thread.

           See "--match-state".

       --ignore-user
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Ignore queries whose user matches this Perl regex.

           See "--match-user".

       --match-all
           group: Query Matches

           Match all queries that are not ignored.  If no ignore options are specified, then every query matches
           (except replication threads, unless "--replication-threads" is also specified).  This  option  allows
           you  to specify negative matches, i.e. "match every query except..." where the exceptions are defined
           by specifying various "--ignore" options.

           This option is not the same as "--victims" "all".  This option matches all queries  within  a  class,
           whereas  "--victims" "all" specifies that all matching queries in a class (however they matched) will
           be killed.  Normally, however, the two are  used  together  because  if,  for  example,  you  specify
           "--victims" "oldest", then although all queries may match, only the oldest will be killed.

       --match-command
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Match only queries whose Command matches this Perl regex.

           Common Command values are:

             Query
             Sleep
             Binlog Dump
             Connect
             Delayed insert
             Execute
             Fetch
             Init DB
             Kill
             Prepare
             Processlist
             Quit
             Reset stmt
             Table Dump

           See  <http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/thread-commands.html> for a full list and description of
           Command values.

       --match-db
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Match only queries whose db (database) matches this Perl regex.

       --match-host
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Match only queries whose Host matches this Perl regex.

           The Host value often time includes the port like "host:port".

       --match-info
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Match only queries whose Info (query) matches this Perl regex.

           The Info column of the processlist shows the query that is being executed or  NULL  if  no  query  is
           being executed.

       --match-state
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Match only queries whose State matches this Perl regex.

           Common State values are:

             Locked
             login
             copy to tmp table
             Copying to tmp table
             Copying to tmp table on disk
             Creating tmp table
             executing
             Reading from net
             Sending data
             Sorting for order
             Sorting result
             Table lock
             Updating

           See   <http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/general-thread-states.html>   for   a   full  list  and
           description of State values.

       --match-user
           type: string; group: Query Matches

           Match only queries whose User matches this Perl regex.

       --replication-threads
           group: Query Matches

           Allow matching and killing replication threads.

           By default, matches do not apply to replication threads;  i.e.  replication  threads  are  completely
           ignored.   Specifying  this option allows matches to match (and potentially kill) replication threads
           on masters and slaves.

       --test-matching
           type: array; group: Query Matches

           Files with processlist snapshots to test matching options against.  Since the matching options can be
           complex, you can save snapshots of processlist in files, then test matching options  against  queries
           in those files.

           This option disables "--run-time", "--interval", and "--[no]ignore-self".

   CLASS MATCHES
       These  matches apply to entire query classes.  Classes are created by specifying the "--group-by" option,
       else all queries are members of a single, default class.

       See also "GROUP, MATCH AND KILL".

       --any-busy-time
           type: time; group: Class Matches

           Match query class if any query has been running for longer than this time.  "Longer than" means  that
           if you specify 10, for example, the class will only match if there's at least one query that has been
           running for greater than 10 seconds.

           See "--each-busy-time" for more details.

       --each-busy-time
           type: time; group: Class Matches

           Match query class if each query has been running for longer than this time.  "Longer than" means that
           if  you  specify  10, for example, the class will only match if each and every query has been running
           for greater than 10 seconds.

           See also "--any-busy-time" (to match a class if ANY query has been running longer than the  specified
           time) and "--busy-time".

       --query-count
           type: int; group: Class Matches

           Match  query  class  if  it has at least this many queries.  When queries are grouped into classes by
           specifying "--group-by", this option causes matches to apply only to classes with at least this  many
           queries.  If "--group-by" is not specified then this option causes matches to apply only if there are
           at least this many queries in the entire SHOW PROCESSLIST.

       --verbose
           short form: -v

           Print information to STDOUT about what is being done.

   ACTIONS
       These  actions are taken for every matching query from all classes.  The actions are taken in this order:
       "--print", "--execute-command", "--kill"/"--kill-query".  This order allows  "--execute-command"  to  see
       the  output  of  "--print" and the query before "--kill"/"--kill-query".  This may be helpful because pt-
       kill does not pass any information to "--execute-command".

       See also "GROUP, MATCH AND KILL".

       --execute-command
           type: string; group: Actions

           Execute this command when a query matches.

           After the command is executed, pt-kill has no control over it, so the command is responsible for  its
           own info gathering, logging, interval, etc.  The command is executed each time a query matches, so be
           careful  that  the command behaves well when multiple instances are ran.  No information from pt-kill
           is passed to the command.

           See also "--wait-before-kill".

       --kill
           group: Actions

           Kill the connection for matching queries.

           This option makes pt-kill kill  the  connections  (a.k.a.  processes,  threads)  that  have  matching
           queries.  Use "--kill-query" if you only want to kill individual queries and not their connections.

           Unless  "--print"  is also given, no other information is printed that shows that pt-kill matched and
           killed a query.

           See also "--wait-before-kill" and "--wait-after-kill".

       --kill-query
           group: Actions

           Kill matching queries.

           This option makes pt-kill kill matching queries.  This requires MySQL 5.0 or newer.  Unlike  "--kill"
           which  kills  the  connection  for  matching  queries,  this  option  only  kills  the query, not its
           connection.

       --print
           group: Actions

           Print a KILL statement for matching queries; does not actually kill queries.

           If you just want to see which queries match and  would  be  killed  without  actually  killing  them,
           specify "--print".  To both kill and print matching queries, specify both "--kill" and "--print".

DSN OPTIONS

       These  DSN  options are used to create a DSN.  Each option is given like "option=value".  The options are
       case-sensitive, so P and p are not the same option.  There cannot be whitespace before or after  the  "="
       and  if  the  value  contains  whitespace  it  must be quoted.  DSN options are comma-separated.  See the
       percona-toolkit manpage for full details.

       •   A

           dsn: charset; copy: yes

           Default character set.

       •   D

           dsn: database; copy: yes

           Default database.

       •   F

           dsn: mysql_read_default_file; copy: yes

           Only read default options from the given file

       •   h

           dsn: host; copy: yes

           Connect to host.

       •   p

           dsn: password; copy: yes

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

       •   P

           dsn: port; copy: yes

           Port number to use for connection.

       •   S

           dsn: mysql_socket; copy: yes

           Socket file to use for connection.

       •   u

           dsn: user; copy: yes

           User for login if not current user.

       •   t

           Table to log actions in, if passed through --log-dsn.

ENVIRONMENT

       The  environment  variable "PTDEBUG" enables verbose debugging output to STDERR.  To enable debugging and
       capture all output to a file, run the tool like:

          PTDEBUG=1 pt-kill ... > FILE 2>&1

       Be careful: debugging output is voluminous and can generate several megabytes of output.

SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

       You need Perl, DBI, DBD::mysql, and some core packages that ought to be installed in any  reasonably  new
       version of Perl.

BUGS

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

       Please report bugs at <https://bugs.launchpad.net/percona-toolkit>.  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 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 2011-2015 Percona LLC and/or its affiliates, 2009-2011 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-kill 2.2.16

perl v5.20.2                                       2015-11-06                                        PT-KILL(1p)