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NAME

       innotop - MySQL and InnoDB transaction/status monitor.

SYNOPSIS

       To monitor servers normally:

        innotop

       To monitor InnoDB status information from a file:

        innotop /var/log/mysql/mysqld.err

       To run innotop non-interactively in a pipe-and-filter configuration:

        innotop --count 5 -d 1 -n

       To monitor a database on another system using a particular username and password:

        innotop -u <username> -p <password> -h <hostname>

DESCRIPTION

       innotop monitors MySQL servers.  Each of its modes shows you a different aspect of what's happening in
       the server.  For example, there's a mode for monitoring replication, one for queries, and one for
       transactions.  innotop refreshes its data periodically, so you see an updating view.

       innotop has lots of features for power users, but you can start and run it with virtually no
       configuration.  If you're just getting started, see "QUICK-START".  Press '?' at any time while running
       innotop for context-sensitive help.

QUICK-START

       To start innotop, open a terminal or command prompt.  If you have installed innotop on your system, you
       should be able to just type "innotop" and press Enter; otherwise, you will need to change to innotop's
       directory and type "perl innotop".

       With no options specified, innotop will attempt to connect to a MySQL server on localhost using
       mariadb_read_default_group=client for other connection parameters.  If you need to specify a different
       username and password, use the -u and -p options, respectively.  To monitor a MySQL database on another
       host, use the -h option.

       After you've connected, innotop should show you something like the following:

        [RO] Query List (? for help) localhost, 01:11:19, 449.44 QPS, 14/7/163 con/run

        CXN        When   Load  QPS    Slow  QCacheHit  KCacheHit  BpsIn    BpsOut
        localhost  Total  0.00  1.07k   697      0.00%     98.17%  476.83k  242.83k

        CXN        Cmd    ID         User  Host      DB   Time   Query
        localhost  Query  766446598  test  10.0.0.1  foo  00:02  INSERT INTO table (

       (This sample is truncated at the right so it will fit on a terminal when running 'man innotop')

       If your server is busy, you'll see more output.  Notice the first line on the screen, which tells you
       that readonly is set to true ([RO]), what mode you're in and what server you're connected to.  You can
       change to other modes with keystrokes; press 'T' to switch to a list of InnoDB transactions, for example.

       Press the '?' key to see what keys are active in the current mode.  You can press any of these keys and
       innotop will either take the requested action or prompt you for more input.  If your system has
       Term::ReadLine support, you can use TAB and other keys to auto-complete and edit input.

       To quit innotop, press the 'q' key.

OPTIONS

       innotop is mostly configured via its configuration file, but some of the configuration options can come
       from the command line.  You can also specify a file to monitor for InnoDB status output; see "MONITORING
       A FILE" for more details.

       You can negate some options by prefixing the option name with --no.  For example, --noinc (or --no-inc)
       negates "--inc".

       --color
           Enable or disable terminal coloring.  Corresponds to the "color" config file setting.

       --config
           Specifies  a  configuration  file  to  read.   This  option is non-sticky, that is to say it does not
           persist to the configuration file itself.

       --count
           Refresh only the specified number of times (ticks) before exiting.   Each  refresh  is  a  pause  for
           "interval"  seconds,  followed  by  requesting  data  from  MySQL  connections and printing it to the
           terminal.

       --delay
           Specifies the amount of time to pause between ticks (refreshes).  Corresponds  to  the  configuration
           option "interval".

       --help
           Print a summary of command-line usage and exit.

       --host
           Host to connect to.

       --inc
           Specifies  whether  innotop  should  display absolute numbers or relative numbers (offsets from their
           previous values).  Corresponds to the configuration option "status_inc".

       --mode
           Specifies the mode in which innotop should start.  Corresponds to the configuration option "mode".

       --nonint
           Enable non-interactive operation.  See "NON-INTERACTIVE OPERATION" for more.

       --password
           Password to use for connection.

       --port
           Port to use for connection.

       --skipcentral
           Don't read the central configuration file.

       --timestamp
           In -n mode, write a timestamp either before every screenful of output, or  if  the  option  is  given
           twice, at the start of every line.  The format is controlled by the timeformat config variable.

       --user
           User to use for connection.

       --version
           Output version information and exit.

       --write
           Sets  the  configuration  option  "readonly"  to 0, making innotop write the running configuration to
           ~/.innotop/innotop.conf on exit, if no configuration file was loaded at start-up.

HOTKEYS

       innotop is interactive, and you control it with key-presses.

       •   Uppercase keys switch between modes.

       •   Lowercase keys initiate some action within the current mode.

       •   Other keys do something special like change configuration or show the innotop license.

       Press '?' at any time to see the currently active keys and what they do.

MODES

       Each of innotop's modes retrieves and displays  a  particular  type  of  data  from  the  servers  you're
       monitoring.   You switch between modes with uppercase keys.  The following is a brief description of each
       mode, in alphabetical order.  To switch to the mode, press the key listed in front of its heading in  the
       following list:

       A: Health Dashboard
           This  mode  displays  a  single  table  with one row per monitored server. The columns show essential
           overview information about the server's health, and coloration  rules  show  whether  replication  is
           running or if there are any very long-running queries or excessive replication delay.

       B: InnoDB Buffers
           This  mode  displays  information  about  the InnoDB buffer pool, page statistics, insert buffer, and
           adaptive hash index.  The data comes from SHOW INNODB STATUS.

           This mode contains the "buffer_pool", "page_statistics", "insert_buffers", and  "adaptive_hash_index"
           tables by default.

       C: Command Summary
           This  mode is similar to mytop's Command Summary mode.  It shows the "cmd_summary" table, which looks
           something like the following:

            Command Summary (? for help) localhost, 25+07:16:43, 2.45 QPS, 3 thd, 5.0.40
            _____________________ Command Summary _____________________
            Name                    Value    Pct     Last Incr  Pct
            Select_scan             3244858  69.89%          2  100.00%
            Select_range            1354177  29.17%          0    0.00%
            Select_full_join          39479   0.85%          0    0.00%
            Select_full_range_join     4097   0.09%          0    0.00%
            Select_range_check            0   0.00%          0    0.00%

           The command summary table is built by extracting variables from  "STATUS_VARIABLES".   The  variables
           must  be  numeric  and  must  match the prefix given by the "cmd_filter" configuration variable.  The
           variables are then sorted by value descending and compared to the last variable, as shown above.  The
           percentage columns are percentage of the total of all variables in the table,  so  you  can  see  the
           relative weight of the variables.

           The  example  shows  what you see if the prefix is "Select_".  The default prefix is "Com_".  You can
           choose a prefix with the 's' key.

           It's rather like running SHOW VARIABLES LIKE "prefix%" with memory and nice formatting.

           Values are aggregated across all servers.  The  Pct  columns  are  not  correctly  aggregated  across
           multiple  servers.   This  is  a  known limitation of the grouping algorithm that may be fixed in the
           future.

       D: InnoDB Deadlocks
           This mode shows the transactions involved in the last InnoDB deadlock.   A  second  table  shows  the
           locks  each transaction held and waited for.  A deadlock is caused by a cycle in the waits-for graph,
           so there should be two locks held and one waited for unless the deadlock information is truncated.

           InnoDB puts deadlock information before some other information in the SHOW INNODB STATUS output.   If
           there  are  a lot of locks, the deadlock information can grow very large, and there is a limit on the
           size of the SHOW INNODB STATUS output.  A large deadlock can fill  the  entire  output,  or  even  be
           truncated,  and  prevent  you  from  seeing  other information at all.  If you are running innotop in
           another mode, for example T mode, and suddenly you don't see anything, you might want  to  check  and
           see if a deadlock has wiped out the data you need.

           If  it  has, you can create a small deadlock to replace the large one.  Use the 'w' key to 'wipe' the
           large deadlock with a small one.  This will not work unless you have defined a deadlock table for the
           connection (see "SERVER CONNECTIONS").

           You can also configure innotop to automatically detect when a large deadlock  needs  to  be  replaced
           with a small one (see "auto_wipe_dl").

           This mode displays the "deadlock_transactions" and "deadlock_locks" tables by default.

       F: InnoDB Foreign Key Errors
           This  mode  shows the last InnoDB foreign key error information, such as the table where it happened,
           when and who and what query caused it, and so on.

           InnoDB has a huge variety of foreign key error messages, and many of them are  just  hard  to  parse.
           innotop  doesn't always do the best job here, but there's so much code devoted to parsing this messy,
           unparsable output that innotop is likely never to be perfect in this regard.  If innotop doesn't show
           you what you need to see, just look at the status text directly.

           This mode displays the "fk_error" table by default.

       I: InnoDB I/O Info
           This mode  shows  InnoDB's  I/O  statistics,  including  the  I/O  threads,  pending  I/O,  file  I/O
           miscellaneous,  and  log statistics.  It displays the "io_threads", "pending_io", "file_io_misc", and
           "log_statistics" tables by default.

       K: InnoDB Lock Waits
           This mode shows information from InnoDB plugin's transaction and locking tables.  You can use  it  to
           find  when  a  transaction is waiting for another, and kill the blocking transaction. It displays the
           "innodb_blocked_blocker" table.

       L: Locks
           This mode shows information about current locks.  At the moment only InnoDB locks are supported,  and
           by default you'll only see locks for which transactions are waiting.  This information comes from the
           TRANSACTIONS  section  of  the  InnoDB  status  text.   If  you have a very busy server, you may have
           frequent lock waits; it helps to be able to see which tables and  indexes  are  the  "hot  spot"  for
           locks.  If your server is running pretty well, this mode should show nothing.

           You can configure MySQL and innotop to monitor not only locks for which a transaction is waiting, but
           those    currently    held,    too.     You    can   do   this   with   the   InnoDB   Lock   Monitor
           (<http://dev.mysql.com/doc/en/innodb-monitor.html>).  It's not documented in the  MySQL  manual,  but
           creating the lock monitor with the following statement also affects the output of SHOW INNODB STATUS,
           which innotop uses:

             CREATE TABLE innodb_lock_monitor(a int) ENGINE=INNODB;

           This  causes  InnoDB  to  print its output to the MySQL file every 16 seconds or so, as stated in the
           manual, but it also makes the normal SHOW  INNODB  STATUS  output  include  lock  information,  which
           innotop can parse and display (that's the undocumented feature).

           This  means  you  can  do what may have seemed impossible: to a limited extent (InnoDB truncates some
           information in the output), you can see which transaction holds the locks something else  is  waiting
           for.  You can also enable and disable the InnoDB Lock Monitor with the key mappings in this mode.

           This  mode  displays  the  "innodb_locks"  table  by default.  Here's a sample of the screen when one
           connection is waiting for locks another connection holds:

            _________________________________ InnoDB Locks __________________________
            CXN        ID  Type    Waiting  Wait   Active  Mode  DB    Table  Index
            localhost  12  RECORD        1  00:10   00:10  X     test  t1     PRIMARY
            localhost  12  TABLE         0  00:10   00:10  IX    test  t1
            localhost  12  RECORD        1  00:10   00:10  X     test  t1     PRIMARY
            localhost  11  TABLE         0  00:00   00:25  IX    test  t1
            localhost  11  RECORD        0  00:00   00:25  X     test  t1     PRIMARY

           You can see the first connection, ID 12, is waiting for a lock on the PRIMARY key on test.t1, and has
           been waiting for 10 seconds.  The second connection isn't waiting, because the Waiting column  is  0,
           but it holds locks on the same index.  That tells you connection 11 is blocking connection 12.

       M: Master/Slave Replication Status
           This  mode  shows  the output of SHOW SLAVE STATUS and SHOW MASTER STATUS in three tables.  The first
           two divide the slave's status into SQL and I/O thread status,  and  the  last  shows  master  status.
           Filters are applied to eliminate non-slave servers from the slave tables, and non-master servers from
           the master table.

           This mode displays the "slave_sql_status", "slave_io_status", and "master_status" tables by default.

       O: Open Tables
           This  section  comes from MySQL's SHOW OPEN TABLES command.  By default it is filtered to show tables
           which are in use by one or more queries, so you can get a quick look at which tables are 'hot'.   You
           can use this to guess which tables might be locked implicitly.

           This mode displays the "open_tables" mode by default.

       U: User Statistics
           This  mode  displays  data  that's  available  in  Percona's enhanced version of MySQL (also known as
           Percona Server with XtraDB).  Specifically, it makes it easy to  enable  and  disable  the  so-called
           "user  statistics."   This  feature gathers stats on clients, threads, users, tables, and indexes and
           makes them available as INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables.  These are invaluable for understanding what  your
           server is doing.  They are also available in MariaDB.

           The  statistics supported so far are only from the TABLE_STATISTICS and INDEX_STATISTICS tables added
           by Percona.  There are three views: one of table stats, one of index stats (which can  be  aggregated
           with the = key), and one of both.

           The  server  doesn't gather these stats by default.  You have to set the variable userstat_running to
           turn it on.  You can do this easily with innotop from U mode, with the 's' key.

       Q: Query List
           This mode displays the output from SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST, much like mytop's query  list  mode.   This
           mode  does  not  show  InnoDB-related information.  This is probably one of the most useful modes for
           general usage.

           There is an informative header that shows general status information  about  your  server.   You  can
           toggle  it  on  and  off  with the 'h' key.  By default, innotop hides inactive processes and its own
           process.  You can toggle these on and off with the 'i' and 'a' keys.

           You can EXPLAIN a query from this mode with the 'e' key.  This displays the query's  full  text,  the
           results  of  EXPLAIN,  and  in  newer MySQL versions, even the optimized query resulting from EXPLAIN
           EXTENDED.  innotop also tries to rewrite certain queries to make  them  EXPLAIN-able.   For  example,
           INSERT/SELECT statements are rewritable.

           This mode displays the "q_header" and "processlist" tables by default.

       R: InnoDB Row Operations and Semaphores
           This  mode shows InnoDB row operations, row operation miscellaneous, semaphores, and information from
           the  wait  array.   It  displays  the  "row_operations",  "row_operation_misc",   "semaphores",   and
           "wait_array" tables by default.

       S: Variables & Status
           This mode calculates statistics, such as queries per second, and prints them out in several different
           styles.  You can show absolute values, or incremental values between ticks.

           You  can  switch between the views by pressing a key.  The 's' key prints a single line each time the
           screen updates, in the style of vmstat.  The 'g' key changes the view to a graph of the same numbers,
           sort of like tload.  The 'v' key changes the view to a pivoted table of variable names on  the  left,
           with  successive  updates  scrolling  across  the screen from left to right.  You can choose how many
           updates to put on the screen with the "num_status_sets" configuration variable.

           Headers may be abbreviated to fit on the screen in interactive operation.  You choose which variables
           to display with the 'c' key, which selects from predefined sets, or lets you create  your  own  sets.
           You can edit the current set with the 'e' key.

           This mode doesn't really display any tables like other modes.  Instead, it uses a table definition to
           extract  and format the data, but it then transforms the result in special ways before outputting it.
           It uses the "var_status" table definition for this.

       T: InnoDB Transactions
           This mode shows transactions from the InnoDB monitor's output, in top-like format.  This mode is  the
           reason I wrote innotop.

           You  can kill queries or processes with the 'k' and 'x' keys, and EXPLAIN a query with the 'e' or 'f'
           keys.  InnoDB doesn't print the full query in transactions, so explaining may not work right  if  the
           query is truncated.

           The  informational  header  can  be  toggled  on and off with the 'h' key.  By default, innotop hides
           inactive transactions and its own transaction.  You can toggle this on and off with the 'i'  and  'a'
           keys.

           This mode displays the "t_header" and "innodb_transactions" tables by default.

INNOTOP STATUS

       The  first line innotop displays is a "status bar" of sorts.  What it contains depends on the mode you're
       in, and what servers you're monitoring.  The first few words are always [RO] (if readonly is set  to  1),
       the  innotop  mode, such as "InnoDB Txns" for T mode, followed by a reminder to press '?' for help at any
       time.

   ONE SERVER
       The simplest case is when you're monitoring a single server.  In this case, the name of the connection is
       next on the status line.  This is the name you gave when you created the connection --  most  likely  the
       MySQL server's hostname.  This is followed by the server's uptime.

       If you're in an InnoDB mode, such as T or B, the next word is "InnoDB" followed by some information about
       the  SHOW  INNODB STATUS output used to render the screen.  The first word is the number of seconds since
       the last SHOW INNODB STATUS, which InnoDB uses to calculate some per-second statistics.  The  next  is  a
       smiley face indicating whether the InnoDB output is truncated.  If the smiley face is a :-), all is well;
       there is no truncation.  A :^| means the transaction list is so long, InnoDB has only printed out some of
       the  transactions.   Finally,  a  frown  :-(  means  the output is incomplete, which is probably due to a
       deadlock printing too much lock information (see "D: InnoDB Deadlocks").

       The next two words indicate the server's queries per second (QPS)  and  how  many  threads  (connections)
       exist.  Finally, the server's version number is the last thing on the line.

   MULTIPLE SERVERS
       If  you  are  monitoring  multiple  servers (see "SERVER CONNECTIONS"), the status line does not show any
       details about individual servers.  Instead, it shows the  names  of  the  connections  that  are  active.
       Again,  these  are  connection  names  you  specified,  which  are likely to be the server's hostname.  A
       connection that has an error is prefixed with an exclamation point.

       If you are monitoring a group of servers (see "SERVER GROUPS"), the status line shows  the  name  of  the
       group.   If any connection in the group has an error, the group's name is followed by the fraction of the
       connections that don't have errors.

       See "ERROR HANDLING" for more details about innotop's error handling.

   MONITORING A FILE
       If you give a filename on the command line, innotop will not connect to ANY  servers  at  all.   It  will
       watch the specified file for InnoDB status output and use that as its data source.  It will always show a
       single connection called 'file'.  And since it can't connect to a server, it can't determine how long the
       server  it's  monitoring  has been up; so it calculates the server's uptime as time since innotop started
       running.

SERVER ADMINISTRATION

       While innotop is primarily a monitor that lets you watch and analyze  your  servers,  it  can  also  send
       commands  to  servers.   The most frequently useful commands are killing queries and stopping or starting
       slaves.

       You can kill a connection, or in newer versions of MySQL kill a query but  not  a  connection,  from  "Q:
       Query  List"  and  "T:  InnoDB Transactions" modes.  Press 'k' to issue a KILL command, or 'x' to issue a
       KILL QUERY command.  innotop will prompt you for the server and/or connection ID to  kill  (innotop  does
       not  prompt  you  if  there is only one possible choice for any input).  innotop pre-selects the longest-
       running query, or the oldest connection.  Confirm the command with 'y'.

       In "Slave Replication Status"" in "M: Master mode, you can start and stop slaves with  the  'a'  and  'o'
       keys,  respectively.   You  can  send  these commands to many slaves at once.  innotop fills in a default
       command of START SLAVE or STOP SLAVE for you, but you can actually edit the command and send anything you
       wish, such as SET GLOBAL SQL_SLAVE_SKIP_COUNTER=1 to make the slave skip one binlog event when it starts.

       You can also ask innotop to calculate the earliest binlog in use by any slave and issue  a  PURGE  MASTER
       LOGS  on  the master.  Use the 'b' key for this.  innotop will prompt you for a master to run the command
       on, then prompt you for the connection names of that master's slaves (there is  no  way  for  innotop  to
       determine  this reliably itself).  innotop will find the minimum binlog in use by these slave connections
       and suggest it as the argument to PURGE MASTER LOGS.

       in "U: User Statistics" mode, you can use the 's' key to start and stop the collection of the  statistics
       data for TABLE_STATISTICS and similar.

SERVER CONNECTIONS

       When you create a server connection using '@', innotop asks you for a series of inputs, as follows:

       DSN A DSN is a Data Source Name, which is the initial argument passed to the DBI module for connecting to
           a server.  It is usually of the form

            DBI:MariaDB:;mariadb_read_default_group=mysql;host=HOSTNAME

           Since  this  DSN  is passed to the DBD::MariaDB driver, you should read the driver's documentation at
           <https://metacpan.org/pod/DBD::MariaDB> for the exact details on all the options  you  can  pass  the
           driver  in  the  DSN.   You can read more about DBI at <http://dbi.perl.org/docs/>, and especially at
           <http://search.cpan.org/~timb/DBI/DBI.pm>.

           The mariadb_read_default_group=mysql option lets the DBD driver read your MySQL options  files,  such
           as  ~/.my.cnf  on  UNIX-ish systems.  You can use this to avoid specifying a username or password for
           the connection.

       InnoDB Deadlock Table
           This optional item tells innotop a table name it can use to deliberately create a small deadlock (see
           "D: InnoDB Deadlocks").  If you specify this option, you just need  to  be  sure  the  table  doesn't
           exist, and that innotop can create and drop the table with the InnoDB storage engine.  You can safely
           omit or just accept the default if you don't intend to use this.

       Username
           innotop  will ask you if you want to specify a username.  If you say 'y', it will then prompt you for
           a user name.  If you have a MySQL option file that specifies your username, you don't have to specify
           a username.

           The username defaults to your login name on the system you're running innotop on.

       Password
           innotop will ask you if you want to specify a password.  Like the username, the password is optional,
           but there's an additional prompt that  asks  if  you  want  to  save  the  password  in  the  innotop
           configuration  file.   If  you don't save it in the configuration file, innotop will prompt you for a
           password each time it starts.  Passwords in the innotop configuration file are saved in  plain  text,
           not encrypted in any way.

       Once  you  finish  answering  these  questions,  you  should be connected to a server.  But innotop isn't
       limited to monitoring a single server; you can define many server connections and switch between them  by
       pressing the '@' key.  See "SWITCHING BETWEEN CONNECTIONS".

SERVER GROUPS

       If  you  have multiple MySQL instances, you can put them into named groups, such as 'all', 'masters', and
       'slaves', which innotop can monitor all together.

       You can choose which group to monitor with the '#' key, and you can press the TAB key to  switch  to  the
       next group.  If you're not currently monitoring a group, pressing TAB selects the first group.

       To  create  a  group,  press  the '#' key and type the name of your new group, then type the names of the
       connections you want the group to contain.

SWITCHING BETWEEN CONNECTIONS

       innotop lets you quickly switch which servers you're monitoring.  The most basic way is by  pressing  the
       '@'  key  and  typing the name(s) of the connection(s) you want to use.  This setting is per-mode, so you
       can monitor different connections in each mode, and innotop remembers which connections you choose.

       You can quickly switch to the 'next' connection in alphabetical  order  with  the  'n'  key.   If  you're
       monitoring a server group (see "SERVER GROUPS") this will switch to the first connection.

       You  can  also  type  many connection names, and innotop will fetch and display data from them all.  Just
       separate the connection names with spaces, for example "server1 server2."  Again, if you type the name of
       a connection that doesn't exist, innotop will prompt  you  for  connection  information  and  create  the
       connection.

       Another  way  to  monitor multiple connections at once is with server groups.  You can use the TAB key to
       switch to the 'next' group in alphabetical order, or if you're not monitoring any groups, TAB will switch
       to the first group.

       innotop does not fetch data in parallel from connections, so if you are monitoring a large group or  many
       connections, you may notice increased delay between ticks.

       When you monitor more than one connection, innotop's status bar changes.  See "INNOTOP STATUS".

ERROR HANDLING

       Error  handling  is  not that important when monitoring a single connection, but is crucial when you have
       many active connections.  A crashed server or lost connection should not crash  innotop.   As  a  result,
       innotop  will continue to run even when there is an error; it just won't display any information from the
       connection that had an error.  Because of this, innotop's behavior might confuse you.   It's  a  feature,
       not a bug!

       innotop  does  not continue to query connections that have errors, because they may slow innotop and make
       it hard to use, especially if the error is a problem connecting and causes  a  long  time-out.   Instead,
       innotop  retries the connection occasionally to see if the error still exists.  If so, it will wait until
       some point in the future.  The wait time increases in ticks as the Fibonacci series,  so  it  tries  less
       frequently as time passes.

       Since  errors  might  only  happen  in  certain  modes because of the SQL commands issued in those modes,
       innotop keeps track of which mode caused the error.  If you switch to  a  different  mode,  innotop  will
       retry the connection instead of waiting.

       By  default  innotop will display the problem in red text at the bottom of the first table on the screen.
       You can disable this behavior with the "show_cxn_errors_in_tbl" configuration option, which is enabled by
       default.  If the "debug" option is enabled, innotop will display the error at the bottom of every  table,
       not  just the first.  And if "show_cxn_errors" is enabled, innotop will print the error text to STDOUT as
       well.  Error messages might only display in the mode that caused the error, depending  on  the  mode  and
       whether innotop is avoiding querying that connection.

NON-INTERACTIVE OPERATION

       You  can  run  innotop  in  non-interactive  mode,  in  which  case  it  is  entirely controlled from the
       configuration file and command-line  options.   To  start  innotop  in  non-interactive  mode,  give  the
       L"<--nonint"> command-line option.  This changes innotop's behavior in the following ways:

       •   Certain  Perl  modules  are  not  loaded.  Term::Readline is not loaded, since innotop doesn't prompt
           interactively.  Term::ANSIColor and Win32::Console::ANSI modules are not  loaded.   Term::ReadKey  is
           still used, since innotop may have to prompt for connection passwords when starting up.

       •   innotop does not clear the screen after each tick.

       •   innotop does not persist any changes to the configuration file.

       •   If  "--count"  is  given  and  innotop is in incremental mode (see "status_inc" and "--inc"), innotop
           actually refreshes one more time than  specified  so  it  can  print  incremental  statistics.   This
           suppresses output during the first tick, so innotop may appear to hang.

       •   innotop  only  displays  the first table in each mode.  This is so the output can be easily processed
           with other command-line utilities such as awk and sed.  To change which tables display in each  mode,
           see  "TABLES".   Since  "Q:  Query  List"  mode  is  so important, innotop automatically disables the
           "q_header" table.  This ensures you'll  see  the  "processlist"  table,  even  if  you  have  innotop
           configured  to  show  the  q_header  table  during  interactive  operation.  Similarly, in "T: InnoDB
           Transactions" mode, the "t_header" table is suppressed so  you  see  only  the  "innodb_transactions"
           table.

       •   All  output  is tab-separated instead of being column-aligned with whitespace, and innotop prints the
           full contents of each table instead of only printing one screenful at a time.

       •   innotop only prints column headers once instead of every tick (see  "hide_hdr").   innotop  does  not
           print table captions (see "display_table_captions").  innotop ensures there are no empty lines in the
           output.

       •   innotop  does  not honor the "shorten" transformation, which normally shortens some numbers to human-
           readable formats.

       •   innotop does not print a status line (see "INNOTOP STATUS").

CONFIGURING

       Nearly everything about innotop is configurable.  Most  things  are  possible  to  change  with  built-in
       commands, but you can also edit the configuration file.

       While running innotop, press the '$' key to bring up the configuration editing dialog.  Press another key
       to select the type of data you want to edit:

       S: Statement Sleep Times
           Edits  SQL  statement  sleep  delays, which make innotop pause for the specified amount of time after
           executing a statement.  See "SQL STATEMENTS" for a definition of each statement and what it does.  By
           default innotop does not delay after any statements.

           This feature is included so you can customize the side-effects caused by monitoring your server.  You
           may not see any effects, but some innotop users have noticed that certain MySQL versions  under  very
           high load with InnoDB enabled take longer than usual to execute SHOW GLOBAL STATUS.  If innotop calls
           SHOW  FULL  PROCESSLIST immediately afterward, the processlist contains more queries than the machine
           actually averages at any given moment.  Configuring innotop  to  pause  briefly  after  calling  SHOW
           GLOBAL STATUS alleviates this effect.

           Sleep  times  are  stored  in  the "stmt_sleep_times" section of the configuration file.  Fractional-
           second sleeps are supported, subject to your hardware's limitations.

       c: Edit Columns
           Starts the table editor on one of the displayed tables.  See "TABLE EDITOR".  An alternative  way  to
           start the table editor without entering the configuration dialog is with the '^' key.

       g: General Configuration
           Starts  the  configuration  editor  to  edit  global  and  mode-specific configuration variables (see
           "MODES").  innotop prompts you to choose a variable from among  the  global  and  mode-specific  ones
           depending on the current mode.

       k: Row-Coloring Rules
           Starts the row-coloring rules editor on one of the displayed table(s).  See "COLORS" for details.

       p: Manage Plugins
           Starts the plugin configuration editor.  See "PLUGINS" for details.

       s: Server Groups
           Lets you create and edit server groups.  See "SERVER GROUPS".

       t: Choose Displayed Tables
           Lets you choose which tables to display in this mode.  See "MODES" and "TABLES".

CONFIGURATION FILE

       innotop's default configuration file locations are $HOME/.innotop and /etc/innotop/innotop.conf, and they
       are  looked for in that order.  If the first configuration file exists, the second will not be processed.
       Those can be overridden with the "--config" command-line option.  You can edit it by hand safely, however
       innotop reads the configuration file when it starts, and, if readonly is set to 0, writes  it  out  again
       when it exits.  Thus, if readonly is set to 0, any changes you make by hand while innotop is running will
       be lost.

       innotop  doesn't  store its entire configuration in the configuration file.  It has a huge set of default
       configuration values that it holds only in memory,  and  the  configuration  file  only  overrides  these
       defaults.  When you customize a default setting, innotop notices, and then stores the customizations into
       the file.  This keeps the file size down, makes it easier to edit, and makes upgrades easier.

       A configuration file is read-only be default.  You can override that with "--write".  See "readonly".

       The  configuration  file  is  arranged  into  sections  like  an  INI  file.   Each  section  begins with
       [section-name] and ends with [/section-name].  Each section's entries have a different  syntax  depending
       on  the  data  they  need  to  store.   You  can  put comments in the file; any line that begins with a #
       character is a comment.  innotop will not read the comments, so it won't write them back out to the  file
       when it exits.  Comments in read-only configuration files are still useful, though.

       The first line in the file is innotop's version number.  This lets innotop notice when the file format is
       not backwards-compatible, and upgrade smoothly without destroying your customized configuration.

       The following list describes each section of the configuration file and the data it contains:

       general
           The  'general'  section  contains  global  configuration  variables  and  variables that may be mode-
           specific, but don't belong in any other section.  The syntax is a  simple  key=value  list.   innotop
           writes a comment above each value to help you edit the file by hand.

           S_func
               Controls  S  mode  presentation  (see  "S: Variables & Status").  If g, values are graphed; if s,
               values are like vmstat; if p, values are in a pivoted table.

           S_set
               Specifies which set of variables to display in "S:  Variables  &  Status"  mode.   See  "VARIABLE
               SETS".

           auto_wipe_dl
               Instructs  innotop to automatically wipe large deadlocks when it notices them.  When this happens
               you may notice a slight delay.  At the next tick, you will usually see the information  that  was
               being truncated by the large deadlock.

           charset
               Specifies what kind of characters to allow through the "no_ctrl_char" transformation.  This keeps
               non-printable  characters  from confusing a terminal when you monitor queries that contain binary
               data, such as images.

               The default is 'ascii', which considers anything outside normal ASCII to be a control  character.
               The  other allowable values are 'unicode' and 'none'.  'none' considers every character a control
               character, which can be useful for collapsing ALL text fields in queries.

           cmd_filter
               This is the prefix that filters variables in "C: Command Summary" mode.

           color
               Whether terminal coloring is permitted.

           cxn_timeout
               On MySQL versions 4.0.3 and newer, this variable is used to  set  the  connection's  timeout,  so
               MySQL  doesn't  close  the connection if it is not used for a while.  This might happen because a
               connection isn't monitored in a particular mode, for example.

           debug
               This option enables more verbose errors and makes innotop more strict in  some  places.   It  can
               help  in  debugging  filters  and  other user-defined code.  It also makes innotop write a lot of
               information to "debugfile" when there is a crash.

           debugfile
               A file to which innotop will write information when there is a crash.  See "FILES".

           display_table_captions
               innotop displays a table caption above most tables.  This variable suppresses or  shows  captions
               on  all  tables  globally.   Some  tables  are  configured  with the hide_caption property, which
               overrides this.

           global
               Whether to show GLOBAL variables and status.  innotop only tries to  do  this  on  servers  which
               support  the  GLOBAL  option to SHOW VARIABLES and SHOW STATUS.  In some MySQL versions, you need
               certain privileges to do this; if you don't have them, innotop will not  be  able  to  fetch  any
               variable  and  status data.  This configuration variable lets you run innotop and fetch what data
               you can even without the elevated privileges.

               I can no longer find or reproduce the situation where GLOBAL wasn't allowed, but I know there was
               one.

           graph_char
               Defines the character to use when drawing graphs in "S: Variables & Status" mode.

           header_highlight
               Defines how to highlight column headers.  This only works if Term::ANSIColor is available.  Valid
               values are 'bold' and 'underline'.

           hide_hdr
               Hides column headers globally.

           interval
               The interval at which innotop will refresh its data (ticks).  The interval is  implemented  as  a
               sleep  time  between ticks, so the true interval will vary depending on how long it takes innotop
               to fetch and render data.

               This variable accepts fractions of a second.

           mode
               The mode in which innotop should start.  Allowable arguments are the same as the key presses that
               select a mode interactively.  See "MODES".

           num_digits
               How many digits to show in fractional numbers and percents.  This variable's range is  between  0
               and 9 and can be set directly from "S: Variables & Status" mode with the '+' and '-' keys.  It is
               used in the "set_precision", "shorten", and "percent" transformations.

           num_status_sets
               Controls  how  many  sets of status variables to display in pivoted "S: Variables & Status" mode.
               It also controls the number of old sets of variables innotop keeps in its memory, so  the  larger
               this variable is, the more memory innotop uses.

           plugin_dir
               Specifies  where  plugins  can  be  found.   By  default, innotop stores plugins in the 'plugins'
               subdirectory of your innotop configuration directory.

           readonly
               Whether the configuration file is readonly.  This cannot be set interactively.

           show_cxn_errors
               Makes innotop print connection errors to STDOUT.  See "ERROR HANDLING".

           show_cxn_errors_in_tbl
               Makes innotop display connection errors as rows  in  the  first  table  on  screen.   See  "ERROR
               HANDLING".

           show_percent
               Adds a '%' character after the value returned by the "percent" transformation.

           show_statusbar
               Controls whether to show the status bar in the display.  See "INNOTOP STATUS".

           skip_innodb
               Disables  fetching  SHOW INNODB STATUS, in case your server(s) do not have InnoDB enabled and you
               don't want innotop to try to fetch it.  This can also be useful when you  don't  have  the  SUPER
               privilege, required to run SHOW INNODB STATUS.

           spark
               Specifies  how wide a spark chart is. There are two ASCII spark charts in A mode, showing QPS and
               User_threads_running.

           status_inc
               Whether to show absolute or incremental values for  status  variables.   Incremental  values  are
               calculated  as  an  offset  from  the last value innotop saw for that variable.  This is a global
               setting, but will probably become mode-specific at some point.  Right now it  is  honored  a  bit
               inconsistently; some modes don't pay attention to it.

           timeformat
               The  C-style strftime()-compatible format for the timestamp line to be printed in -n mode when -t
               is set.

       plugins
           This section holds a list of package names of active plugins.  If the  plugin  exists,  innotop  will
           activate it.  See "PLUGINS" for more information.

       filters
           This   section   holds   user-defined   filters   (see  "FILTERS").   Each  line  is  in  the  format
           filter_name=text='filter text' tbls='table list'.

           The filter text is the text of the subroutine's code.  The table list is a list of  tables  to  which
           the  filter  can  apply.   By  default,  user-defined  filters apply to the table for which they were
           created, but you can manually override that by editing the definition in the configuration file.

       active_filters
           This section  stores  which  filters  are  active  on  each  table.   Each  line  is  in  the  format
           table_name=filter_list.

       tbl_meta
           This  section  stores  user-defined  or user-customized columns (see "COLUMNS").  Each line is in the
           format col_name=properties, where the properties are a name=quoted-value list.

       connections
           This  section  holds  the  server  connections  you  have  defined.   Each  line  is  in  the  format
           name=properties,  where  the  properties are a name=value list.  The properties are self-explanatory,
           and the only one that is treated specially is 'pass' which is only  present  if  'savepass'  is  set.
           This section of the configuration file will be skipped if any DSN, username, or password command-line
           options are used.  See "SERVER CONNECTIONS".

       active_connections
           This  section  holds a list of which connections are active in each mode.  Each line is in the format
           mode_name=connection_list.

       server_groups
           This section holds server groups.  Each line is in  the  format  name=connection_list.   See  "SERVER
           GROUPS".

       active_server_groups
           This  section  holds a list of which server group is active in each mode.  Each line is in the format
           mode_name=server_group.

       max_values_seen
           This section holds the maximum values seen for variables.  This is used to scale the  graphs  in  "S:
           Variables & Status" mode.  Each line is in the format name=value.

       active_columns
           This  section  holds  table  column  lists.   Each  line  is in the format tbl_name=column_list.  See
           "COLUMNS".

       sort_cols
           This section holds the sort definition.  Each line is  in  the  format  tbl_name=column_list.   If  a
           column is prefixed with '-', that column sorts descending.  See "SORTING".

       visible_tables
           This  section  defines  which  tables  are  visible  in  each  mode.   Each  line  is  in  the format
           mode_name=table_list.  See "TABLES".

       varsets
           This section defines variable sets for use in "S: Status & Variables" mode.   Each  line  is  in  the
           format name=variable_list.  See "VARIABLE SETS".

       colors
           This  section  defines  colorization  rules.  Each line is in the format tbl_name=property_list.  See
           "COLORS".

       stmt_sleep_times
           This section contains statement sleep times.  Each line is in the  format  statement_name=sleep_time.
           See "S: Statement Sleep Times".

       group_by
           This  section  contains  column  lists  for  table  group_by expressions.  Each line is in the format
           tbl_name=column_list.  See "GROUPING".

CUSTOMIZING

       You can customize innotop a great deal.  For example, you can:

       •   Choose which tables to display, and in what order.

       •   Choose which columns are in those tables, and create new columns.

       •   Filter which rows display with built-in filters, user-defined filters, and quick-filters.

       •   Sort the rows to put important data first or group together related rows.

       •   Highlight rows with color.

       •   Customize the alignment, width, and formatting of columns, and apply transformations  to  columns  to
           extract parts of their values or format the values as you wish (for example, shortening large numbers
           to familiar units).

       •   Design  your  own  expressions  to  extract  and  combine data as you need.  This gives you unlimited
           flexibility.

       All these and more are explained in the following sections.

   TABLES
       A table is what you'd expect: a collection of columns.  It also has some  other  properties,  such  as  a
       caption.   Filters,  sorting  rules,  and  colorization  rules  belong to tables and are covered in later
       sections.

       Internally, table meta-data is defined in a data structure called %tbl_meta.  This hash holds all  built-
       in table definitions, which contain a lot of default instructions to innotop.  The meta-data includes the
       caption,  a list of columns the user has customized, a list of columns, a list of visible columns, a list
       of filters, color rules, a sort-column list, sort direction, and some information about the table's  data
       sources.  Most of this is customizable via the table editor (see "TABLE EDITOR").

       You can choose which tables to show by pressing the '$' key.  See "MODES" and "TABLES".

       The table life-cycle is as follows:

       •   Each  table  begins  with  a data source, which is an array of hashes.  See below for details on data
           sources.

       •   Each element of the data source becomes a row in the final table.

       •   For each element in the data source, innotop extracts values from the source and creates a row.  This
           row is another hash, which later steps will refer to  as  $set.   The  values  innotop  extracts  are
           determined  by  the  table's  columns.   Each  column  has an extraction subroutine, compiled from an
           expression (see "EXPRESSIONS").  The resulting row is a hash whose keys are named  the  same  as  the
           column name.

       •   innotop filters the rows, removing those that don't need to be displayed.  See "FILTERS".

       •   innotop sorts the rows.  See "SORTING".

       •   innotop groups the rows together, if specified.  See "GROUPING".

       •   innotop colorizes the rows.  See "COLORS".

       •   innotop transforms the column values in each row.  See "TRANSFORMATIONS".

       •   innotop optionally pivots the rows (see "PIVOTING"), then filters and sorts them.

       •   innotop  formats  and  justifies  the  rows  as  a  table.  During this step, innotop applies further
           formatting to the column values, including alignment, maximum and minimum widths.  innotop also  does
           final  error  checking  to  ensure there are no crashes due to undefined values.  innotop then adds a
           caption if specified, and the table is ready to print.

       The lifecycle is slightly different if the table is pivoted, as noted above.  To clarify, if the table is
       pivoted, the process is extract, group, transform, pivot, filter, sort, create.  If it's not pivoted, the
       process is extract, filter, sort, group, color, transform,  create.   This  slightly  convoluted  process
       doesn't  map  all that well to SQL, but pivoting complicates things pretty thoroughly.  Roughly speaking,
       filtering and sorting happen as late as needed to effect the final result as you  might  expect,  but  as
       early as possible for efficiency.

       Each built-in table is described below:

       adaptive_hash_index
           Displays data about InnoDB's adaptive hash index.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       buffer_pool
           Displays data about InnoDB's buffer pool.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       cmd_summary
           Displays weighted status variables.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       deadlock_locks
           Shows  which  locks  were  held  and  waited  for  by  the  last  detected  deadlock.   Data  source:
           "DEADLOCK_LOCKS".

       deadlock_transactions
           Shows transactions involved in the last detected deadlock.  Data source: "DEADLOCK_TRANSACTIONS".

       explain
           Shows the output of EXPLAIN.  Data source: "EXPLAIN".

       file_io_misc
           Displays data about InnoDB's file and I/O operations.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       fk_error
           Displays various data about InnoDB's last foreign key error.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       health_dashboard
           Displays an overall  summary  of  servers,  one  server  per  line,  for  monitoring.   Data  source:
           "STATUS_VARIABLES", "MASTER_SLAVE", "PROCESSLIST_STATS".

       index_statistics
           Displays data from the INDEX_STATISTICS table in Percona-enhanced servers.

       index_table_statistics
           Displays  data from the INDEX_STATISTICS and TABLE_STATISTICS tables in Percona-enhanced servers.  It
           joins the two together, grouped by the database and table name.  It is the default view in  "U:  User
           Statistics"  mode, and makes it easy to see what tables are hot, how many rows are read from indexes,
           how many changes are made, and how many changes are made to indexes.

       innodb_blocked_blocker
           Displays InnoDB locks and lock waits. Data source: "INNODB_BLOCKED_BLOCKER".

       innodb_locks
           Displays InnoDB locks.  Data source: "INNODB_LOCKS".

       innodb_transactions
           Displays data about InnoDB's current transactions.  Data source: "INNODB_TRANSACTIONS".

       insert_buffers
           Displays data about InnoDB's insert buffer.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       io_threads
           Displays data about InnoDB's I/O threads.  Data source: "IO_THREADS".

       log_statistics
           Displays data about InnoDB's logging system.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       master_status
           Displays replication master status.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       open_tables
           Displays open tables.  Data source: "OPEN_TABLES".

       page_statistics
           Displays InnoDB page statistics.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       pending_io
           Displays InnoDB pending I/O operations.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       processlist
           Displays current MySQL processes (threads/connections).  Data source: "PROCESSLIST".

       q_header
           Displays various status values.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       row_operation_misc
           Displays data about InnoDB's row operations.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       row_operations
           Displays data about InnoDB's row operations.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       semaphores
           Displays data about InnoDB's semaphores and mutexes.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       slave_io_status
           Displays data about the slave I/O thread.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       slave_sql_status
           Displays data about the slave SQL thread.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       table_statistics
           Displays data from the TABLE_STATISTICS table in Percona-enhanced servers.

       t_header
           Displays various InnoDB status values.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       var_status
           Displays user-configurable data.  Data source: "STATUS_VARIABLES".

       wait_array
           Displays data about InnoDB's OS wait array.  Data source: "OS_WAIT_ARRAY".

   COLUMNS
       Columns belong to tables.  You can choose a table's columns by pressing the '^'  key,  which  starts  the
       "TABLE  EDITOR" and lets you choose and edit columns.  Pressing 'e' from within the table editor lets you
       edit the column's properties:

       •   hdr: a column header.  This appears in the first row of the table.

       •   just: justification.  '-' means left-justified and '' means  right-justified,  just  as  with  printf
           formatting codes (not a coincidence).

       •   dec: whether to further align the column on the decimal point.

       •   num: whether the column is numeric.  This affects how values are sorted (lexically or numerically).

       •   label: a small note about the column, which appears in dialogs that help the user choose columns.

       •   src:  an  expression  that  innotop  uses  to  extract  the  column's data from its source (see "DATA
           SOURCES").  See "EXPRESSIONS" for more on expressions.

       •   minw: specifies a minimum display width.  This helps stabilize the display, which makes it easier  to
           read if the data is changing frequently.

       •   maxw: similar to minw.

       •   trans: a list of column transformations.  See "TRANSFORMATIONS".

       •   agg: an aggregate function.  See "GROUPING".  The default is "first".

       •   aggonly:  controls  whether  the  column  only  shows  when  grouping  is  enabled  on the table (see
           "GROUPING").  By default, this is disabled.  This means columns will  always  be  shown  by  default,
           whether  grouping  is enabled or not.  If a column's aggonly is set true, the column will appear when
           you toggle grouping on the table.  Several columns are set this way, such  as  the  count  column  on
           "processlist"  and  "innodb_transactions",  so you don't see a count when the grouping isn't enabled,
           but you do when it is.

       •   agghide: the reverse of aggonly.  The column is hidden when grouping is enabled.

   FILTERS
       Filters remove rows from the display.  They behave much like a WHERE clause in SQL.  innotop has  several
       built-in  filters, which remove irrelevant information like inactive queries, but you can define your own
       as well.  innotop also lets you create quick-filters, which do not get saved to the  configuration  file,
       and are just an easy way to quickly view only some rows.

       You  can  enable  or  disable a filter on any table.  Press the '%' key (mnemonic: % looks kind of like a
       line being filtered between two circles) and choose which table you want to  filter,  if  asked.   You'll
       then  see  a  list  of possible filters and a list of filters currently enabled for that table.  Type the
       names of filters you want to apply and press Enter.

       USER-DEFINED FILTERS

       If you type a name that doesn't exist, innotop will prompt you to create the filter.  Filters are easy to
       create if you know Perl, and not hard if you don't.  What you're doing  is  creating  a  subroutine  that
       returns  true  if  the row should be displayed.  The row is a hash reference passed to your subroutine as
       $set.

       For example, imagine you want to filter the processlist table so you only  see  queries  that  have  been
       running  more  than  five minutes.  Type a new name for your filter, and when prompted for the subroutine
       body, press TAB to initiate your terminal's auto-completion.  You'll see the names of the columns in  the
       "processlist" table (innotop generally tries to help you with auto-completion lists).  You want to filter
       on the 'time' column.  Type the text "$set->{time} > 300" to return true when the query is more than five
       minutes old.  That's all you need to do.

       In other words, the code you're typing is surrounded by an implicit context, which looks like this:

        sub filter {
           my ( $set ) = @_;
           # YOUR CODE HERE
        }

       If  your  filter  doesn't work, or if something else suddenly behaves differently, you might have made an
       error in your filter, and innotop is silently catching the error.  Try enabling "debug" to  make  innotop
       throw an error instead.

       QUICK-FILTERS

       innotop's quick-filters are a shortcut to create a temporary filter that doesn't persist when you restart
       innotop.   To  create a quick-filter, press the '/' key.  innotop will prompt you for the column name and
       filter text.  Again, you can use auto-completion on column names.  The filter text can be just  the  text
       you  want  to  "search for."  For example, to filter the "processlist" table on queries that refer to the
       products table, type '/' and then 'info product'.  Internally, the filter is compiled into  a  subroutine
       like this:

        sub filter {
           my ( $set ) = @_;
           $set->{info} =~ m/product/;
        }

       The  filter  text  can  actually  be  any  Perl  regular  expression, but of course a literal string like
       'product' works fine as a regular expression.

       What if you want the filter to discard matching rows, rather  than  showing  matching  rows?   If  you're
       familiar  with  Perl  regular  expressions, you might guess how to do this.  You have to use a zero-width
       negative lookahead assertion.  If you don't know what that means, don't worry.  Let's filter out all rows
       where the command is Gandalf.  Type the following:

        1. /
        2. cmd ^(?!Gandalf)

       Behind the scenes innotop compiles the quick-filter into a specially tagged filter that is otherwise like
       any other filter.  It just isn't saved to the configuration file.

       To clear quick-filters, press the '\' key and innotop will clear them all at once.

   SORTING
       innotop has sensible built-in defaults to sort the most important rows to the top  of  the  table.   Like
       anything else in innotop, you can customize how any table is sorted.

       To  start  the  sort  dialog, start the "TABLE EDITOR" with the '^' key, choose a table if necessary, and
       press the 's' key.  You'll see a list of columns you can use in the sort expression and the current  sort
       expression,  if  any.  Enter a list of columns by which you want to sort and press Enter.  If you want to
       reverse sort, prefix the column name with a minus sign.  For example, if you want to  sort  by  column  a
       ascending,  then  column  b descending, type 'a -b'.  You can also explicitly add a + in front of columns
       you want to sort ascending, but it's not required.

       Some modes have keys mapped to open this dialog directly, and to quickly reverse sort  direction.   Press
       '?' as usual to see which keys are mapped in any mode.

   GROUPING
       innotop  can  group,  or  aggregate,  rows  together (the terms are used interchangeably).  This is quite
       similar to an SQL GROUP BY clause.  You can specify to group on certain columns, or if you don't  specify
       any,  the entire set of rows is treated as one group.  This is quite like SQL so far, but unlike SQL, you
       can also select un-grouped columns.  innotop actually aggregates every column.  If you  don't  explicitly
       specify  a  grouping function, the default is 'first'.  This is basically a convenience so you don't have
       to specify an aggregate function for every column you want in the result.

       You can quickly toggle grouping on a table with the '=' key, which toggles its aggregate property.   This
       property doesn't persist to the config file.

       The columns by which the table is grouped are specified in its group_by property.  When you turn grouping
       on,  innotop places the group_by columns at the far left of the table, even if they're not supposed to be
       visible.  The rest of the visible columns appear in order after them.

       Two  tables  have  default  group_by  lists  and   a   count   column   built   in:   "processlist"   and
       "innodb_transactions".  The grouping is by connection and status, so you can quickly see how many queries
       or  transactions are in a given status on each server you're monitoring.  The time columns are aggregated
       as a sum; other columns are left at the default 'first' aggregation.

       By default, the table shown in "S: Variables & Status"  mode  also  uses  grouping  so  you  can  monitor
       variables and status across many servers.  The default aggregation function in this mode is 'avg'.

       Valid grouping functions are defined in the %agg_funcs hash.  They include

       first
           Returns the first element in the group.

       count
           Returns the number of elements in the group, including undefined elements, much like SQL's COUNT(*).

       avg Returns the average of defined elements in the group.

       sum Returns the sum of elements in the group.

       Here's  an  example  of  grouping  at  work.   Suppose  you have a very busy server with hundreds of open
       connections, and you want to see how many connections are in what status.  Using  the  built-in  grouping
       rules,  you  can  press  'Q'  to enter "Q: Query List" mode.  Press '=' to toggle grouping (if necessary,
       select the "processlist" table when prompted).

       Your display might now look like the following:

        Query List (? for help) localhost, 32:33, 0.11 QPS, 1 thd, 5.0.38-log

        CXN        Cmd        Cnt  ID      User   Host           Time   Query
        localhost  Query      49    12933  webusr localhost      19:38  SELECT * FROM
        localhost  Sending Da 23     2383  webusr localhost      12:43  SELECT col1,
        localhost  Sleep      120     140  webusr localhost    5:18:12
        localhost  Statistics 12    19213  webusr localhost      01:19  SELECT * FROM

       That's actually quite a worrisome picture.  You've got a  lot  of  idle  connections  (Sleep),  and  some
       connections  executing  queries  (Query  and  Sending  Data).   That's  okay,  but you also have a lot in
       Statistics status, collectively spending over a minute.  That means  the  query  optimizer  is  having  a
       really  hard time generating execution plans for your statements.  Something is wrong; it should normally
       take milliseconds to plan queries.  You might not have seen this pattern  if  you  didn't  look  at  your
       connections in aggregate.  (This is a made-up example, but it can happen in real life).

   PIVOTING
       innotop can pivot a table for more compact display, similar to a Pivot Table in a spreadsheet (also known
       as a crosstab).  Pivoting a table makes columns into rows.  Assume you start with this table:

        foo bar
        === ===
        1   3
        2   4

       After pivoting, the table will look like this:

        name set0 set1
        ==== ==== ====
        foo  1    2
        bar  3    4

       To  get reasonable results, you might need to group as well as pivoting.  innotop currently does this for
       "S: Variables & Status" mode.

   COLORS
       By default, innotop highlights rows with color so you can see at a glance which rows are more  important.
       You  can  customize the colorization rules and add your own to any table.  Open the table editor with the
       '^' key, choose a table if needed, and press 'o' to open the color editor dialog.

       The color editor dialog displays the rules applied to the table, in the order they are  evaluated.   Each
       row  is  evaluated  against  each  rule  to see if the rule matches the row; if it does, the row gets the
       specified color, and no further rules are evaluated.  The rules look like the following:

        state  eq  Locked       black on_red
        cmd    eq  Sleep        white
        user   eq  system user  white
        cmd    eq  Connect      white
        cmd    eq  Binlog Dump  white
        time   >   600          red
        time   >   120          yellow
        time   >   60           green
        time   >   30           cyan

       This is the default rule set for the "processlist" table.  In order of priority, these rules make  locked
       queries black on a red background, "gray out" connections from replication and sleeping queries, and make
       queries turn from cyan to red as they run longer.

       (For  some  reason,  the  ANSI  color code "white" is actually a light gray.  Your terminal's display may
       vary; experiment to find colors you like).

       You can use keystrokes to move the rules up and down, which  re-orders  their  priority.   You  can  also
       delete  rules  and  add new ones.  If you add a new rule, innotop prompts you for the column, an operator
       for the comparison, a value against which to compare the column, and  a  color  to  assign  if  the  rule
       matches.  There is auto-completion and prompting at each step.

       The  value  in  the  third  step  needs  to be correctly quoted.  innotop does not try to quote the value
       because it doesn't know whether it should treat the value as a string  or  a  number.   If  you  want  to
       compare  the  column  against a string, as for example in the first rule above, you should enter 'Locked'
       surrounded by quotes.  If you get an error message about a bareword,  you  probably  should  have  quoted
       something.

   EXPRESSIONS
       Expressions are at the core of how innotop works, and are what enables you to extend innotop as you wish.
       Recall  the  table  lifecycle explained in "TABLES".  Expressions are used in the earliest step, where it
       extracts values from a data source to form rows.

       It does this by calling a subroutine for each column, passing it the source data set, a  set  of  current
       values,  and  a set of previous values.  These are all needed so the subroutine can calculate things like
       the difference between this tick and the previous tick.

       The subroutines that  extract  the  data  from  the  set  are  compiled  from  expressions.   This  gives
       significantly  more power than just naming the values to fill the columns, because it allows the column's
       value to be calculated from whatever data is necessary, but avoids the  need  to  write  complicated  and
       lengthy Perl code.

       innotop  begins  with  a  string of text that can look as simple as a value's name or as complicated as a
       full-fledged Perl expression.  It looks at each 'bareword' token in the string and decides  whether  it's
       supposed  to  be a key into the $set hash.  A bareword is an unquoted value that isn't already surrounded
       by code-ish things like dollar signs or curly brackets.  If innotop decides that  the  bareword  isn't  a
       function  or  other  valid  Perl  code,  it  converts  it  into a hash access.  After the whole string is
       processed, innotop compiles a subroutine, like this:

        sub compute_column_value {
           my ( $set, $cur, $pre ) = @_;
           my $val = # EXPANDED STRING GOES HERE
           return $val;
        }

       Here's a concrete example, taken from the  header  table  "q_header"  in  "Q:  Query  List"  mode.   This
       expression  calculates  the qps, or Queries Per Second, column's values, from the values returned by SHOW
       STATUS:

        Questions/Uptime_hires

       innotop decides both words are barewords, and transforms this expression into the following Perl code:

        $set->{Questions}/$set->{Uptime_hires}

       When surrounded by the rest of the subroutine's code, this is executable Perl  that  calculates  a  high-
       resolution queries-per-second value.

       The arguments to the subroutine are named $set, $cur, and $pre.  In most cases, $set and $cur will be the
       same  values.   However,  if  "status_inc"  is  set, $cur will not be the same as $set, because $set will
       already contain values that are the incremental difference between $cur and $pre.

       Every column in innotop is computed by subroutines compiled in the same fashion.  There is no  difference
       between  innotop's  built-in  columns  and  user-defined  columns.   This  keeps  things  consistent  and
       predictable.

   TRANSFORMATIONS
       Transformations change how a value is rendered.  For example, they can  take  a  number  of  seconds  and
       display it in H:M:S format.  The following transformations are defined:

       commify
           Adds commas to large numbers every three decimal places.

       distill
           Distills SQL into verb-noun-noun format for quick comprehension.

       dulint_to_int
           Accepts  two  unsigned integers and converts them into a single longlong.  This is useful for certain
           operations with InnoDB, which uses two integers as transaction identifiers, for example.

       fuzzy_time
           Converts a number of seconds into a friendly, readable value like "1h35m".

       no_ctrl_char
           Removes quoted control characters from the value.  This is affected by  the  "charset"  configuration
           variable.

           This  transformation  only  operates within quoted strings, for example, values to a SET clause in an
           UPDATE statement.  It will not alter the UPDATE statement, but will collapse  the  quoted  string  to
           [BINARY] or [TEXT], depending on the charset.

       percent
           Converts  a  number  to a percentage by multiplying it by two, formatting it with "num_digits" digits
           after the decimal point, and optionally adding a percent sign (see "show_percent").

       secs_to_time
           Formats a number of seconds as time in days+hours:minutes:seconds format.

       set_precision
           Formats numbers with "num_digits" number of digits after the decimal point.

       shorten
           Formats a number as a unit of 1024 (k/M/G/T) and with "num_digits" number of digits after the decimal
           point.

   TABLE EDITOR
       The innotop table editor lets you customize tables with keystrokes.  You start the table editor with  the
       '^'  key.   If there's more than one table on the screen, it will prompt you to choose one of them.  Once
       you do, innotop will show you something like this:

        Editing table definition for Buffer Pool.  Press ? for help, q to quit.

        name               hdr          label                  src
        cxn                CXN          Connection from which  cxn
        buf_pool_size      Size         Buffer pool size       IB_bp_buf_poo
        buf_free           Free Bufs    Buffers free in the b  IB_bp_buf_fre
        pages_total        Pages        Pages total            IB_bp_pages_t
        pages_modified     Dirty Pages  Pages modified (dirty  IB_bp_pages_m
        buf_pool_hit_rate  Hit Rate     Buffer pool hit rate   IB_bp_buf_poo
        total_mem_alloc    Memory       Total memory allocate  IB_bp_total_m
        add_pool_alloc     Add'l Pool   Additional pool alloca  IB_bp_add_poo

       The first line shows which table you're editing, and reminds you again to press '?' for  a  list  of  key
       mappings.  The rest is a tabular representation of the table's columns, because that's likely what you're
       trying  to  edit.   However,  you  can edit more than just the table's columns; this screen can start the
       filter editor, color rule editor, and more.

       Each row in the display shows a single column in the table you're editing, along with  a  couple  of  its
       properties such as its header and source expression (see "EXPRESSIONS").

       The  key mappings are Vim-style, as in many other places.  Pressing 'j' and 'k' moves the highlight up or
       down.  You can then (d)elete or (e)dit the highlighted column.  You can also (a)dd a column to the table.
       This actually just activates one of the columns already defined for the table; it prompts you  to  choose
       from among the columns available but not currently displayed.  Finally, you can re-order the columns with
       the '+' and '-' keys.

       You  can  do  more  than just edit the columns with the table editor, you can also edit other properties,
       such as the table's sort expression and group-by expression.  Press '?' to see the full list, of course.

       If you want to really customize and create your own column, as opposed to just activating a built-in  one
       that's  not  currently displayed, press the (n)ew key, and innotop will prompt you for the information it
       needs:

       •   The column name: this needs to be a word without any funny characters, e.g. just letters, numbers and
           underscores.

       •   The column header: this is the label that appears at the top of the  column,  in  the  table  header.
           This can have spaces and funny characters, but be careful not to make it too wide and waste space on-
           screen.

       •   The  column's  data  source:  this  is  an  expression that determines what data from the source (see
           "TABLES") innotop will put into the column.  This can just be the name of an item in the  source,  or
           it can be a more complex expression, as described in "EXPRESSIONS".

       Once  you've entered the required data, your table has a new column.  There is no difference between this
       column and the built-in ones; it can have all the same properties and behaviors.  innotop will write  the
       column's definition to the configuration file, so it will persist across sessions.

       Here's  an  example:  suppose  you  want  to  track how many times your slaves have retried transactions.
       According to the MySQL manual, the Slave_retried_transactions status variable gives you that  data:  "The
       total  number of times since startup that the replication slave SQL thread has retried transactions. This
       variable was added in version 5.0.4."  This is appropriate to add to the "slave_sql_status" table.

       To add the column, switch to the replication-monitoring mode with the 'M' key, and press the '^'  key  to
       start  the  table  editor.  When prompted, choose slave_sql_status as the table, then press 'n' to create
       the  column.   Type  'retries'  as   the   column   name,   'Retries'   as   the   column   header,   and
       'Slave_retried_transactions'  as  the  source.   Now  the column is created, and you see the table editor
       screen again.  Press 'q' to exit the table editor, and you'll see your column at the end of the table.

VARIABLE SETS

       Variable sets are used in "S: Variables & Status" mode to define more easily what variables you  want  to
       monitor.   Behind  the  scenes they are compiled to a list of expressions, and then into a column list so
       they  can  be  treated  just  like  columns  in  any  other  table,  in  terms  of  data  extraction  and
       transformations.   However, you're protected from the tedious details by a syntax that ought to feel very
       natural to you: a SQL SELECT list.

       The data source for variable sets, and indeed the entire S mode, is the combination of SHOW STATUS,  SHOW
       VARIABLES,  and  SHOW  INNODB  STATUS.   Imagine  that  you had a huge table with one column per variable
       returned from those statements.  That's the data source for variable sets.  You can now query  this  data
       source just like you'd expect.  For example:

        Questions, Uptime, Questions/Uptime as QPS

       Behind the scenes innotop will split that variable set into three expressions, compile them and turn them
       into  a  table definition, then extract as usual.  This becomes a "variable set," or a "list of variables
       you want to monitor."

       innotop lets you name and save your variable sets, and writes them to the configuration  file.   You  can
       choose  which  variable set you want to see with the 'c' key, or activate the next and previous sets with
       the '>' and '<' keys.  There are many built-in variable sets as well, which should give you a good  start
       for  creating your own.  Press 'e' to edit the current variable set, or just to see how it's defined.  To
       create a new one, just press 'c' and type its name.

       You may want to use some of the functions listed in "TRANSFORMATIONS" to help  format  the  results.   In
       particular,  "set_precision"  is often useful to limit the number of digits you see.  Extending the above
       example, here's how:

        Questions, Uptime, set_precision(Questions/Uptime) as QPS

       Actually, this still needs a little more work.  If your "interval" is less than one second, you might  be
       dividing by zero because Uptime is incremental in this mode by default.  Instead, use Uptime_hires:

        Questions, Uptime, set_precision(Questions/Uptime_hires) as QPS

       This example is simple, but it shows how easy it is to choose which variables you want to monitor.

PLUGINS

       innotop  has  a  simple  but  powerful  plugin  mechanism  by which you can extend or modify its existing
       functionality, and add  new  functionality.   innotop's  plugin  functionality  is  event-based:  plugins
       register themselves to be called when events happen.  They then have a chance to influence the event.

       An  innotop  plugin  is  a  Perl  module  (.pm) file placed in innotop's "plugin_dir" directory.  On UNIX
       systems, you can place a symbolic link to the module instead of putting the actual file  there.   innotop
       automatically  discovers  files  named  "*.pm".   If  there  is  a  corresponding  entry in the "plugins"
       configuration file section, innotop loads and activates the plugin.

       The module must conform to innotop's plugin interface.  Additionally, the source code of the module  must
       be  written  in  such  a  way  that  innotop  can  inspect  the  file  and determine the package name and
       description.

   Package Source Convention
       innotop inspects the plugin module's source to determine the Perl package name.  It looks for a  line  of
       the  form  "package  Foo;"  and  if  found, considers the plugin's package name to be Foo.  Of course the
       package name can be a valid Perl package name such as Foo::Bar, with double colons (::) and so on.

       It also looks for a description in the source code, to make the plugin editor more  human-friendly.   The
       description  is  a  comment  line  of the form "# description: Foo", where "Foo" is the text innotop will
       consider to be the plugin's description.

   Plugin Interface
       The innotop plugin interface is quite simple: innotop expects the plugin to be an object-oriented  module
       it can call certain methods on.  The methods are

       new(%variables)
           This  is  the  plugin's  constructor.   It  is  passed  a  hash  of innotop's variables, which it can
           manipulate (see "Plugin Variables").  It must return a reference to the newly created plugin object.

           At construction time, innotop has only loaded the  general  configuration  and  created  the  default
           built-in  variables  with their default contents (which is quite a lot).  Therefore, the state of the
           program is exactly as in the innotop source code, plus the configuration variables from the "general"
           section in the config file.

           If your plugin manipulates the variables, it is changing global data, which is shared by innotop  and
           all  plugins.   Plugins  are  loaded in the order they're listed in the config file.  Your plugin may
           load before or after another plugin, so there is a potential  for  conflict  or  interaction  between
           plugins if they modify data other plugins use or modify.

       register_for_events()
           This  method  must  return  a  list of events in which the plugin is interested, if any.  See "Plugin
           Events" for the defined events.  If the plugin returns an event that's  not  defined,  the  event  is
           ignored.

       event handlers
           The  plugin  must  implement  a  method named the same as each event for which it has registered.  In
           other words, if the plugin returns qw(foo bar) from register_for_events(), it  must  have  foo()  and
           bar()  methods.   These  methods  are callbacks for the events.  See "Plugin Events" for more details
           about each event.

   Plugin Variables
       The plugin's constructor is passed a hash of  innotop's  variables,  which  it  can  manipulate.   It  is
       probably a good idea if the plugin object saves a copy of it for later use.  The variables are defined in
       the innotop variable %pluggable_vars, and are as follows:

       action_for
           A hashref of key mappings.  These are innotop's global hot-keys.

       agg_funcs
           A hashref of functions that can be used for grouping.  See "GROUPING".

       config
           The global configuration hash.

       connections
           A hashref of connection specifications.  These are just specifications of how to connect to a server.

       dbhs
           A hashref of innotop's database connections.  These are actual DBI connection objects.

       filters
           A hashref of filters applied to table rows.  See "FILTERS" for more.

       modes
           A hashref of modes.  See "MODES" for more.

       server_groups
           A hashref of server groups.  See "SERVER GROUPS".

       tbl_meta
           A hashref of innotop's table meta-data, with one entry per table (see "TABLES" for more information).

       trans_funcs
           A hashref of transformation functions.  See "TRANSFORMATIONS".

       var_sets
           A hashref of variable sets.  See "VARIABLE SETS".

   Plugin Events
       Each event is defined somewhere in the innotop source code.  When innotop runs that code, it executes the
       callback function for each plugin that expressed its interest in the event.  innotop passes some data for
       each event.  The events are defined in the %event_listener_for variable, and are as follows:

       extract_values($set, $cur, $pre, $tbl)
           This event occurs inside the function that extracts values from a data source.  The arguments are the
           set of values, the current values, the previous values, and the table name.

       set_to_tbl
           Events are defined at many places in this subroutine, which is responsible for turning an arrayref of
           hashrefs  into  an arrayref of lines that can be printed to the screen.  The events all pass the same
           data:  an  arrayref  of  rows  and  the  name  of  the  table  being   created.    The   events   are
           set_to_tbl_pre_filter,       set_to_tbl_pre_sort,set_to_tbl_pre_group,       set_to_tbl_pre_colorize,
           set_to_tbl_pre_transform, set_to_tbl_pre_pivot, set_to_tbl_pre_create, set_to_tbl_post_create.

       draw_screen($lines)
           This event occurs inside the subroutine that prints the lines to the screen.  $lines is  an  arrayref
           of strings.

   Simple Plugin Example
       The  easiest  way  to  explain the plugin functionality is probably with a simple example.  The following
       module adds a column to the beginning of every table and sets its value to 1.  (If  you  copy  and  paste
       this  example  code, be sure to remove the first space from each line; lines such as '# description' must
       not start with whitespace).

        use strict;
        use warnings FATAL => 'all';

        package Innotop::Plugin::Example;
        # description: Adds an 'example' column to every table

        sub new {
           my ( $class, %vars ) = @_;
           # Store reference to innotop's variables in $self
           my $self = bless { %vars }, $class;

           # Design the example column
           my $col = {
              hdr   => 'Example',
              just  => '',
              dec   => 0,
              num   => 1,
              label => 'Example',
              src   => 'example', # Get data from this column in the data source
              tbl   => '',
              trans => [],
           };

           # Add the column to every table.
           my $tbl_meta = $vars{tbl_meta};
           foreach my $tbl ( values %$tbl_meta ) {
              # Add the column to the list of defined columns
              $tbl->{cols}->{example} = $col;
              # Add the column to the list of visible columns
              unshift @{$tbl->{visible}}, 'example';
           }

           # Be sure to return a reference to the object.
           return $self;
        }

        # I'd like to be called when a data set is being rendered into a table, please.
        sub register_for_events {
           my ( $self ) = @_;
           return qw(set_to_tbl_pre_filter);
        }

        # This method will be called when the event fires.
        sub set_to_tbl_pre_filter {
           my ( $self, $rows, $tbl ) = @_;
           # Set the example column's data source to the value 1.
           foreach my $row ( @$rows ) {
              $row->{example} = 1;
           }
        }

        1;

   Plugin Editor
       The plugin editor lets you view the plugins innotop discovered and activate or  deactivate  them.   Start
       the editor by pressing $ to start the configuration editor from any mode.  Press the 'p' key to start the
       plugin  editor.   You'll  see  a list of plugins innotop discovered.  You can use the 'j' and 'k' keys to
       move the highlight to the desired one, then press the * key to toggle it active or  inactive.   Exit  the
       editor and restart innotop for the changes to take effect.

SQL STATEMENTS

       innotop uses a limited set of SQL statements to retrieve data from MySQL for display.  The statements are
       customized  depending  on the server version against which they are executed; for example, on MySQL 5 and
       newer, INNODB_STATUS executes "SHOW ENGINE INNODB STATUS", while on earlier versions  it  executes  "SHOW
       INNODB STATUS".  The statements are as follows:

        Statement           SQL executed
        =================== ===============================
        INDEX_STATISTICS    SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.INDEX_STATISTICS
        INNODB_STATUS       SHOW [ENGINE] INNODB STATUS
        KILL_CONNECTION     KILL
        KILL_QUERY          KILL QUERY
        OPEN_TABLES         SHOW OPEN TABLES
        PROCESSLIST         SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST
        SHOW_MASTER_LOGS    SHOW MASTER LOGS
        SHOW_MASTER_STATUS  SHOW MASTER STATUS
        SHOW_SLAVE_STATUS   SHOW SLAVE STATUS
        SHOW_STATUS         SHOW [GLOBAL] STATUS
        SHOW_VARIABLES      SHOW [GLOBAL] VARIABLES
        TABLE_STATISTICS    SELECT * FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TABLE_STATISTICS

DATA SOURCES

       Each  time  innotop extracts values to create a table (see "EXPRESSIONS" and "TABLES"), it does so from a
       particular data source.  Largely because of the complex data extracted from SHOW INNODB STATUS,  this  is
       slightly  messy.   SHOW  INNODB  STATUS contains a mixture of single values and repeated values that form
       nested data sets.

       Whenever innotop fetches data from MySQL, it adds two extra bits to each set: cxn and Uptime_hires.   cxn
       is the name of the connection from which the data came.  Uptime_hires is a high-resolution version of the
       server's Uptime status variable, which is important if your "interval" setting is sub-second.

       Here are the kinds of data sources from which data is extracted:

       STATUS_VARIABLES
           This  is  the  broadest  category,  into  which  the  most  kinds  of  data fall.  It begins with the
           combination of SHOW STATUS and SHOW VARIABLES, but other sources  may  be  included  as  needed,  for
           example,  SHOW  MASTER  STATUS and SHOW SLAVE STATUS, as well as many of the non-repeated values from
           SHOW INNODB STATUS.

       DEADLOCK_LOCKS
           This data is extracted from the transaction list in the LATEST  DETECTED  DEADLOCK  section  of  SHOW
           INNODB STATUS.  It is nested two levels deep: transactions, then locks.

       DEADLOCK_TRANSACTIONS
           This data is from the transaction list in the LATEST DETECTED DEADLOCK section of SHOW INNODB STATUS.
           It is nested one level deep.

       EXPLAIN
           This data is from the result set returned by EXPLAIN.

       INNODB_BLOCKED_BLOCKER
           This data is from the INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables related to InnoDB locks and the processlist.

       INNODB_TRANSACTIONS
           This data is from the TRANSACTIONS section of SHOW INNODB STATUS.

       IO_THREADS
           This data is from the list of threads in the FILE I/O section of SHOW INNODB STATUS.

       INNODB_LOCKS
           This data is from the TRANSACTIONS section of SHOW INNODB STATUS and is nested two levels deep.

       MASTER_SLAVE
           This data is from the combination of SHOW MASTER STATUS and SHOW SLAVE STATUS.

       OPEN_TABLES
           This data is from SHOW OPEN TABLES.

       PROCESSLIST
           This data is from SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST.

       PROCESSLIST_STATS
           This  data is from SHOW FULL PROCESSLIST and computes stats such as the maximum time a user query has
           been running, and how many user queries are running. A "user query" excludes replication threads.

       OS_WAIT_ARRAY
           This data is from the SEMAPHORES section of SHOW INNODB STATUS and is  nested  one  level  deep.   It
           comes from the lines that look like this:

            --Thread 1568861104 has waited at btr0cur.c line 424 ....

MYSQL PRIVILEGES

       •   You must connect to MySQL as a user who has the SUPER privilege for many of the functions.

       •   If  you  don't  have the SUPER privilege, you can still run some functions, but you won't necessarily
           see all the same data.

       •   You need the PROCESS privilege to see the list of currently running queries in Q mode.

       •   You need special privileges to start and stop slave servers.

       •   You need appropriate privileges to create and  drop  the  deadlock  tables  if  needed  (see  "SERVER
           CONNECTIONS").

SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

       You  need  Perl  to  run  innotop,  of  course.   You  also  need  a few Perl modules: DBI, DBD::MariaDB,
       Term::ReadKey, and Time::HiRes.  These should be included with most Perl distributions, but in case  they
       are not, I recommend using versions distributed with your operating system or Perl distribution, not from
       CPAN.  Term::ReadKey in particular has been known to cause problems if installed from CPAN.

       If  you  have Term::ANSIColor, innotop will use it to format headers more readably and compactly.  (Under
       Microsoft Windows, you also need Win32::Console::ANSI for terminal formatting codes to be  honored).   If
       you install Term::ReadLine, preferably Term::ReadLine::Gnu, you'll get nice auto-completion support.

       I  run  innotop  on  Gentoo  GNU/Linux, Debian and Ubuntu, and I've had feedback from people successfully
       running it on Red Hat, CentOS, Solaris, and Mac OSX.  I don't see any reason why it won't work  on  other
       UNIX-ish  operating systems, but I don't know for sure.  It also runs on Windows under ActivePerl without
       problem.

       innotop has been used on MySQL versions 3.23.58, 4.0.27, 4.1.0, 4.1.22, 5.0.26, 5.1.15, and 5.2.3.  If it
       doesn't run correctly for you, that is a bug that should be reported.

FILES

       $HOMEDIR/.innotop and/or /etc/innotop are used to store configuration  information.   Files  include  the
       configuration  file  innotop.conf, the core_dump file which contains verbose error messages if "debug" is
       enabled, and the plugins/ subdirectory.

GLOSSARY OF TERMS

       tick
           A tick is a refresh event, when innotop re-fetches data from connections and displays it.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       The following people and organizations are acknowledged for various reasons.  Hopefully no one  has  been
       forgotten.

       Aaron  Racine, Allen K. Smith, Aurimas Mikalauskas, Bartosz Fenski, Brian Miezejewski, Christian Hammers,
       Cyril Scetbon, Dane Miller, David Multer, Dr. Frank Ullrich, Giuseppe Maxia, Google.com Site  Reliability
       Engineers,  Google  Code,  Jan Pieter Kunst, Jari Aalto, Jay Pipes, Jeremy Zawodny, Johan Idren, Kristian
       Kohntopp, Lenz Grimmer, Maciej Dobrzanski, Michiel Betel, MySQL AB, Paul McCullagh,  Sebastien  Estienne,
       Sourceforge.net,  Steven  Kreuzer, The Gentoo MySQL Team, Trevor Price, Yaar Schnitman, and probably more
       people that have not been included.

       (If your name has been misspelled, it's probably out of fear of  putting  international  characters  into
       this documentation; earlier versions of Perl might not be able to compile it then).

COPYRIGHT, LICENSE AND WARRANTY

       This program is copyright (c) 2006 Baron Schwartz.  Feedback and improvements are welcome.

       THIS  PROGRAM  IS  PROVIDED  "AS  IS"  AND  WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT
       LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY 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., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1335 USA.

       Execute innotop and press '!' to see this information at any time.

AUTHOR

       Originally written by Baron Schwartz; currently maintained by Aaron Racine.

BUGS

       You   can   report   bugs,   ask   for   improvements,   and   get   other   help    and    support    at
       <https://github.com/innotop/innotop>.   There  are  mailing  lists, a source code browser, a bug tracker,
       etc.  Please use these instead of contacting the maintainer or author  directly,  as  it  makes  our  job
       easier  and  benefits  others  if  the  discussions  are permanent and public.  Of course, if you need to
       contact us in private, please do.

perl v5.20.2                                       2017-01-23                                         INNOTOP(1)