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PERCONA-TOOLKIT(1)    User Contributed Perl Documentation   PERCONA-TOOLKIT(1)

NAME
       percona-toolkit - Advanced command-line tools for MySQL

DESCRIPTION
       Percona Toolkit is a collection of advanced command-line tools used by
       Percona (<http://www.percona.com/>) support staff to perform a variety
       of MySQL and system tasks that are too difficult or complex to perform
       manually.

       These tools are ideal alternatives to private or "one-off" scripts
       because they are professionally developed, formally tested, and fully
       documented.  They are also fully self-contained, so installation is
       quick and easy and no libraries are installed.

       Percona Toolkit is derived from Maatkit and Aspersa, two of the best-
       known toolkits for MySQL server administration.	It is developed and
       supported by Percona.  For more information and other free, open-source
       software developed by Percona, visit
       <http://www.percona.com/software/>.

TOOLS
       This release of Percona Toolkit includes the following tools:

       pt-align
	   Align output from other tools to columns.

       pt-archiver
	   Archive rows from a MySQL table into another table or a file.

       pt-config-diff
	   Diff MySQL configuration files and server variables.

       pt-deadlock-logger
	   Log MySQL deadlocks.

       pt-diskstats
	   An interactive I/O monitoring tool for GNU/Linux.

       pt-duplicate-key-checker
	   Find duplicate indexes and foreign keys on MySQL tables.

       pt-fifo-split
	   Split files and pipe lines to a fifo without really splitting.

       pt-find
	   Find MySQL tables and execute actions, like GNU find.

       pt-fingerprint
	   Convert queries into fingerprints.

       pt-fk-error-logger
	   Log MySQL foreign key errors.

       pt-heartbeat
	   Monitor MySQL replication delay.

       pt-index-usage
	   Read queries from a log and analyze how they use indexes.

       pt-ioprofile
	   Watch process IO and print a table of file and I/O activity.

       pt-kill
	   Kill MySQL queries that match certain criteria.

       pt-mext
	   Look at many samples of MySQL "SHOW GLOBAL STATUS" side-by-side.

       pt-mysql-summary
	   Summarize MySQL information nicely.

       pt-online-schema-change
	   ALTER tables without locking them.

       pt-pmp
	   Aggregate GDB stack traces for a selected program.

       pt-query-digest
	   Analyze MySQL queries from logs, processlist, and tcpdump.

       pt-show-grants
	   Canonicalize and print MySQL grants so you can effectively
	   replicate, compare and version-control them.

       pt-sift
	   Browses files created by pt-stalk.

       pt-slave-delay
	   Make a MySQL slave server lag behind its master.

       pt-slave-find
	   Find and print replication hierarchy tree of MySQL slaves.

       pt-slave-restart
	   Watch and restart MySQL replication after errors.

       pt-stalk
	   Collect forensic data about MySQL when problems occur.

       pt-summary
	   Summarize system information nicely.

       pt-table-checksum
	   Verify MySQL replication integrity.

       pt-table-sync
	   Synchronize MySQL table data efficiently.

       pt-table-usage
	   Analyze how queries use tables.

       pt-upgrade
	   Verify that query results are identical on different servers.

       pt-variable-advisor
	   Analyze MySQL variables and advise on possible problems.

       pt-visual-explain
	   Format EXPLAIN output as a tree.

       For more free, open-source software developed Percona, visit
       <http://www.percona.com/software/>.

SPECIAL OPTION TYPES
       Tool options use standard types ("int", "string", etc.) as well as
       these special types:

       time
	   Time values are seconds by default.	For example, "--run-time 60"
	   means 60 seconds.  Time values support an optional suffix: s
	   (seconds), m (minutes), h (hours), d (days).	 "--run-time 1m" means
	   1 minute (the same as 60 seconds).

       size
	   Size values are bytes by default.  For example, "--disk-space-free
	   1024" means 1 Kibibyte.  Size values support an optional suffix: k
	   (Kibibyte), M (Mebibyte), G (Gibibyte).

       DSN See "DSN (DATA SOURCE NAME) SPECIFICATIONS".

       Hash, hash, Array, array
	   Hash, hash, Array, and array values are comma-separated lists of
	   values.  For example, "--ignore-tables foo,bar" ignores tables
	   "foo" and "bar".

CONFIGURATION FILES
       Percona Toolkit tools can read options from configuration files.	 The
       configuration file syntax is simple and direct, and bears some
       resemblances to the MySQL command-line client tools.  The configuration
       files all follow the same conventions.

       Internally, what actually happens is that the lines are read from the
       file and then added as command-line options and arguments to the tool,
       so just think of the configuration files as a way to write your command
       lines.

   SYNTAX
       The syntax of the configuration files is as follows:

       ·   Whitespace followed by a hash sign (#) signifies that the rest of
	   the line is a comment.  This is deleted.  For example:

       ·   Whitespace is stripped from the beginning and end of all lines.

       ·   Empty lines are ignored.

       ·   Each line is permitted to be in either of the following formats:

	     option
	     option=value

	   Do not prefix the option with "--".	Do not quote the values, even
	   if it has spaces; value are literal.	 Whitespace around the equals
	   sign is deleted during processing.

       ·   Only long options are recognized.

       ·   A line containing only two hyphens signals the end of option
	   parsing.  Any further lines are interpreted as additional arguments
	   (not options) to the program.

   EXAMPLE
       This config file for pt-stalk,

	 # Config for pt-stalk
	 variable=Threads_connected
	 cycles=2  # trigger if problem seen twice in a row
	 --
	 --user daniel

       is equivalent to this command line:

	 pt-stalk --variable Threads_connected --cycles 2 -- --user daniel

       Options after "--" are passed literally to mysql and mysqladmin.

   READ ORDER
       The tools read several configuration files in order:

       1.  The global Percona Toolkit configuration file,
	   /etc/percona-toolkit/percona-toolkit.conf.  All tools read this
	   file, so you should only add options to it that you want to apply
	   to all tools.

       2.  The global tool-specific configuration file,
	   /etc/percona-toolkit/TOOL.conf, where "TOOL" is a tool name like
	   "pt-query-digest".  This file is named after the specific tool
	   you're using, so you can add options that apply only to that tool.

       3.  The user's own Percona Toolkit configuration file,
	   $HOME/.percona-toolkit.conf.	 All tools read this file, so you
	   should only add options to it that you want to apply to all tools.

       4.  The user's tool-specific configuration file, $HOME/.TOOL.conf,
	   where "TOOL" is a tool name like "pt-query-digest".	This file is
	   named after the specific tool you're using, so you can add options
	   that apply only to that tool.

   SPECIFYING
       There is a special "--config" option, which lets you specify which
       configuration files Percona Toolkit should read.	 You specify a comma-
       separated list of files.	 However, its behavior is not like other
       command-line options.  It must be given first on the command line,
       before any other options.  If you try to specify it anywhere else, it
       will cause an error.  Also, you cannot specify
       "--config=/path/to/file"; you must specify the option and the path to
       the file separated by whitespace without an equal sign between them,
       like:

	 --config /path/to/file

       If you don't want any configuration files at all, specify "--config ''"
       to provide an empty list of files.

DSN (DATA SOURCE NAME) SPECIFICATIONS
       Percona Toolkit tools use DSNs to specify how to create a DBD
       connection to a MySQL server.  A DSN is a comma-separated string of
       "key=value" parts, like:

	 h=host1,P=3306,u=bob

       The standard key parts are shown below, but some tools add additional
       key parts.  See each tool's documentation for details.

       Some tools do not use DSNs but still connect to MySQL using options
       like "--host", "--user", and "--password".  Such tools uses these
       options to create a DSN automatically, behind the scenes.

       Other tools uses both DSNs and options like the ones above.  The
       options provide defaults for all DSNs that do not specify the option's
       corresponding key part.	For example, if DSN "h=host1" and option
       "--port=12345" are specified, then the tool automatically adds
       "P=12345" to DSN.

   ESCAPING VALUES
       DSNs are usually specified on the command line, so shell quoting and
       escaping must be taken into account.  Special characters, like asterisk
       ("*"), need to be quoted and/or escaped properly to be passed as
       literal characters in DSN values.

       Since DSN parts are separated by commas, literal commas in DSN values
       must be escaped with a single backslash ("\").  And since a backslash
       is the escape character for most shells, two backslashes are required
       to pass a literal backslash.  For example, if the username is literally
       "my,name", it must be specified as "my\\,name" on most shells.  This
       applies to DSNs and DSN-related options like "--user".

   KEY PARTS
       Many of the tools add more parts to DSNs for special purposes, and
       sometimes override parts to make them do something slightly different.
       However, all the tools support at least the following:

       A   Default character set for the connection ("SET NAMES").

	   Enables character set settings in Perl and MySQL.  If the value is
	   "utf8", sets Perl's binmode on STDOUT to utf8, passes the
	   "mysql_enable_utf8" option to DBD::mysql, and runs "SET NAMES
	   'utf8'" after connecting to MySQL.  Other values set binmode on
	   STDOUT without the utf8 layer and run "SET NAMES" after connecting
	   to MySQL.

	   Unfortunately, there is no way from within Perl itself to specify
	   the client library's character set.	"SET NAMES" only affects the
	   server; if the client library's settings don't match, there could
	   be problems.	 You can use the defaults file to specify the client
	   library's character set, however.  See the description of the F
	   part below.

       D   Default database to use when connecting.  Tools may "USE" a
	   different databases while running.

       F   Defaults file for the MySQL client library (the C client library
	   used by DBD::mysql, not Percona Toolkit itself).  All tools all
	   read the "[client]" section within the defaults file.  If you omit
	   this, the standard defaults files will be read in the usual order.
	   "Standard" varies from system to system, because the filenames to
	   read are compiled into the client library.  On Debian systems, for
	   example, it's usually "/etc/mysql/my.cnf" then "~/.my.cnf".	If you
	   place the following in "~/.my.cnf", you won't have to specify your
	   MySQL username and password on the command line:

	     [client]
	     user=your_user_name
	     pass=secret

	   Omitting the F part is usually the right thing to do.  As long as
	   you have configured your "~/.my.cnf" correctly, that will result in
	   tools connecting automatically without needing a username or
	   password.

	   You can also specify a default character set in the defaults file.
	   Unlike the "A" part described above, this will actually instruct
	   the client library (DBD::mysql) to change the character set it uses
	   internally, which cannot be accomplished any other way.

       h   MySQL hostname or IP address to connect to.

       L   Explicitly enable LOAD DATA LOCAL INFILE.

	   For some reason, some vendors compile libmysql without the
	   --enable-local-infile option, which disables the statement.	This
	   can lead to weird situations, like the server allowing LOCAL
	   INFILE, but the client throwing exceptions if it's used.

	   However, as long as the server allows LOAD DATA, clients can easily
	   re-enable it; see
	   <https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/load-data-local.html> and
	   <http://search.cpan.org/~capttofu/DBD-mysql/lib/DBD/mysql.pm>.
	   This option does exactly that.

       p   MySQL password to use when connecting.

       P   Port number to use for the connection.  Note that the usual
	   special-case behaviors apply: if you specify "localhost" as your
	   hostname on Unix systems, the connection actually uses a socket
	   file, not a TCP/IP connection, and thus ignores the port.

       S   MySQL socket file to use for the connection (on Unix systems).

       u   MySQL username to use when connecting, if not current system user.

   BAREWORD
       Many of the tools will let you specify a DSN as a single word, without
       any "key=value" syntax.	This is called a 'bareword'.  How this is
       handled is tool-specific, but it is usually interpreted as the "h"
       part.  The tool's "--help" output will tell you the behavior for that
       tool.

   PROPAGATION
       Many tools will let you propagate values from one DSN to the next, so
       you don't have to specify all the parts for each DSN.  For example, if
       you want to specify a username and password for each DSN, you can
       connect to three hosts as follows:

	h=host1,u=fred,p=wilma host2 host3

       This is tool-specific.

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

	  PTDEBUG=1 pt-table-checksum ... > FILE 2>&1

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

SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
       Most tools require:

       ·   Perl v5.8 or newer

       ·   Bash v3 or newer

       ·   Core Perl modules like Time::HiRes

       Tools that connect to MySQL require:

       ·   Perl modules DBI and DBD::mysql

       ·   MySQL 5.0 or newer

       Percona Toolkit officially supports and is tested on many popular Linux
       distributions and MySQL 5.0 through 5.6; see http://goo.gl/srHm7 for
       the list of supported platforms and versions.

BUGS
       Please report bugs at <https://bugs.launchpad.net/percona-toolkit>.
       Include the following information in your bug report:

       ·   Complete command-line used to run the tool

       ·   Tool "--version"

       ·   MySQL version of all servers involved

       ·   Output from the tool including STDERR

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

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

AUTHORS
       Baron Schwartz
	   Baron created Maatkit, from which Percona Toolkit was forked.  Many
	   of the tools and modules were originally written by Baron.

       Daniel Nichter
	   Daniel has been the project's lead developer since 2008.  He is
	   employed by Percona.

       Frank Cizmich
	   Frank is a full-time Percona Toolkit developer employed by Percona.

       Others
	   Many people have contributed code over the years.  See each tool's
	   "AUTHORS" section for details.

COPYRIGHT, LICENSE, AND WARRANTY
       Percona Toolkit is copyright 2011-2015 Percona LLC and/or its
       affiliates, et al.  See each program's documentation for complete
       copyright notices.

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

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

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

VERSION
       Percona Toolkit v2.2.14 released 2015-04-10

perl v5.20.2			  2015-04-10		    PERCONA-TOOLKIT(1)
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