Oracle 5.0 Reference Manual page 2690

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Mysqlnd query result cache plugin (mysqlnd_qc)
["run_time"]=>
int(0)
["store_time"]=>
int(8)
["eligible_for_caching"]=>
bool(false)
["no_table"]=>
bool(false)
["was_added"]=>
bool(false)
["was_already_in_cache"]=>
bool(false)
}
}
Assorted information is given in the trace. Among them timings and the origin of the query call. The
origin property holds a code backtrace to identify the source of the query. The depth of the backtrace
can be limited with the PHP configuration directive mysqlnd_qc.query_trace_bt_depth. The
default depth is 3.
Example 20.314. Setting the backtrace depth with the
setting
mysqlnd_qc.enable_qc=1
mysqlnd_qc.collect_query_trace=1
<?php
/* connect to MySQL */
$mysqli = new mysqli("host", "user", "password", "schema", "port", "socket");
$mysqli->query("DROP TABLE IF EXISTS test");
$mysqli->query("CREATE TABLE test(id INT)");
$mysqli->query("INSERT INTO test(id) VALUES (1), (2), (3)");
/* dummy queries to fill the query trace */
for ($i = 0; $i < 3; $i++) {
$res = $mysqli->query("SELECT id FROM test WHERE id = " . $mysqli->real_escape_string($i));
$res->free();
}
$trace = mysqlnd_qc_get_query_trace_log();
$summary = array();
foreach ($trace as $entry) {
if (!isset($summary[$entry['query']])) {
$summary[$entry['query']] = array(
"executions" => 1,
"time"
);
} else {
$summary[$entry['query']]['executions']++;
$summary[$entry['query']]['time'] += $entry['run_time'] + $entry['store_time'];
}
}
foreach ($summary as $query => $details) {
printf("%45s: %5dms (%dx)\n",
$query, $details['time'], $details['executions']);
}
?>
The above examples will output something similar to:
=> $entry['run_time'] + $entry['store_time'],
2670
mysqlnd_qc.query_trace_bt_depth
ini

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