You have 2 options here.  The Mysql General Query Log

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/query-log.html

Alternatively, if it's windows ( I ask because of the ODBC connector)
and it's easier for you,
I haven't done windows in awhile, but I suspect you might find what
you want via that connector.  I seem to recall that you can, via
control panel, set debug options on the connector which will happily
create enormous logs of every query passing through.

best of luck.

 - md

 (side-note: I would not recommend hosting data services without a DBA
to manage them)

On Wed, Jun 9, 2010 at 6:48 AM, Bill Dossett <bill.doss...@pb.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm a real newb at admining MySQL.    We have a customer that uses our 
> software that scripts queries and they are using a MySQL backend.
>
> They have sent us a test script and their database and I have setup a test 
> server, loaded the data setup an ODBC connection and this all works fine.
>
> The first job they sent us appears to be working fine, but the second one 
> throws an error saying the query is empty back at us.
>
> I am an IT manager and I don't know much about how our software scripting 
> system works or even if there is a debugger, so I was just trying to attack 
> the problem from the server side to see if I could see the query at the 
> server...   I thought profiling might help, but that only helps me with the 
> session that I am connected to as far as I can see anyway, I'm not seeing any 
> of the queries that are being generated by the remote seesion through the 
> odbc connector...
>
> Is there some way the I can see the queries that are being run against this 
> server from the remote session?  As this is a test system and it's doing very 
> little, I was hoping that if I could see the query I might get some insight 
> of what might be wrong in the script without having to learn how our whole 
> scripting software system works.
>
> I have done this with the MSSQL profiler in the past to locate slow queries 
> in the past, so I assume it is possible and I just can't make the documents 
> on the MySQL profiler make sense to me.
>
> Thanks for any help anyone could provide on this as I've got people that 
> expect miracles in the next 5 minutes here!
>
> Bill
>
>



-- 
 - michael dykman
 - mdyk...@gmail.com

 May the Source be with you.

--
MySQL General Mailing List
For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql
To unsubscribe:    http://lists.mysql.com/mysql?unsub=arch...@jab.org

Reply via email to