The timestamp is when the query was written to the log. You will have to subtract the query time to get when the query began. Unless you have queries that are running for long durations the timestamp and actual time should be close. Are you performing reads or writes to this disk? Have you captured or monitored the CPU and memory usage during this time?
-----Original Message----- From: Ronan Lucio To: Victor Pendleton; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 4/20/04 3:34 PM Subject: Re: Process Monitoring Victor, > Do you have any around the approximate time? I know the time that the problem occurred. In the slow-log, it shows the line "Time". Is it line the hour the query ran? > The timestamp will be will the > query was written to the slow log and how long it took. What are the > symptoms that lead you to believe that it is a slow running query? Actually, I donīt know if the problemīs origem is a slow query. Iīd like to know what query was running in such moment to see if exist a query receiving too many data. Thanks, Ronan -- MySQL General Mailing List For list archives: http://lists.mysql.com/mysql To unsubscribe: http://lists.mysql.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]