pcp_proc_info
Options
-
-P
PID
--process-id= PID -
PID of Pgpool-II child process.
- Other options
-
See pcp_common_options .
Example
Here is an example output:
$ pcp_proc_info -h localhost -p 9898 -U postgres 3815 postgres_db postgres 1150769932 1150767351 3 0 1 1467 1 postgres_db postgres 1150769932 1150767351 3 0 1 1468 1
The result is in the following order:
1. connected database name 2. connected user name 3. process start-up timestamp 4. connection created timestamp 5. protocol major version 6. protocol minor version 7. connection-reuse counter 8. PostgreSQL backend process id 9. 1 if frontend conncted 0 if not
If there is no connection to the backends, nothing will be displayed. If there are multiple connections, one connection's information will be displayed on each line multiple times. Timestamps are displayed in EPOCH format.
The --verbose option can help understand the output. For example:
$ pcp_proc_info --verbose -U postgres 3815 Database : postgres_db Username : postgres Start time : 1150769932 Creation time: 1150767351 Major : 3 Minor : 0 Counter : 1 PID : 1467 Connected : 1 Database : postgres_db Username : postgres Start time : 1150769932 Creation time: 1150767351 Major : 3 Minor : 0 Counter : 1 PID : 1468 Connected : 1