As just described, while the transaction and locking data is
        correct and consistent when these INFORMATION_SCHEMA tables
        are populated, the underlying data changes so fast that similar
        glimpses at other, similarly fast-changing data, may not be in
        sync. Thus, you should be careful in comparing the data in the
        InnoDB transaction and locking tables with that in the
        
        MySQL table PROCESSLIST . The data from the
        PROCESSLIST table does not come from the same snapshot as the
        data about locking and transactions. Even if you issue a single
        SELECT (JOINing
        INNODB_TRX and PROCESSLIST, for example), the content of
        those tables is generally not consistent. INNODB_TRX may
        reference rows that are not present in PROCESSLIST or the
        currently executing SQL query of a transaction, shown in
        INNODB_TRX.TRX_QUERY may be different from
        the one in PROCESSLIST.INFO. The query in
        INNODB_TRX is always consistent with the rest of INNODB_TRX,
        INNODB_LOCKS and INNODB_LOCK_WAITS when the data comes from
        the same snapshot.
      
This is the User’s Guide for InnoDB storage engine 1.1 for MySQL 5.5, generated on 2010-04-13 (revision: 19994) .

