This utility is deprecated in MySQL 5.6.17 and removed in MySQL 5.7
mysql_find_rows reads files containing SQL
statements and extracts statements that match a given regular
expression or that contain USE
or
db_nameSET
statements. The utility expects statements to be terminated with
semicolon (;) characters.
Invoke mysql_find_rows like this:
shell> mysql_find_rows [options] [file_name ...]
Each file_name argument should be the
name of file containing SQL statements. If no file names are
given, mysql_find_rows reads the standard
input.
Examples:
mysql_find_rows --regexp=problem_table --rows=20 < update.log mysql_find_rows --regexp=problem_table update-log.1 update-log.2
mysql_find_rows supports the following options:
Display a help message and exit.
Display queries that match the pattern.
Quit after displaying
Nqueries.Do not include
USEstatements in the output.db_nameStart output from this row.