KILL [CONNECTION | QUERY] processlist_id
        Each connection to mysqld runs in a separate
        thread. You can kill a thread with the KILL
         statement.
      processlist_id
        Thread processlist identifiers can be determined from the
        ID column of the
        INFORMATION_SCHEMA
        PROCESSLIST table, the
        Id column of SHOW
        PROCESSLIST output, and the
        PROCESSLIST_ID column of the Performance
        Schema threads table. The value for
        the current thread is returned by the
        CONNECTION_ID() function.
      
        KILL permits an optional
        CONNECTION or QUERY
        modifier:
KILL CONNECTIONis the same asKILLwith no modifier: It terminates the connection associated with the givenprocesslist_id, after terminating any statement the connection is executing.KILL QUERYterminates the statement the connection is currently executing, but leaves the connection itself intact.
        The ability to see which threads are available to be killed
        depends on the PROCESS privilege:
        The ability to kill threads and statements depends on the
        SUPER privilege:
You can also use the mysqladmin processlist and mysqladmin kill commands to examine and kill threads.
          You cannot use KILL with the
          Embedded MySQL Server library because the embedded server
          merely runs inside the threads of the host application. It
          does not create any connection threads of its own.
        When you use KILL, a
        thread-specific kill flag is set for the thread. In most cases,
        it might take some time for the thread to die because the kill
        flag is checked only at specific intervals:
During
SELECToperations, forORDER BYandGROUP BYloops, the flag is checked after reading a block of rows. If the kill flag is set, the statement is aborted.ALTER TABLEoperations that make a table copy check the kill flag periodically for each few copied rows read from the original table. If the kill flag was set, the statement is aborted and the temporary table is deleted.The
KILLstatement returns without waiting for confirmation, but the kill flag check aborts the operation within a reasonably small amount of time. Aborting the operation to perform any necessary cleanup also takes some time.During
UPDATEorDELETEoperations, the kill flag is checked after each block read and after each updated or deleted row. If the kill flag is set, the statement is aborted. If you are not using transactions, the changes are not rolled back.GET_LOCK()aborts and returnsNULL.If the thread is in the table lock handler (state:
Locked), the table lock is quickly aborted.If the thread is waiting for free disk space in a write call, the write is aborted with a “disk full” error message.
          Killing a REPAIR TABLE or
          OPTIMIZE TABLE operation on a
          MyISAM table results in a table that is
          corrupted and unusable. Any reads or writes to such a table
          fail until you optimize or repair it again (without
          interruption).