Backing up and restoring MySQL database
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MySQL database backup
For large production databases refer CentOS 8.x mariadb taking backup of large production databases
To backup MySQL database one can use 'mysqldump' program. Syntax for mysqldump is:
mysqldump -u <mysql_username> -p <database_name> > <database_name>.sql
To automatically compress the database before it is stored on disk the output of mysqldump can be passed through bzip2 as:
mysqldump -u <mysql_username> -p <database_name> | bzip2 > <database_name>.sql.bz2
Dump each database in separate dump file
If a system has multiple MySQL databases we can dump each on a separate file using:
#!/bin/bash cd /opt for A in $(mysql -N --batch -e 'show databases'); do mysqldump --single-transaction --quick --skip-lock-tables $A | bzip2 > database-backups/$A.sql.bz2 ; done exit 0
We can call such backup script via rsnapshot to ensure that during every run of rsnapshot we get a separate DB backup file for each database.
Restoring MySQL database
To restore MySQL database we can use 'mysql' command line client. Command to restore database is:
cat <dump_file>.sql | mysql -u <mysql_username> -p <database_name>
To restore a compressed database along with password we can take help of 'bunzip2' and 'sshpass' utilities in following manner:
bunzip2 -c <dump_file>.sql.bz2 | sshpass -p <mysql_database_password> mysql -u <mysql_username> -p <database_name>
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