Comrite Unix Man page/Perldoc/Info page, English-Chinese Dictionary, Chinese-English Dictionary

mysqlhotcopy

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


 
MYSQLHOTCOPY(1)       User Contributed Perl Documentation      MYSQLHOTCOPY(1)



NAME
       mysqlhotcopy - fast on-line hot-backup utility for local MySQL
       databases and tables

SYNOPSIS
         mysqlhotcopy db_name

         mysqlhotcopy --suffix=_copy db_name_1 ... db_name_n

         mysqlhotcopy db_name_1 ... db_name_n /path/to/new_directory

         mysqlhotcopy db_name./regex/

         mysqlhotcopy db_name./^\(foo\|bar\)/

         mysqlhotcopy db_name./~regex/

         mysqlhotcopy db_name_1./regex_1/ db_name_1./regex_2/ ... db_name_n./regex_n/ /path/to/new_directory

         mysqlhotcopy --method='scp -Bq -i /usr/home/foo/.ssh/identity' --user=root --password=secretpassword \
                db_1./^nice_table/ user AT some.dom:~/path/to/new_directory
         (INSECURE)

       WARNING: THIS PROGRAM IS STILL IN BETA. Comments/patches welcome.

DESCRIPTION
       mysqlhotcopy is designed to make stable copies of live MySQL databases.

       Here "live" means that the database server is running and the database
       may be in active use. And "stable" means that the copy will not have
       any corruptions that could occur if the table files were simply copied
       without first being locked and flushed from within the server.

OPTIONS
       --checkpoint checkpoint-table
           As each database is copied, an entry is written to the specified
           checkpoint-table.  This has the happy side-effect of updating the
           MySQL update-log (if it is switched on) giving a good indication of
           where roll-forward should begin for backup+rollforward schemes.

           The name of the checkpoint table should be supplied in database.ta-
           ble format.  The checkpoint-table must contain at least the follow-
           ing fields:

             time_stamp timestamp not null
             src varchar(32)
             dest varchar(60)
             msg varchar(255)

       --record_log_pos log-pos-table
           Just before the database files are copied, update the record in the
           log-pos-table from the values returned from "show master status"
           and "show slave status". The master status values are stored in the
           log_file and log_pos columns, and establish the position in the
           binary logs that any slaves of this host should adopt if ini-
           tialised from this dump.  The slave status values are stored in
           master_host, master_log_file, and master_log_pos, and these are
           useful if the host performing the dump is a slave and other sibling
           slaves are to be initialised from this dump.

           The name of the log-pos table should be supplied in database.table
           format.  A sample log-pos table definition:

               CREATE TABLE log_pos (
                 host            varchar(60) NOT null,
                 time_stamp      timestamp(14) NOT NULL,
                 log_file        varchar(32) default NULL,
                 log_pos         int(11)     default NULL,
                 master_host     varchar(60) NULL,
                 master_log_file varchar(32) NULL,
                 master_log_pos  int NULL,

                 PRIMARY KEY  (host)
               );

       --suffix suffix
           Each database is copied back into the originating datadir under a
           new name. The new name is the original name with the suffix
           appended.

           If only a single db_name is supplied and the --suffix flag is not
           supplied, then "--suffix=_copy" is assumed.

       --allowold
           Move any existing version of the destination to a backup directory
           for the duration of the copy. If the copy successfully completes,
           the backup directory is deleted - unless the --keepold flag is set.
           If the copy fails, the backup directory is restored.

           The backup directory name is the original name with "_old"
           appended.  Any existing versions of the backup directory are
           deleted.

       --keepold
           Behaves as for the --allowold, with the additional feature of keep-
           ing the backup directory after the copy successfully completes.

       --addtodest
           Don't rename target directory if it already exists, just add the
           copied files into it.

           This is most useful when backing up a database with many large
           tables and you don't want to have all the tables locked for the
           whole duration.

           In this situation, if you are happy for groups of tables to be
           backed up separately (and thus possibly not be logically consistant
           with one another) then you can run mysqlhotcopy several times on
           the same database each with different db_name./table_regex/.  All
           but the first should use the --addtodest option so the tables all
           end up in the same directory.

       --flushlog
           Rotate the log files by executing "FLUSH LOGS" after all tables are
           locked, and before they are copied.

       --resetmaster
           Reset the bin-log by executing "RESET MASTER" after all tables are
           locked, and before they are copied. Useful if you are recovering a
           slave in a replication setup.

       --resetslave
           Reset the master.info by executing "RESET SLAVE" after all tables
           are locked, and before they are copied. Useful if you are recover-
           ing a server in a mutual replication setup.

       --regexp pattern
           Copy all databases with names matching the pattern

       --regexp /pattern1/./pattern2/
           Copy all tables with names matching pattern2 from all databases
           with names matching pattern1. For example, to select all tables
           which names begin with 'bar' from all databases which names end
           with 'foo':

              mysqlhotcopy --indices --method=cp --regexp /foo$/./^bar/

       db_name./pattern/
           Copy only tables matching pattern. Shell metacharacters ( (, ), |,
           !, etc.) have to be escaped (e.g. \). For example, to select all
           tables in database db1 whose names begin with 'foo' or 'bar':

               mysqlhotcopy --indices --method=cp db1./^\(foo\|bar\)/

       db_name./~pattern/
           Copy only tables not matching pattern. For example, to copy tables
           that do not begin with foo nor bar:

               mysqlhotcopy --indices --method=cp db1./~^\(foo\|bar\)/

       -?, --help
           Display helpscreen and exit

       -u, --user=#
           user for database login if not current user

       -p, --password=#
           password to use when connecting to the server. Note that you are
           strongly encouraged *not* to use this option as every user would be
           able to see the password in the process list. Instead use the
           '[mysqlhotcopy]' section in one of the config files, normally
           /etc/my.cnf or your personal ~/.my.cnf.  (See the chapter 'my.cnf
           Option Files' in the manual)

           WARNING: Providing a password on command line is insecure as it is
           visible through /proc to anyone for a short time.

       -h, -h, --host=#
           Hostname for local server when connecting over TCP/IP.  By specify-
           ing this different from 'localhost' will trigger mysqlhotcopy to
           use TCP/IP connection.

       -P, --port=#
           port to use when connecting to MySQL server with TCP/IP.  This is
           only used when using the --host option.

       -S, --socket=#
           UNIX domain socket to use when connecting to local server

       --noindices
           Don\'t include index files in copy. Only up to the first 2048 bytes
           are copied;  You can restore the indexes with isamchk -r or myisam-
           chk -r on the backup.

       --method=#
           method for copy (only "cp" currently supported). Alpha support for
           "scp" was added in November 2000. Your experience with the scp
           method will vary with your ability to understand how scp works.
           'man scp' and 'man ssh' are your friends.

           The destination directory _must exist_ on the target machine using
           the scp method. --keepold and --allowold are meaningless with scp.
           Liberal use of the --debug option will help you figure out what\'s
           really going on when you do an scp.

           Note that using scp will lock your tables for a _long_ time unless
           your network connection is _fast_. If this is unacceptable to you,
           use the 'cp' method to copy the tables to some temporary area and
           then scp or rsync the files at your leisure.

       -q, --quiet
           be silent except for errors

       --debug
           Debug messages are displayed

       -n, --dryrun
           Display commands without actually doing them

WARRANTY
       This software is free and comes without warranty of any kind. You
       should never trust backup software without studying the code yourself.
       Study the code inside this script and only rely on it if you believe
       that it does the right thing for you.

       Patches adding bug fixes, documentation and new features are welcome.
       Please send these to internals AT lists.com.

TO DO
       Extend the individual table copy to allow multiple subsets of tables to
       be specified on the command line:

         mysqlhotcopy db newdb  t1 t2 /^foo_/ : t3 /^bar_/ : +

       where ":" delimits the subsets, the /^foo_/ indicates all tables with
       names begining with "foo_" and the "+" indicates all tables not copied
       by the previous subsets.

       newdb is either another not existing database or a full path to a
       directory where we can create a directory 'db'

       Add option to lock each table in turn for people who don\'t need cross-
       table integrity.

       Add option to FLUSH STATUS just before UNLOCK TABLES.

       Add support for other copy methods (eg tar to single file?).

       Add support for forthcoming MySQL ``RAID'' table subdirectory layouts.

AUTHOR
       Tim Bunce

       Martin Waite - added checkpoint, flushlog, regexp and dryrun options
                      Fixed cleanup of targets when hotcopy fails.
       Added --record_log_pos.
                      RAID tables are now copied (don't know if this works
       over scp).

       Ralph Corderoy - added synonyms for commands

       Scott Wiersdorf - added table regex and scp support

       Monty - working --noindex (copy only first 2048 bytes of index file)
               Fixes for --method=scp

       Ask Bjoern Hansen - Cleanup code to fix a few bugs and enable -w again.

       Emil S. Hansen - Added resetslave and resetmaster.

       Jeremy D. Zawodny - Removed depricated DBI calls.  Fixed bug which
       resulted in nothing being copied when a regexp was specified but no
       database name(s).

       Martin Waite - Fix to handle database name that contains space.

       Paul DuBois - Remove end '/' from directory names



perl v5.8.8                       2007-01-02                   MYSQLHOTCOPY(1)
 

©2005 Comrite