Table of Contents
It is important to back up your databases so that you can recover your data and be up and running again in case problems occur, such as system crashes, hardware failures, or users deleting data by mistake. Backups are also essential as a safeguard before upgrading a MySQL installation, and they can be used to transfer a MySQL installation to another system or to set up replication slave servers.
MySQL offers a variety of backup strategies from which you can choose the methods that best suit the requirements for your installation. This chapter discusses several backup and recovery topics with which you should be familiar:
Types of backups: Logical versus physical, full versus incremental, and so forth.
Methods for creating backups.
Recovery methods, including point-in-time recovery.
Backup scheduling, compression, and encryption.
Table maintenance, to enable recovery of corrupt tables.
Resources related to backup or to maintaining data availability include the following:
Customers of MySQL Enterprise Edition can use the MySQL Enterprise Backup product for backups. For an overview of the MySQL Enterprise Backup product, see Section 25.2, “MySQL Enterprise Backup Overview”.
A forum dedicated to backup issues is available at https://forums.mysql.com/list.php?28.
Details for mysqldump, mysqlhotcopy, and other MySQL backup programs can be found in Chapter 4, MySQL Programs.
The syntax of the SQL statements described here is given in Chapter 13, SQL Statements.
For additional information about InnoDB
backup procedures, see Section 14.18.1, “InnoDB Backup”.
Replication enables you to maintain identical data on multiple servers. This has several benefits, such as enabling client query load to be distributed over servers, availability of data even if a given server is taken offline or fails, and the ability to make backups with no impact on the master by using a slave server. See Chapter 17, Replication.
NDB Cluster provides a high-availability, high-redundancy
version of MySQL adapted for the distributed computing
environment. See Chapter 18, MySQL NDB Cluster 7.3 and NDB Cluster 7.4, which provides
information about MySQL NDB Cluster 7.4 (based on MySQL 5.6 but
containing the latest improvements and fixes for the
NDB
storage engine).
Distributed Replicated Block Device (DRBD) is another high-availability solution. It works by replicating a block device from a primary server to a secondary server at the block level. See Chapter 16, High Availability and Scalability
This section describes the characteristics of different types of backups.
Physical backups consist of raw copies of the directories and files that store database contents. This type of backup is suitable for large, important databases that need to be recovered quickly when problems occur.
Logical backups save information represented as logical database
structure (CREATE DATABASE
,
CREATE TABLE
statements) and
content (INSERT
statements or
delimited-text files). This type of backup is suitable for smaller
amounts of data where you might edit the data values or table
structure, or recreate the data on a different machine
architecture.
Physical backup methods have these characteristics:
The backup consists of exact copies of database directories and files. Typically this is a copy of all or part of the MySQL data directory.
Physical backup methods are faster than logical because they involve only file copying without conversion.
Output is more compact than for logical backup.
Because backup speed and compactness are important for busy, important databases, the MySQL Enterprise Backup product performs physical backups. For an overview of the MySQL Enterprise Backup product, see Section 25.2, “MySQL Enterprise Backup Overview”.
Backup and restore granularity ranges from the level of the
entire data directory down to the level of individual files.
This may or may not provide for table-level granularity,
depending on storage engine. For example,
InnoDB
tables can each be in a separate
file, or share file storage with other
InnoDB
tables; each
MyISAM
table corresponds uniquely to a set
of files.
In addition to databases, the backup can include any related files such as log or configuration files.
Data from MEMORY
tables is tricky to back
up this way because their contents are not stored on disk.
(The MySQL Enterprise Backup product has a feature where you
can retrieve data from MEMORY
tables during
a backup.)
Backups are portable only to other machines that have identical or similar hardware characteristics.
Backups can be performed while the MySQL server is not running. If the server is running, it is necessary to perform appropriate locking so that the server does not change database contents during the backup. MySQL Enterprise Backup does this locking automatically for tables that require it.
Physical backup tools include the
mysqlbackup of MySQL Enterprise Backup for
InnoDB
or any other tables, file
system-level commands (such as cp,
scp, tar,
rsync), or mysqlhotcopy
for MyISAM
tables.
For restore:
MySQL Enterprise Backup restores InnoDB
and other tables that it backed up.
ndb_restore restores
NDB
tables.
Files copied at the file system level or with mysqlhotcopy can be copied back to their original locations with file system commands.
Logical backup methods have these characteristics:
The backup is done by querying the MySQL server to obtain database structure and content information.
Backup is slower than physical methods because the server must access database information and convert it to logical format. If the output is written on the client side, the server must also send it to the backup program.
Output is larger than for physical backup, particularly when saved in text format.
Backup and restore granularity is available at the server level (all databases), database level (all tables in a particular database), or table level. This is true regardless of storage engine.
The backup does not include log or configuration files, or other database-related files that are not part of databases.
Backups stored in logical format are machine independent and highly portable.
Logical backups are performed with the MySQL server running. The server is not taken offline.
Logical backup tools include the mysqldump
program and the SELECT
... INTO OUTFILE
statement. These work for any
storage engine, even MEMORY
.
To restore logical backups, SQL-format dump files can be
processed using the mysql client. To load
delimited-text files, use the LOAD
DATA
statement or the mysqlimport
client.
Online backups take place while the MySQL server is running so that the database information can be obtained from the server. Offline backups take place while the server is stopped. This distinction can also be described as “hot” versus “cold” backups; a “warm” backup is one where the server remains running but locked against modifying data while you access database files externally.
Online backup methods have these characteristics:
The backup is less intrusive to other clients, which can connect to the MySQL server during the backup and may be able to access data depending on what operations they need to perform.
Care must be taken to impose appropriate locking so that data modifications do not take place that would compromise backup integrity. The MySQL Enterprise Backup product does such locking automatically.
Offline backup methods have these characteristics:
Clients can be affected adversely because the server is unavailable during backup. For that reason, such backups are often taken from a replication slave server that can be taken offline without harming availability.
The backup procedure is simpler because there is no possibility of interference from client activity.
A similar distinction between online and offline applies for recovery operations, and similar characteristics apply. However, it is more likely that clients will be affected for online recovery than for online backup because recovery requires stronger locking. During backup, clients might be able to read data while it is being backed up. Recovery modifies data and does not just read it, so clients must be prevented from accessing data while it is being restored.
A local backup is performed on the same host where the MySQL server runs, whereas a remote backup is done from a different host. For some types of backups, the backup can be initiated from a remote host even if the output is written locally on the server. host.
mysqldump can connect to local or remote
servers. For SQL output (CREATE
and
INSERT
statements), local or
remote dumps can be done and generate output on the client.
For delimited-text output (with the
--tab
option), data files
are created on the server host.
mysqlhotcopy performs only local backups: It connects to the server to lock it against data modifications and then copies local table files.
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
can be initiated from a local or remote
client host, but the output file is created on the server
host.
Physical backup methods typically are initiated locally on the MySQL server host so that the server can be taken offline, although the destination for copied files might be remote.
Some file system implementations enable “snapshots” to be taken. These provide logical copies of the file system at a given point in time, without requiring a physical copy of the entire file system. (For example, the implementation may use copy-on-write techniques so that only parts of the file system modified after the snapshot time need be copied.) MySQL itself does not provide the capability for taking file system snapshots. It is available through third-party solutions such as Veritas, LVM, or ZFS.
A full backup includes all data managed by a MySQL server at a given point in time. An incremental backup consists of the changes made to the data during a given time span (from one point in time to another). MySQL has different ways to perform full backups, such as those described earlier in this section. Incremental backups are made possible by enabling the server's binary log, which the server uses to record data changes.
A full recovery restores all data from a full backup. This restores the server instance to the state that it had when the backup was made. If that state is not sufficiently current, a full recovery can be followed by recovery of incremental backups made since the full backup, to bring the server to a more up-to-date state.
Incremental recovery is recovery of changes made during a given time span. This is also called point-in-time recovery because it makes a server's state current up to a given time. Point-in-time recovery is based on the binary log and typically follows a full recovery from the backup files that restores the server to its state when the backup was made. Then the data changes written in the binary log files are applied as incremental recovery to redo data modifications and bring the server up to the desired point in time.
Data integrity can be compromised if tables become corrupt. For
InnoDB
tables, this is not a typical
issue. For programs to check MyISAM
tables and repair them if problems are found, see
Section 7.6, “MyISAM Table Maintenance and Crash Recovery”.
Backup scheduling is valuable for automating backup procedures.
Compression of backup output reduces space requirements, and
encryption of the output provides better security against
unauthorized access of backed-up data. MySQL itself does not
provide these capabilities. The MySQL Enterprise Backup product
can compress InnoDB
backups, and compression or
encryption of backup output can be achieved using file system
utilities. Other third-party solutions may be available.
This section summarizes some general methods for making backups.
Customers of MySQL Enterprise Edition can use the
MySQL Enterprise
Backup product to do
physical backups of entire
instances or selected databases, tables, or both. This product
includes features for
incremental and
compressed backups.
Backing up the physical database files makes restore much faster
than logical techniques such as the mysqldump
command. InnoDB
tables are copied using a
hot backup mechanism.
(Ideally, the InnoDB
tables should represent a
substantial majority of the data.) Tables from other storage
engines are copied using a warm
backup mechanism. For an overview of the MySQL Enterprise
Backup product, see Section 25.2, “MySQL Enterprise Backup Overview”.
The mysqldump program and the mysqlhotcopy script can make backups. mysqldump is more general because it can back up all kinds of tables. mysqlhotcopy works only with some storage engines. (See Section 7.4, “Using mysqldump for Backups”, and Section 4.6.10, “mysqlhotcopy — A Database Backup Program”.)
For InnoDB
tables, it is possible to perform an
online backup that takes no locks on tables using the
--single-transaction
option to
mysqldump. See Section 7.3.1, “Establishing a Backup Policy”.
For storage engines that represent each table using its own files,
tables can be backed up by copying those files. For example,
MyISAM
tables are stored as files, so it is
easy to do a backup by copying files (*.frm
,
*.MYD
, and *.MYI
files).
To get a consistent backup, stop the server or lock and flush the
relevant tables:
FLUSH TABLES tbl_list
WITH READ LOCK;
You need only a read lock; this enables other clients to continue to query the tables while you are making a copy of the files in the database directory. The flush is needed to ensure that the all active index pages are written to disk before you start the backup. See Section 13.3.5, “LOCK TABLES and UNLOCK TABLES Statements”, and Section 13.7.6.3, “FLUSH Statement”.
You can also create a binary backup simply by copying all table
files, as long as the server isn't updating anything. The
mysqlhotcopy script uses this method. (But note
that table file copying methods do not work if your database
contains InnoDB
tables.
mysqlhotcopy does not work for
InnoDB
tables because InnoDB
does not necessarily store table contents in database directories.
Also, even if the server is not actively updating data,
InnoDB
may still have modified data cached in
memory and not flushed to disk.)
To create a text file containing a table's data, you can use
SELECT * INTO OUTFILE
'
. The file is created
on the MySQL server host, not the client host. For this statement,
the output file cannot already exist because permitting files to
be overwritten constitutes a security risk. See
Section 13.2.9, “SELECT Statement”. This method works for any kind of data
file, but saves only table data, not the table structure.
file_name
' FROM
tbl_name
Another way to create text data files (along with files containing
CREATE TABLE
statements for the
backed up tables) is to use mysqldump with the
--tab
option. See
Section 7.4.3, “Dumping Data in Delimited-Text Format with mysqldump”.
To reload a delimited-text data file, use
LOAD DATA
or
mysqlimport.
MySQL supports incremental backups: You must start the server with
the --log-bin
option to enable
binary logging; see Section 5.4.4, “The Binary Log”. The binary log
files provide you with the information you need to replicate
changes to the database that are made subsequent to the point at
which you performed a backup. At the moment you want to make an
incremental backup (containing all changes that happened since the
last full or incremental backup), you should rotate the binary log
by using FLUSH LOGS
. This done, you
need to copy to the backup location all binary logs which range
from the one of the moment of the last full or incremental backup
to the last but one. These binary logs are the incremental backup;
at restore time, you apply them as explained in
Section 7.5, “Point-in-Time (Incremental) Recovery Using the Binary Log”. The next time you do a
full backup, you should also rotate the binary log using
FLUSH LOGS
, mysqldump
--flush-logs, or mysqlhotcopy
--flushlog. See Section 4.5.4, “mysqldump — A Database Backup Program”, and
Section 4.6.10, “mysqlhotcopy — A Database Backup Program”.
If you have performance problems with your master server while making backups, one strategy that can help is to set up replication and perform backups on the slave rather than on the master. See Section 17.3.1, “Using Replication for Backups”.
If you are backing up a slave replication server, you should back
up its master info and relay log info repositories (see
Section 17.2.2, “Replication Relay and Status Logs”) when you back up the slave's
databases, regardless of the backup method you choose. These
information files are always needed to resume replication after
you restore the slave's data. If your slave is replicating
LOAD DATA
statements, you should
also back up any SQL_LOAD-*
files that exist
in the directory that the slave uses for this purpose. The slave
needs these files to resume replication of any interrupted
LOAD DATA
operations. The location
of this directory is the value of the
slave_load_tmpdir
system
variable. If the server was not started with that variable set,
the directory location is the value of the
tmpdir
system variable.
If you have to restore MyISAM
tables that have
become corrupt, try to recover them using
REPAIR TABLE
or myisamchk
-r first. That should work in 99.9% of all cases. If
myisamchk fails, see
Section 7.6, “MyISAM Table Maintenance and Crash Recovery”.
If you are using a Veritas file system, you can make a backup like this:
From a client program, execute FLUSH
TABLES WITH READ LOCK
.
From another shell, execute mount vxfs
snapshot
.
From the first client, execute
UNLOCK
TABLES
.
Copy files from the snapshot.
Unmount the snapshot.
Similar snapshot capabilities may be available in other file systems, such as LVM or ZFS.
This section discusses a procedure for performing backups that enables you to recover data after several types of crashes:
Operating system crash
Power failure
File system crash
Hardware problem (hard drive, motherboard, and so forth)
The example commands do not include options such as
--user
and
--password
for the
mysqldump and mysql client
programs. You should include such options as necessary to enable
client programs to connect to the MySQL server.
Assume that data is stored in the InnoDB
storage engine, which has support for transactions and automatic
crash recovery. Assume also that the MySQL server is under load at
the time of the crash. If it were not, no recovery would ever be
needed.
For cases of operating system crashes or power failures, we can
assume that MySQL's disk data is available after a restart. The
InnoDB
data files might not contain consistent
data due to the crash, but InnoDB
reads its
logs and finds in them the list of pending committed and
noncommitted transactions that have not been flushed to the data
files. InnoDB
automatically rolls back those
transactions that were not committed, and flushes to its data
files those that were committed. Information about this recovery
process is conveyed to the user through the MySQL error log. The
following is an example log excerpt:
InnoDB: Database was not shut down normally. InnoDB: Starting recovery from log files... InnoDB: Starting log scan based on checkpoint at InnoDB: log sequence number 0 13674004 InnoDB: Doing recovery: scanned up to log sequence number 0 13739520 InnoDB: Doing recovery: scanned up to log sequence number 0 13805056 InnoDB: Doing recovery: scanned up to log sequence number 0 13870592 InnoDB: Doing recovery: scanned up to log sequence number 0 13936128 ... InnoDB: Doing recovery: scanned up to log sequence number 0 20555264 InnoDB: Doing recovery: scanned up to log sequence number 0 20620800 InnoDB: Doing recovery: scanned up to log sequence number 0 20664692 InnoDB: 1 uncommitted transaction(s) which must be rolled back InnoDB: Starting rollback of uncommitted transactions InnoDB: Rolling back trx no 16745 InnoDB: Rolling back of trx no 16745 completed InnoDB: Rollback of uncommitted transactions completed InnoDB: Starting an apply batch of log records to the database... InnoDB: Apply batch completed InnoDB: Started mysqld: ready for connections
For the cases of file system crashes or hardware problems, we can assume that the MySQL disk data is not available after a restart. This means that MySQL fails to start successfully because some blocks of disk data are no longer readable. In this case, it is necessary to reformat the disk, install a new one, or otherwise correct the underlying problem. Then it is necessary to recover our MySQL data from backups, which means that backups must already have been made. To make sure that is the case, design and implement a backup policy.
To be useful, backups must be scheduled regularly. A full backup
(a snapshot of the data at a point in time) can be done in MySQL
with several tools. For example,
MySQL Enterprise
Backup can perform a
physical backup of
an entire instance, with optimizations to minimize overhead and
avoid disruption when backing up InnoDB
data
files; mysqldump provides online
logical backup. This
discussion uses mysqldump.
Assume that we make a full backup of all our
InnoDB
tables in all databases using the
following command on Sunday at 1 p.m., when load is low:
shell> mysqldump --all-databases --master-data --single-transaction > backup_sunday_1_PM.sql
The resulting .sql
file produced by
mysqldump contains a set of SQL
INSERT
statements that can be
used to reload the dumped tables at a later time.
This backup operation acquires a global read lock on all tables
at the beginning of the dump (using FLUSH
TABLES WITH READ LOCK
). As soon as this lock has been
acquired, the binary log coordinates are read and the lock is
released. If long updating statements are running when the
FLUSH
statement is issued, the
backup operation may stall until those statements finish. After
that, the dump becomes lock-free and does not disturb reads and
writes on the tables.
It was assumed earlier that the tables to back up are
InnoDB
tables, so
--single-transaction
uses a
consistent read and guarantees that data seen by
mysqldump does not change. (Changes made by
other clients to InnoDB
tables are not seen
by the mysqldump process.) If the backup
operation includes nontransactional tables, consistency requires
that they do not change during the backup. For example, for the
MyISAM
tables in the mysql
database, there must be no administrative changes to MySQL
accounts during the backup.
Full backups are necessary, but it is not always convenient to create them. They produce large backup files and take time to generate. They are not optimal in the sense that each successive full backup includes all data, even that part that has not changed since the previous full backup. It is more efficient to make an initial full backup, and then to make incremental backups. The incremental backups are smaller and take less time to produce. The tradeoff is that, at recovery time, you cannot restore your data just by reloading the full backup. You must also process the incremental backups to recover the incremental changes.
To make incremental backups, we need to save the incremental
changes. In MySQL, these changes are represented in the binary
log, so the MySQL server should always be started with the
--log-bin
option to enable that
log. With binary logging enabled, the server writes each data
change into a file while it updates data. Looking at the data
directory of a MySQL server that was started with the
--log-bin
option and that has
been running for some days, we find these MySQL binary log
files:
-rw-rw---- 1 guilhem guilhem 1277324 Nov 10 23:59 gbichot2-bin.000001 -rw-rw---- 1 guilhem guilhem 4 Nov 10 23:59 gbichot2-bin.000002 -rw-rw---- 1 guilhem guilhem 79 Nov 11 11:06 gbichot2-bin.000003 -rw-rw---- 1 guilhem guilhem 508 Nov 11 11:08 gbichot2-bin.000004 -rw-rw---- 1 guilhem guilhem 220047446 Nov 12 16:47 gbichot2-bin.000005 -rw-rw---- 1 guilhem guilhem 998412 Nov 14 10:08 gbichot2-bin.000006 -rw-rw---- 1 guilhem guilhem 361 Nov 14 10:07 gbichot2-bin.index
Each time it restarts, the MySQL server creates a new binary log
file using the next number in the sequence. While the server is
running, you can also tell it to close the current binary log
file and begin a new one manually by issuing a
FLUSH LOGS
SQL statement or with
a mysqladmin flush-logs command.
mysqldump also has an option to flush the
logs. The .index
file in the data directory
contains the list of all MySQL binary logs in the directory.
The MySQL binary logs are important for recovery because they form the set of incremental backups. If you make sure to flush the logs when you make your full backup, the binary log files created afterward contain all the data changes made since the backup. Let's modify the previous mysqldump command a bit so that it flushes the MySQL binary logs at the moment of the full backup, and so that the dump file contains the name of the new current binary log:
shell>mysqldump --single-transaction --flush-logs --master-data=2 \
--all-databases > backup_sunday_1_PM.sql
After executing this command, the data directory contains a new
binary log file, gbichot2-bin.000007
,
because the --flush-logs
option causes the server to flush its logs. The
--master-data
option causes
mysqldump to write binary log information to
its output, so the resulting .sql
dump file
includes these lines:
-- Position to start replication or point-in-time recovery from -- CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_LOG_FILE='gbichot2-bin.000007',MASTER_LOG_POS=4;
Because the mysqldump command made a full backup, those lines mean two things:
The dump file contains all changes made before any changes
written to the gbichot2-bin.000007
binary log file or higher.
All data changes logged after the backup are not present in
the dump file, but are present in the
gbichot2-bin.000007
binary log file or
higher.
On Monday at 1 p.m., we can create an incremental backup by
flushing the logs to begin a new binary log file. For example,
executing a mysqladmin flush-logs command
creates gbichot2-bin.000008
. All changes
between the Sunday 1 p.m. full backup and Monday 1 p.m. will be
in the gbichot2-bin.000007
file. This
incremental backup is important, so it is a good idea to copy it
to a safe place. (For example, back it up on tape or DVD, or
copy it to another machine.) On Tuesday at 1 p.m., execute
another mysqladmin flush-logs command. All
changes between Monday 1 p.m. and Tuesday 1 p.m. will be in the
gbichot2-bin.000008
file (which also should
be copied somewhere safe).
The MySQL binary logs take up disk space. To free up space, purge them from time to time. One way to do this is by deleting the binary logs that are no longer needed, such as when we make a full backup:
shell>mysqldump --single-transaction --flush-logs --master-data=2 \
--all-databases --delete-master-logs > backup_sunday_1_PM.sql
Deleting the MySQL binary logs with mysqldump
--delete-master-logs can be dangerous if your server
is a replication master server, because slave servers might
not yet fully have processed the contents of the binary log.
The description for the PURGE BINARY
LOGS
statement explains what should be verified
before deleting the MySQL binary logs. See
Section 13.4.1.1, “PURGE BINARY LOGS Statement”.
Now, suppose that we have a catastrophic crash on Wednesday at 8 a.m. that requires recovery from backups. To recover, first we restore the last full backup we have (the one from Sunday 1 p.m.). The full backup file is just a set of SQL statements, so restoring it is very easy:
shell> mysql < backup_sunday_1_PM.sql
At this point, the data is restored to its state as of Sunday 1
p.m.. To restore the changes made since then, we must use the
incremental backups; that is, the
gbichot2-bin.000007
and
gbichot2-bin.000008
binary log files. Fetch
the files if necessary from where they were backed up, and then
process their contents like this:
shell> mysqlbinlog gbichot2-bin.000007 gbichot2-bin.000008 | mysql
We now have recovered the data to its state as of Tuesday 1
p.m., but still are missing the changes from that date to the
date of the crash. To not lose them, we would have needed to
have the MySQL server store its MySQL binary logs into a safe
location (RAID disks, SAN, ...) different from the place where
it stores its data files, so that these logs were not on the
destroyed disk. (That is, we can start the server with a
--log-bin
option that specifies a
location on a different physical device from the one on which
the data directory resides. That way, the logs are safe even if
the device containing the directory is lost.) If we had done
this, we would have the gbichot2-bin.000009
file (and any subsequent files) at hand, and we could apply them
using mysqlbinlog and
mysql to restore the most recent data changes
with no loss up to the moment of the crash:
shell> mysqlbinlog gbichot2-bin.000009 ... | mysql
For more information about using mysqlbinlog to process binary log files, see Section 7.5, “Point-in-Time (Incremental) Recovery Using the Binary Log”.
In case of an operating system crash or power failure,
InnoDB
itself does all the job of recovering
data. But to make sure that you can sleep well, observe the
following guidelines:
Always run the MySQL server with the
--log-bin
option, or even
--log-bin=
,
where the log file name is located on some safe media
different from the drive on which the data directory is
located. If you have such safe media, this technique can
also be good for disk load balancing (which results in a
performance improvement).
log_name
Make periodic full backups, using the mysqldump command shown earlier in Section 7.3.1, “Establishing a Backup Policy”, that makes an online, nonblocking backup.
Make periodic incremental backups by flushing the logs with
FLUSH LOGS
or
mysqladmin flush-logs.
This section describes how to use mysqldump to produce dump files, and how to reload dump files. A dump file can be used in several ways:
As a backup to enable data recovery in case of data loss.
As a source of data for setting up replication slaves.
As a source of data for experimentation:
To make a copy of a database that you can use without changing the original data.
To test potential upgrade incompatibilities.
mysqldump produces two types of output,
depending on whether the --tab
option is given:
Without --tab
,
mysqldump writes SQL statements to the
standard output. This output consists of
CREATE
statements to create dumped objects
(databases, tables, stored routines, and so forth), and
INSERT
statements to load data into tables.
The output can be saved in a file and reloaded later using
mysql to recreate the dumped objects.
Options are available to modify the format of the SQL
statements, and to control which objects are dumped.
With --tab
,
mysqldump produces two output files for
each dumped table. The server writes one file as tab-delimited
text, one line per table row. This file is named
in the output directory. The server also sends a
tbl_name
.txtCREATE TABLE
statement for the
table to mysqldump, which writes it as a
file named
in the output directory.
tbl_name
.sql
This section describes how to use mysqldump to create SQL-format dump files. For information about reloading such dump files, see Section 7.4.2, “Reloading SQL-Format Backups”.
By default, mysqldump writes information as SQL statements to the standard output. You can save the output in a file:
shell> mysqldump [arguments
] > file_name
To dump all databases, invoke mysqldump with
the --all-databases
option:
shell> mysqldump --all-databases > dump.sql
To dump only specific databases, name them on the command line
and use the --databases
option:
shell> mysqldump --databases db1 db2 db3 > dump.sql
The --databases
option causes
all names on the command line to be treated as database names.
Without this option, mysqldump treats the
first name as a database name and those following as table
names.
With --all-databases
or
--databases
,
mysqldump writes CREATE
DATABASE
and USE
statements prior to the dump output for each database. This
ensures that when the dump file is reloaded, it creates each
database if it does not exist and makes it the default database
so database contents are loaded into the same database from
which they came. If you want to cause the dump file to force a
drop of each database before recreating it, use the
--add-drop-database
option as
well. In this case, mysqldump writes a
DROP DATABASE
statement preceding
each CREATE DATABASE
statement.
To dump a single database, name it on the command line:
shell> mysqldump --databases test > dump.sql
In the single-database case, it is permissible to omit the
--databases
option:
shell> mysqldump test > dump.sql
The difference between the two preceding commands is that
without --databases
, the dump
output contains no CREATE
DATABASE
or USE
statements. This has several implications:
When you reload the dump file, you must specify a default database name so that the server knows which database to reload.
For reloading, you can specify a database name different from the original name, which enables you to reload the data into a different database.
If the database to be reloaded does not exist, you must create it first.
Because the output will contain no
CREATE DATABASE
statement,
the --add-drop-database
option has no effect. If you use it, it produces no
DROP DATABASE
statement.
To dump only specific tables from a database, name them on the command line following the database name:
shell> mysqldump test t1 t3 t7 > dump.sql
To reload a dump file written by mysqldump
that consists of SQL statements, use it as input to the
mysql client. If the dump file was created by
mysqldump with the
--all-databases
or
--databases
option, it
contains CREATE DATABASE
and
USE
statements and it is not
necessary to specify a default database into which to load the
data:
shell> mysql < dump.sql
Alternatively, from within mysql, use a
source
command:
mysql> source dump.sql
If the file is a single-database dump not containing
CREATE DATABASE
and
USE
statements, create the
database first (if necessary):
shell> mysqladmin create db1
Then specify the database name when you load the dump file:
shell> mysql db1 < dump.sql
Alternatively, from within mysql, create the database, select it as the default database, and load the dump file:
mysql>CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS db1;
mysql>USE db1;
mysql>source dump.sql
For Windows PowerShell users: Because the "<" character is
reserved for future use in PowerShell, an alternative approach
is required, such as using quotes cmd.exe /c "mysql
< dump.sql"
.
This section describes how to use mysqldump to create delimited-text dump files. For information about reloading such dump files, see Section 7.4.4, “Reloading Delimited-Text Format Backups”.
If you invoke mysqldump with the
--tab=
option, it uses dir_name
dir_name
as the
output directory and dumps tables individually in that directory
using two files for each table. The table name is the base name
for these files. For a table named t1
, the
files are named t1.sql
and
t1.txt
. The .sql
file
contains a CREATE TABLE
statement
for the table. The .txt
file contains the
table data, one line per table row.
The following command dumps the contents of the
db1
database to files in the
/tmp
database:
shell> mysqldump --tab=/tmp db1
The .txt
files containing table data are
written by the server, so they are owned by the system account
used for running the server. The server uses
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
to write the files, so you must have the
FILE
privilege to perform this
operation, and an error occurs if a given
.txt
file already exists.
The server sends the CREATE
definitions for
dumped tables to mysqldump, which writes them
to .sql
files. These files therefore are
owned by the user who executes mysqldump.
It is best that --tab
be used
only for dumping a local server. If you use it with a remote
server, the --tab
directory
must exist on both the local and remote hosts, and the
.txt
files will be written by the server in
the remote directory (on the server host), whereas the
.sql
files will be written by
mysqldump in the local directory (on the
client host).
For mysqldump --tab, the server by default
writes table data to .txt
files one line
per row with tabs between column values, no quotation marks
around column values, and newline as the line terminator. (These
are the same defaults as for
SELECT ... INTO
OUTFILE
.)
To enable data files to be written using a different format, mysqldump supports these options:
The string for separating column values (default: tab).
The character within which to enclose column values (default: no character).
--fields-optionally-enclosed-by=
char
The character within which to enclose non-numeric column values (default: no character).
The character for escaping special characters (default: no escaping).
The line-termination string (default: newline).
Depending on the value you specify for any of these options, it
might be necessary on the command line to quote or escape the
value appropriately for your command interpreter. Alternatively,
specify the value using hex notation. Suppose that you want
mysqldump to quote column values within
double quotation marks. To do so, specify double quote as the
value for the
--fields-enclosed-by
option. But this character is often special to command
interpreters and must be treated specially. For example, on
Unix, you can quote the double quote like this:
--fields-enclosed-by='"'
On any platform, you can specify the value in hex:
--fields-enclosed-by=0x22
It is common to use several of the data-formatting options
together. For example, to dump tables in comma-separated values
format with lines terminated by carriage-return/newline pairs
(\r\n
), use this command (enter it on a
single line):
shell>mysqldump --tab=/tmp --fields-terminated-by=,
--fields-enclosed-by='"' --lines-terminated-by=0x0d0a db1
Should you use any of the data-formatting options to dump table data, you will need to specify the same format when you reload data files later, to ensure proper interpretation of the file contents.
For backups produced with mysqldump --tab,
each table is represented in the output directory by an
.sql
file containing the
CREATE TABLE
statement for the
table, and a .txt
file containing the table
data. To reload a table, first change location into the output
directory. Then process the .sql
file with
mysql to create an empty table and process
the .txt
file to load the data into the
table:
shell>mysql db1 < t1.sql
shell>mysqlimport db1 t1.txt
An alternative to using mysqlimport to load
the data file is to use the LOAD
DATA
statement from within the
mysql client:
mysql>USE db1;
mysql>LOAD DATA INFILE 't1.txt' INTO TABLE t1;
If you used any data-formatting options with
mysqldump when you initially dumped the
table, you must use the same options with
mysqlimport or LOAD
DATA
to ensure proper interpretation of the data file
contents:
shell>mysqlimport --fields-terminated-by=,
--fields-enclosed-by='"' --lines-terminated-by=0x0d0a db1 t1.txt
Or:
mysql>USE db1;
mysql>LOAD DATA INFILE 't1.txt' INTO TABLE t1
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' FIELDS ENCLOSED BY '"'
LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n';
This section surveys techniques that enable you to use mysqldump to solve specific problems:
How to make a copy a database
How to copy a database from one server to another
How to dump stored programs (stored procedures and functions, triggers, and events)
How to dump definitions and data separately
shell>mysqldump db1 > dump.sql
shell>mysqladmin create db2
shell>mysql db2 < dump.sql
Do not use --databases
on
the mysqldump command line because that
causes USE db1
to be included in the dump
file, which overrides the effect of naming
db2
on the mysql command
line.
On Server 1:
shell> mysqldump --databases db1 > dump.sql
Copy the dump file from Server 1 to Server 2.
On Server 2:
shell> mysql < dump.sql
Use of --databases
with the
mysqldump command line causes the dump file
to include CREATE DATABASE
and
USE
statements that create the
database if it does exist and make it the default database for
the reloaded data.
Alternatively, you can omit
--databases
from the
mysqldump command. Then you will need to
create the database on Server 2 (if necessary) and specify it
as the default database when you reload the dump file.
On Server 1:
shell> mysqldump db1 > dump.sql
On Server 2:
shell>mysqladmin create db1
shell>mysql db1 < dump.sql
You can specify a different database name in this case, so
omitting --databases
from
the mysqldump command enables you to dump
data from one database and load it into another.
Several options control how mysqldump handles stored programs (stored procedures and functions, triggers, and events):
--events
: Dump Event
Scheduler events
--routines
: Dump stored
procedures and functions
--triggers
: Dump
triggers for tables
The --triggers
option is
enabled by default so that when tables are dumped, they are
accompanied by any triggers they have. The other options are
disabled by default and must be specified explicitly to dump
the corresponding objects. To disable any of these options
explicitly, use its skip form:
--skip-events
,
--skip-routines
,
or
--skip-triggers
.
The --no-data
option tells
mysqldump not to dump table data, resulting
in the dump file containing only statements to create the
tables. Conversely, the
--no-create-info
option
tells mysqldump to suppress
CREATE
statements from the output, so that
the dump file contains only table data.
For example, to dump table definitions and data separately for
the test
database, use these commands:
shell>mysqldump --no-data test > dump-defs.sql
shell>mysqldump --no-create-info test > dump-data.sql
For a definition-only dump, add the
--routines
and
--events
options to also include stored routine and event definitions:
shell> mysqldump --no-data --routines --events test > dump-defs.sql
When contemplating a MySQL upgrade, it is prudent to install the newer version separately from your current production version. Then you can dump the database and database object definitions from the production server and load them into the new server to verify that they are handled properly. (This is also useful for testing downgrades.)
On the production server:
shell> mysqldump --all-databases --no-data --routines --events > dump-defs.sql
On the upgraded server:
shell> mysql < dump-defs.sql
Because the dump file does not contain table data, it can be processed quickly. This enables you to spot potential incompatibilities without waiting for lengthy data-loading operations. Look for warnings or errors while the dump file is being processed.
After you have verified that the definitions are handled properly, dump the data and try to load it into the upgraded server.
On the production server:
shell> mysqldump --all-databases --no-create-info > dump-data.sql
On the upgraded server:
shell> mysql < dump-data.sql
Now check the table contents and run some test queries.
Point-in-time recovery refers to recovery of data changes made since a given point in time. Typically, this type of recovery is performed after restoring a full backup that brings the server to its state as of the time the backup was made. (The full backup can be made in several ways, such as those listed in Section 7.2, “Database Backup Methods”.) Point-in-time recovery then brings the server up to date incrementally from the time of the full backup to a more recent time.
Many of the examples here use the mysql
client to process binary log output produced by
mysqlbinlog. If your binary log contains
\0
(null) characters, that output cannot be
parsed by mysql unless you invoke it with the
--binary-mode
option.
Point-in-time recovery is based on these principles:
The source of information for point-in-time recovery is the
set of incremental backups represented by the binary log files
generated subsequent to the full backup operation. Therefore,
the server must be started with the
--log-bin
option to enable
binary logging (see Section 5.4.4, “The Binary Log”).
To restore data from the binary log, you must know the name
and location of the current binary log files. By default, the
server creates binary log files in the data directory, but a
path name can be specified with the
--log-bin
option to place the
files in a different location. Section 5.4.4, “The Binary Log”.
To see a listing of all binary log files, use this statement:
mysql> SHOW BINARY LOGS;
To determine the name of the current binary log file, issue the following statement:
mysql> SHOW MASTER STATUS;
The mysqlbinlog utility converts the events in the binary log files from binary format to text so that they can be executed or viewed. mysqlbinlog has options for selecting sections of the binary log based on event times or position of events within the log. See Section 4.6.8, “mysqlbinlog — Utility for Processing Binary Log Files”.
Executing events from the binary log causes the data modifications they represent to be redone. This enables recovery of data changes for a given span of time. To execute events from the binary log, process mysqlbinlog output using the mysql client:
shell> mysqlbinlog binlog_files
| mysql -u root -p
Viewing log contents can be useful when you need to determine event times or positions to select partial log contents prior to executing events. To view events from the log, send mysqlbinlog output into a paging program:
shell> mysqlbinlog binlog_files
| more
Alternatively, save the output in a file and view the file in a text editor:
shell>mysqlbinlog
shell> ...binlog_files
> tmpfileedit tmpfile
...
Saving the output in a file is useful as a preliminary to
executing the log contents with certain events removed, such
as an accidental DROP DATABASE
.
You can delete from the file any statements not to be executed
before executing its contents. After editing the file, execute
the contents as follows:
shell> mysql -u root -p < tmpfile
If you have more than one binary log to execute on the MySQL server, the safe method is to process them all using a single connection to the server. Here is an example that demonstrates what may be unsafe:
shell>mysqlbinlog binlog.000001 | mysql -u root -p # DANGER!!
shell>mysqlbinlog binlog.000002 | mysql -u root -p # DANGER!!
Processing binary logs this way using different connections to the
server causes problems if the first log file contains a
CREATE TEMPORARY
TABLE
statement and the second log contains a statement
that uses the temporary table. When the first
mysql process terminates, the server drops the
temporary table. When the second mysql process
attempts to use the table, the server reports “unknown
table.”
To avoid problems like this, use a single connection to execute the contents of all binary logs that you want to process. Here is one way to do so:
shell> mysqlbinlog binlog.000001 binlog.000002 | mysql -u root -p
Another approach is to write all the logs to a single file and then process the file:
shell>mysqlbinlog binlog.000001 > /tmp/statements.sql
shell>mysqlbinlog binlog.000002 >> /tmp/statements.sql
shell>mysql -u root -p -e "source /tmp/statements.sql"
When writing to a dump file while reading back from a binary log
containing GTIDs (see Section 17.1.3, “Replication with Global Transaction Identifiers”), use
the --skip-gtids
option with
mysqlbinlog, like this:
shell>mysqlbinlog --skip-gtids binlog.000001 > /tmp/dump.sql
shell>mysqlbinlog --skip-gtids binlog.000002 >> /tmp/dump.sql
shell>mysql -u root -p -e "source /tmp/dump.sql"
To indicate the start and end times for recovery, specify the
--start-datetime
and
--stop-datetime
options for
mysqlbinlog, in
DATETIME
format. As an example,
suppose that exactly at 10:00 a.m. on April 20, 2005 an SQL
statement was executed that deleted a large table. To restore
the table and data, you could restore the previous night's
backup, and then execute the following command:
shell>mysqlbinlog --stop-datetime="2005-04-20 9:59:59" \
/var/log/mysql/bin.123456 | mysql -u root -p
This command recovers all of the data up until the date and time
given by the --stop-datetime
option. If you did not detect the erroneous SQL statement that
was entered until hours later, you will probably also want to
recover the activity that occurred afterward. Based on this, you
could run mysqlbinlog again with a start date
and time, like so:
shell>mysqlbinlog --start-datetime="2005-04-20 10:01:00" \
/var/log/mysql/bin.123456 | mysql -u root -p
In this command, the SQL statements logged from 10:01 a.m. on will be re-executed. The combination of restoring of the previous night's dump file and the two mysqlbinlog commands restores everything up until one second before 10:00 a.m. and everything from 10:01 a.m. on.
To use this method of point-in-time recovery, you should examine the log to be sure of the exact times to specify for the commands. To display the log file contents without executing them, use this command:
shell> mysqlbinlog /var/log/mysql/bin.123456 > /tmp/mysql_restore.sql
Then open the /tmp/mysql_restore.sql
file
with a text editor to examine it.
Excluding specific changes by specifying times for mysqlbinlog does not work well if multiple statements executed at the same time as the one to be excluded.
Instead of specifying dates and times, the
--start-position
and
--stop-position
options for
mysqlbinlog can be used for specifying log
positions. They work the same as the start and stop date
options, except that you specify log position numbers rather
than dates. Using positions may enable you to be more precise
about which part of the log to recover, especially if many
transactions occurred around the same time as a damaging SQL
statement. To determine the position numbers, run
mysqlbinlog for a range of times near the
time when the unwanted transaction was executed, but redirect
the results to a text file for examination. This can be done
like so:
shell>mysqlbinlog --start-datetime="2005-04-20 9:55:00" \
--stop-datetime="2005-04-20 10:05:00" \
/var/log/mysql/bin.123456 > /tmp/mysql_restore.sql
This command creates a small text file in the
/tmp
directory that contains the SQL
statements around the time that the deleterious SQL statement
was executed. Open this file with a text editor and look for the
statement that you do not want to repeat. Determine the
positions in the binary log for stopping and resuming the
recovery and make note of them. Positions are labeled as
log_pos
followed by a number. After restoring
the previous backup file, use the position numbers to process
the binary log file. For example, you would use commands
something like these:
shell>mysqlbinlog --stop-position=368312 /var/log/mysql/bin.123456 \
| mysql -u root -p
shell>mysqlbinlog --start-position=368315 /var/log/mysql/bin.123456 \
| mysql -u root -p
The first command recovers all the transactions up until the
stop position given. The second command recovers all
transactions from the starting position given until the end of
the binary log. Because the output of
mysqlbinlog includes SET
TIMESTAMP
statements before each SQL statement
recorded, the recovered data and related MySQL logs will reflect
the original times at which the transactions were executed.
This section discusses how to use myisamchk to
check or repair MyISAM
tables (tables that have
.MYD
and .MYI
files for
storing data and indexes). For general
myisamchk background, see
Section 4.6.3, “myisamchk — MyISAM Table-Maintenance Utility”. Other table-repair information can be
found at Section 2.11.10, “Rebuilding or Repairing Tables or Indexes”.
You can use myisamchk to check, repair, or optimize database tables. The following sections describe how to perform these operations and how to set up a table maintenance schedule. For information about using myisamchk to get information about your tables, see Section 4.6.3.5, “Obtaining Table Information with myisamchk”.
Even though table repair with myisamchk is quite secure, it is always a good idea to make a backup before doing a repair or any maintenance operation that could make a lot of changes to a table.
myisamchk operations that affect indexes can
cause MyISAM
FULLTEXT
indexes to be rebuilt with full-text parameters that are
incompatible with the values used by the MySQL server. To avoid
this problem, follow the guidelines in
Section 4.6.3.1, “myisamchk General Options”.
MyISAM
table maintenance can also be done using
the SQL statements that perform operations similar to what
myisamchk can do:
To check MyISAM
tables, use
CHECK TABLE
.
To repair MyISAM
tables, use
REPAIR TABLE
.
To optimize MyISAM
tables, use
OPTIMIZE TABLE
.
To analyze MyISAM
tables, use
ANALYZE TABLE
.
For additional information about these statements, see Section 13.7.2, “Table Maintenance Statements”.
These statements can be used directly or by means of the mysqlcheck client program. One advantage of these statements over myisamchk is that the server does all the work. With myisamchk, you must make sure that the server does not use the tables at the same time so that there is no unwanted interaction between myisamchk and the server.
This section describes how to check for and deal with data corruption in MySQL databases. If your tables become corrupted frequently, you should try to find the reason why. See Section B.4.3.3, “What to Do If MySQL Keeps Crashing”.
For an explanation of how MyISAM
tables can
become corrupted, see Section 15.2.4, “MyISAM Table Problems”.
If you run mysqld with external locking disabled (which is the default), you cannot reliably use myisamchk to check a table when mysqld is using the same table. If you can be certain that no one will access the tables through mysqld while you run myisamchk, you only have to execute mysqladmin flush-tables before you start checking the tables. If you cannot guarantee this, you must stop mysqld while you check the tables. If you run myisamchk to check tables that mysqld is updating at the same time, you may get a warning that a table is corrupt even when it is not.
If the server is run with external locking enabled, you can use myisamchk to check tables at any time. In this case, if the server tries to update a table that myisamchk is using, the server will wait for myisamchk to finish before it continues.
If you use myisamchk to repair or optimize tables, you must always ensure that the mysqld server is not using the table (this also applies if external locking is disabled). If you do not stop mysqld, you should at least do a mysqladmin flush-tables before you run myisamchk. Your tables may become corrupted if the server and myisamchk access the tables simultaneously.
When performing crash recovery, it is important to understand
that each MyISAM
table
tbl_name
in a database corresponds to
the three files in the database directory shown in the following
table.
File | Purpose |
---|---|
|
Definition (format) file |
|
Data file |
|
Index file |
Each of these three file types is subject to corruption in various ways, but problems occur most often in data files and index files.
myisamchk works by creating a copy of the
.MYD
data file row by row. It ends the
repair stage by removing the old .MYD
file
and renaming the new file to the original file name. If you use
--quick
,
myisamchk does not create a temporary
.MYD
file, but instead assumes that the
.MYD
file is correct and generates only a
new index file without touching the .MYD
file. This is safe, because myisamchk
automatically detects whether the .MYD
file
is corrupt and aborts the repair if it is. You can also specify
the --quick
option twice to
myisamchk. In this case,
myisamchk does not abort on some errors (such
as duplicate-key errors) but instead tries to resolve them by
modifying the .MYD
file. Normally the use
of two --quick
options is
useful only if you have too little free disk space to perform a
normal repair. In this case, you should at least make a backup
of the table before running myisamchk.
To check a MyISAM
table, use the following
commands:
This finds 99.99% of all errors. What it cannot find is
corruption that involves only the data
file (which is very unusual). If you want to check a table,
you should normally run myisamchk without
options or with the -s
(silent) option.
This finds 99.999% of all errors. It first checks all index entries for errors and then reads through all rows. It calculates a checksum for all key values in the rows and verifies that the checksum matches the checksum for the keys in the index tree.
This does a complete and thorough check of all data
(-e
means “extended check”).
It does a check-read of every key for each row to verify
that they indeed point to the correct row. This may take a
long time for a large table that has many indexes. Normally,
myisamchk stops after the first error it
finds. If you want to obtain more information, you can add
the -v
(verbose) option. This causes
myisamchk to keep going, up through a
maximum of 20 errors.
This is like the previous command, but the
-i
option tells
myisamchk to print additional statistical
information.
In most cases, a simple myisamchk command with no arguments other than the table name is sufficient to check a table.
The discussion in this section describes how to use
myisamchk on MyISAM
tables
(extensions .MYI
and
.MYD
).
You can also use the CHECK TABLE
and REPAIR TABLE
statements to
check and repair MyISAM
tables. See
Section 13.7.2.2, “CHECK TABLE Statement”, and
Section 13.7.2.5, “REPAIR TABLE Statement”.
Symptoms of corrupted tables include queries that abort unexpectedly and observable errors such as these:
is locked against change
tbl_name
.frm
Can't find file
(Errcode: tbl_name
.MYInnn
)
Unexpected end of file
Record file is crashed
Got error nnn
from table handler
To get more information about the error, run
perror nnn
, where
nnn
is the error number. The
following example shows how to use perror to
find the meanings for the most common error numbers that
indicate a problem with a table:
shell> perror 126 127 132 134 135 136 141 144 145
MySQL error code 126 = Index file is crashed
MySQL error code 127 = Record-file is crashed
MySQL error code 132 = Old database file
MySQL error code 134 = Record was already deleted (or record file crashed)
MySQL error code 135 = No more room in record file
MySQL error code 136 = No more room in index file
MySQL error code 141 = Duplicate unique key or constraint on write or update
MySQL error code 144 = Table is crashed and last repair failed
MySQL error code 145 = Table was marked as crashed and should be repaired
Error 135 (no more room in record file) and error 136 (no more
room in index file) are not errors that can be fixed by a simple
repair. In this case, you must use ALTER
TABLE
to increase the MAX_ROWS
and
AVG_ROW_LENGTH
table option values:
ALTER TABLEtbl_name
MAX_ROWS=xxx
AVG_ROW_LENGTH=yyy
;
If you do not know the current table option values, use
SHOW CREATE TABLE
.
For the other errors, you must repair your tables. myisamchk can usually detect and fix most problems that occur.
The repair process involves up to four stages, described here. Before you begin, you should change location to the database directory and check the permissions of the table files. On Unix, make sure that they are readable by the user that mysqld runs as (and to you, because you need to access the files you are checking). If it turns out you need to modify files, they must also be writable by you.
This section is for the cases where a table check fails (such as those described in Section 7.6.2, “How to Check MyISAM Tables for Errors”), or you want to use the extended features that myisamchk provides.
The myisamchk options used for table maintenance with are described in Section 4.6.3, “myisamchk — MyISAM Table-Maintenance Utility”. myisamchk also has variables that you can set to control memory allocation that may improve performance. See Section 4.6.3.6, “myisamchk Memory Usage”.
If you are going to repair a table from the command line, you must first stop the mysqld server. Note that when you do mysqladmin shutdown on a remote server, the mysqld server is still available for a while after mysqladmin returns, until all statement-processing has stopped and all index changes have been flushed to disk.
Stage 1: Checking your tables
Run myisamchk *.MYI or myisamchk -e
*.MYI if you have more time. Use the
-s
(silent) option to suppress unnecessary
information.
If the mysqld server is stopped, you should
use the --update-state
option
to tell myisamchk to mark the table as
“checked.”
You have to repair only those tables for which myisamchk announces an error. For such tables, proceed to Stage 2.
If you get unexpected errors when checking (such as out
of memory
errors), or if myisamchk
crashes, go to Stage 3.
Stage 2: Easy safe repair
First, try myisamchk -r -q
tbl_name
(-r
-q
means “quick recovery mode”). This
attempts to repair the index file without touching the data
file. If the data file contains everything that it should and
the delete links point at the correct locations within the data
file, this should work, and the table is fixed. Start repairing
the next table. Otherwise, use the following procedure:
Make a backup of the data file before continuing.
Use myisamchk -r
tbl_name
(-r
means “recovery mode”).
This removes incorrect rows and deleted rows from the data
file and reconstructs the index file.
If the preceding step fails, use myisamchk
--safe-recover
tbl_name
. Safe recovery
mode uses an old recovery method that handles a few cases
that regular recovery mode does not (but is slower).
If you want a repair operation to go much faster, you should
set the values of the
sort_buffer_size
and
key_buffer_size
variables
each to about 25% of your available memory when running
myisamchk.
If you get unexpected errors when repairing (such as
out of memory
errors), or if
myisamchk crashes, go to Stage 3.
Stage 3: Difficult repair
You should reach this stage only if the first 16KB block in the index file is destroyed or contains incorrect information, or if the index file is missing. In this case, it is necessary to create a new index file. Do so as follows:
Move the data file to a safe place.
Use the table description file to create new (empty) data and index files:
shell> mysql db_name
mysql>SET autocommit=1;
mysql>TRUNCATE TABLE
mysql>tbl_name
;quit
Copy the old data file back onto the newly created data file. (Do not just move the old file back onto the new file. You want to retain a copy in case something goes wrong.)
If you are using replication, you should stop it prior to performing the above procedure, since it involves file system operations, and these are not logged by MySQL.
Go back to Stage 2. myisamchk -r -q should work. (This should not be an endless loop.)
You can also use the REPAIR TABLE
SQL
statement, which performs the whole procedure automatically.
There is also no possibility of unwanted interaction between a
utility and the server, because the server does all the work
when you use tbl_name
USE_FRMREPAIR TABLE
. See
Section 13.7.2.5, “REPAIR TABLE Statement”.
Stage 4: Very difficult repair
You should reach this stage only if the
.frm
description file has also crashed.
That should never happen, because the description file is not
changed after the table is created:
Restore the description file from a backup and go back to Stage 3. You can also restore the index file and go back to Stage 2. In the latter case, you should start with myisamchk -r.
If you do not have a backup but know exactly how the table
was created, create a copy of the table in another database.
Remove the new data file, and then move the
.frm
description and
.MYI
index files from the other
database to your crashed database. This gives you new
description and index files, but leaves the
.MYD
data file alone. Go back to Stage
2 and attempt to reconstruct the index file.
To coalesce fragmented rows and eliminate wasted space that results from deleting or updating rows, run myisamchk in recovery mode:
shell> myisamchk -r tbl_name
You can optimize a table in the same way by using the
OPTIMIZE TABLE
SQL statement.
OPTIMIZE TABLE
does a table
repair and a key analysis, and also sorts the index tree so that
key lookups are faster. There is also no possibility of unwanted
interaction between a utility and the server, because the server
does all the work when you use OPTIMIZE
TABLE
. See Section 13.7.2.4, “OPTIMIZE TABLE Statement”.
myisamchk has a number of other options that you can use to improve the performance of a table:
--analyze
or
-a
: Perform key distribution analysis. This
improves join performance by enabling the join optimizer to
better choose the order in which to join the tables and
which indexes it should use.
--sort-index
or
-S
: Sort the index blocks. This optimizes
seeks and makes table scans that use indexes faster.
--sort-records=
or index_num
-R
:
Sort data rows according to a given index. This makes your
data much more localized and may speed up range-based
index_num
SELECT
and ORDER
BY
operations that use this index.
For a full description of all available options, see Section 4.6.3, “myisamchk — MyISAM Table-Maintenance Utility”.
It is a good idea to perform table checks on a regular basis
rather than waiting for problems to occur. One way to check and
repair MyISAM
tables is with the
CHECK TABLE
and
REPAIR TABLE
statements. See
Section 13.7.2, “Table Maintenance Statements”.
Another way to check tables is to use
myisamchk. For maintenance purposes, you can
use myisamchk -s. The -s
option (short for --silent
)
causes myisamchk to run in silent mode,
printing messages only when errors occur.
It is also a good idea to enable automatic
MyISAM
table checking. For example, whenever
the machine has done a restart in the middle of an update, you
usually need to check each table that could have been affected
before it is used further. (These are “expected crashed
tables.”) To cause the server to check
MyISAM
tables automatically, start it with
the myisam_recover_options
system variable set. See
Section 5.1.7, “Server System Variables”.
You should also check your tables regularly during normal system
operation. For example, you can run a cron
job to check important tables once a week, using a line like
this in a crontab
file:
35 0 * * 0/path/to/myisamchk
--fast --silent/path/to/datadir
/*/*.MYI
This prints out information about crashed tables so that you can examine and repair them as necessary.
To start with, execute myisamchk -s each night on all tables that have been updated during the last 24 hours. As you see that problems occur infrequently, you can back off the checking frequency to once a week or so.
Normally, MySQL tables need little maintenance. If you are
performing many updates to MyISAM
tables with
dynamic-sized rows (tables with
VARCHAR
,
BLOB
, or
TEXT
columns) or have tables with
many deleted rows you may want to defragment/reclaim space from
the tables from time to time. You can do this by using
OPTIMIZE TABLE
on the tables in
question. Alternatively, if you can stop the
mysqld server for a while, change location
into the data directory and use this command while the server is
stopped:
shell> myisamchk -r -s --sort-index --myisam_sort_buffer_size=16M */*.MYI