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When using MySQL, I always use a .my.cnf file to store my password so that I can switch to 'root' on the host, and execute whatever commands I need.
file=~/.my.cnf
touch $file
chmod 600 $file
cat <<EOF >> $file
[client]
user=root
password=SuperSecretSauce
EOF
Backup Script[edit | edit source]
Here's a quick recipe using mysqldump
cat ./backup.db.sh
#!/bin/sh
DB=wiki
backupdir="$HOME/backups";
if [ ! -d "$backupdir" ]; then
mkdir -p $backupdir;
fi
backup="$backupdir/dump-$(date +%F).$(hostname)-$DB.sql";
# increment the filename if it already exists
# http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Shell-Parameter-Expansion.html#Shell-Parameter-Expansion
i=1
filename=$(basename "$backup") # foo.txt
extension=${filename##*.} # .txt
file=${filename%.*} # foo
while [ -f $backup ]; do
backup="$backupdir/${file}.${i}.${extension}"
i=$(( i+1 )) # increments $i
done
/usr/bin/mysqldump $DB > $backup;
ls -al $backup;
Backup One-liner[edit | edit source]
For times when you need to enter a password
db=MYDATABASE;
mysqldump -u db_user $db -p > ./tmp/dump-$(date +%F).$(hostname)-$db.sql
For all databases on a host
mysql --execute="show databases" | awk '{print $1}' | grep -iv ^Database$ | sed 's/\(.*\)/mysqldump \1 > \1.'$(date +"%Y%m%d")'.sql/'
# Then just redo the command piped to sh
Restore[edit | edit source]
mysql $DB < $backup
Using process substitution and zcat
, you don't even need to uncompress your gzipped backups first.
mysql -p -u db_user db < <(zcat ./scheduled/eQualityTechnology-2015-03-15T23-11-50.mysql.gz)