Provided by: mylvmbackup_0.15-1.1_all bug

NAME

       mylvmbackup - a utility for creating MySQL backups using LVM snapshots

SYNOPSIS

       mylvmbackup [OPTIONS]

DESCRIPTION

       mylvmbackup is a tool for quickly creating full physical backups of a MySQL server's data
       files. To perform a backup, mylvmbackup obtains a read lock on all tables and flushes all
       server caches to disk, makes an LVM snapshot of the volume containing the MySQL data
       directory, and unlocks the tables again. The snapshot process takes only a small amount of
       time. When it is done, the server can continue normal operations, while the actual file
       backup proceeds.

       The LVM snapshot is mounted to a temporary directory and all data is backed up using the
       tar program by default. The archive files are created using names in the form of
       backup-YYYYMMDD_hhmmss_mysql.tar.gz, where YYYY, MM, DD, hh, mm and ss represent the year,
       month, day, hour, minute, and second of the time at which the backup occurred. The default
       prefix backup, date format and file suffix may be modified. The use of timestamped archive
       names allows you to run mylvmbackup many times without risking to overwrite old archives.
       It is possible to preserve only a defined number of last backups, to avoid running out of
       disk space.

       Alternatively, instead of tar, you can use rsync, rsnap or zbackup to perform the
       archiving.

       The rsync backup can perform both local backups as well as backing up to a remote server
       using rsyncd or rsync via SSH.

       rsnap is a wrapper around rsync to automatically maintain and rotate a given number of
       last backups (7 by default). It utilizes hard links to link to unchanged files for saving
       disk space.

       zbackup is a globally-deduplicating backup tool. Feed a large .tar into it, and it will
       store duplicate regions of it only once, then compress and optionally encrypt the result.
       Feed another .tar file, and it will also re-use any data found in any previous backups.
       This way only new changes are stored, and as long as the files are not very different, the
       amount of storage required is very low. Any of the backup files stored previously can be
       read back in full at any time.

       Moreover, a backup type none is provided for cases where the user wants to use mylvmbackup
       only for creating the snapshots and intends to perform the actual backup by using the
       appropriate hooks. (Or for cases where the snapshot itself is considered to be the
       backup).

       mylvmbackup also provides several methods for logging and reporting the progress and
       success of a backup run. The log messages can either be printed to the console (STDOUT) or
       logged via syslog. Additionally, a report can be sent to you via email.

GENERAL HINTS

       It is required to run mylvmbackup on the same host where the MySQL server runs. If your
       MySQL daemon is not listening on localhost or using the default socket location, you must
       specify --host or --socket. Even though mylvmbackup communicates with the server through a
       normal client connection to obtain the read lock and flush data, it performs the actual
       backup by accessing the file system directly. It is also a requirement that the MySQL
       server's data directory resides on an LVM volume. (It is, however, a good idea to do the
       LVM backup to a different partition than the one where the data directory resides.
       Otherwise, there is a good chance that LVM will run out of undo space for LVM snapshot
       maintenance and the backup will fail.)

       The user who invokes mylvmbackup must have sufficient filesystem permissions to create the
       LVM snapshot and mount it. This includes read/write access to the backup directory.

       If you plan to back up InnoDB tables using LVM snapshots, be advised that it is not
       sufficient to lock the tables and issue the FLUSH TABLES command to get the table files
       into a consistent state. When starting the MySQL server from these restored files, InnoDB
       will detect these tables as being in an inconsistent state and will perform a log recovery
       run before the tables can be accessed again. As this can potentially take some time (which
       you may not want to spend after restoring a server and trying to get it back on its feet
       as fast as possible), consider using the option --innodb_recover, which will perform the
       recovery operation on the backup snapshot prior to archiving it.

       The recovery operation is performed by spawning a second mysqld instance that uses the
       snapshot volume as the data directory. Note that this functionality currently assumes a
       default InnoDB configuration in which all InnoDB table spaces and log files are stored
       inside of the data directory - it does not work properly if you use options like
       --innodb-data-home-dir, --innodb-data-file-path or --innodb-log-group-home-dir that modify
       the default file layout for InnoDB tables.

       If you use InnoDB tables exclusively, you may also want to consider to include the option
       --skip_flush_tables, to avoid the probably time-consuming and in this case unnecessary
       flushing of buffers. But don't enable this option when MyISAM tables are involved!

HOOKS

       It is possible to run arbitrary external programs or scripts (hooks) at various stages of
       the backup process, to perform additional actions as part of the backup process.

       These scripts or symbolic links to executables should be placed in the directory that the
       hooksdir configuration option points to (/usr/share/mylvmbackup by default). They should
       return zero upon successful completion, any non-zero return value will be considered a
       failure which will be logged.

       Hook scripts can also be implemented as Perl modules. The module must be named hookname.pm
       and must be a package of type hookname. The module must implement execute() which is
       called by mylvmbackup to initiate the hook. It must return boolean true/false (1 or 0) on
       success/failure. execute() will be passed 2 parameters. The first parameter is a clone()
       of the global database handle $dbh. This will allow hook scripts to interact with the
       database using the established connection.  The second parameter is a string containing
       any messages passed to the run_hook() function.  The module must also implement errmsg()
       which will return a string error message to be sent to log_msg(). This will be called by
       mylvmbackup when execute() returns false/0.

       The names of the scripts or symbolic links reflect the stage in which the hook will be
       called. Currently, the following stages exist:

       preconnect
           before a connection to the database server is established

       preflush
           before calling FLUSH TABLES

       presnapshot
           before the file system snapshot is created

       preunlock
           before the database tables are unlocked again

       predisconnect
           before the connection to the database server is released

       premount
           before the snapshot volume is mounted

       prebackup
           before the snapshot backup will be performed

       backupsuccess
           after a successful backup

       backupfailure
           after a failed backup

       logerr
           when an error is logged

       precleanup
           before the snapshot is unmounted and discarded

       These hooks are optional and will only be called if a file for the particular stage exists
       and is executable. Note that hooks implemented as Perl modules (hookname.pm) have priority
       over "plain" hook scripts (hookname), if both exist, only the first one will be used. The
       execution of all hooks can be suppressed by passing the --skip_hooks option or by setting
       the skip_hooks configuration option to 1;

OPTIONS

       mylvmbackup supports the following command line options. The same options can also be
       defined in the /etc/mylvmbackup.conf configuration file (omitting the leading dashes, of
       course). A sample configuration file is included in the distribution.

       --action=string
           Selects the mode of action. Possible values are backup and purge.

           When this option is omitted, the backup action is assumed by default, which performs
           the actual backup creation. Older backup files are preserved.

           The purge action can be used to remove older tar or local rsync backups from the
           backup directory, except for the a configurable number of most recent backups, defined
           by the backupretention option. The backup creation process is skipped in this case.

           Note that this option erases all files contained in this directory that match the
           criterion of being older than the last n backup files (with the exception of hidden
           (dot) files!

       --user=string
           Specifies the username to use for connecting to the MySQL server.  The default is
           root.

       --password=string
           Specifies the password to use for connecting to the MySQL server.  The default is the
           empty string (no password). Alternatively, you can set the password by defining the
           environment variable MYSQL_PWD prior to starting the script. Note however that this
           method is considered to be highly insecure, as it's possible for other users to obtain
           the password by examining the environment variables of the running process.  See the
           MySQL Reference manual for more details on password security.

       --host=string
           Specifies the host name to use for connecting to the MySQL server. Note that
           mylvmbackup needs to be run on the same system that the MySQL server to be backed up
           runs on - do not enter a remote host's host name or IP address here!  A non-empty
           value for host other than localhost overrides any given socket path value.  The
           default is the empty string.

       --port=number
           Specifies the TCP port number to use for connecting to the MySQL server.  This value
           is only honoured, if host is provided as well and is not equal to localhost.  The
           default is the empty string.

       --socket=string
           Specifies the path to the local socket file, if it is not located at the default
           location. The default is the empty string.

       --quiet
           Suppresses logging of informal messages. Warnings and errors will still be printed or
           logged (depending on the selected logging mechanism).  The default is verbose logging.

       --innodb_recover
           Run InnoDB recovery on the writable snapshot prior to performing the backup.

       --recoveryopts
           Additional values to pass to the startup options of the separate MySQL instance that
           gets spawned to perform the InnoDB log recovery option.  Depending on your MySQL
           Server version, you may have to modify these startup parameters.

           The default is --skip-networking --skip-grant --bootstrap --skip-syslog
           --skip-slave-start.

       --skip_flush_tables
           Don't issue a FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK command before creating the snapshot. Only
           use this option when backing up InnoDB tables (as they don't support this function
           anyway and will require recovery in any case). This option skips the (probably time
           consuming) flushing of buffers.

       --extra_flush_tables
           If your database performs a lot of writes, it may help to perform an extra initial
           FLUSH TABLES so that the lvcreate can finish within the interactivity timeout during
           the read-locked flush.

       --pidfile=string
           Specifies the full path and file name to the PID file of the server instance that is
           spawned to perform the InnoDB recovery (see option --innodb_recover). Must be
           different from the PID file that the actual running server uses.  The default is
           /var/run/mysqld/mylvmbackup_recoverserver.pid

       --lvcreate=string
           Specifies the pathname for the lvcreate program.  The default is lvcreate.

       --lvremove=string
           Specifies the pathname for the lvremove program.  The default is lvremove.

       --lvs=string
           Specifies the pathname for the lvs program.  The default is lvs.

       --mysqld_safe=string
           Specifies the pathname for the mysqld_safe program.  The default is mysqld_safe.  Only
           used to perform InnoDB recovery.

       --mycnf=string
           Specifies the name of a MySQL config file (e.g. /etc/my.cnf) or an entire config
           directory (e.g. /etc/mysql) to include in the backup.  The default is /etc/my.cnf.

       --skip_mycnf
           Skip backing up the MySQL configuration.  The default is to include a copy of the
           MySQL configuration in the backup.

       --hooksdir=string
           The location of external scripts or executable to be called during various stages of
           the backup. See the HOOKS section in this manual page for more info.  The default is
           /usr/share/mylvmbackup.

       --skip_hooks
           Skip invoking any external hooks during the backup.

       --vgname=string
           Specifies the volume group of the logical volume where the MySQL data directory is
           located.  The default is mysql.

       --lvname=string
           Specifies the name of the logical volume where the MySQL data directory is located.
           The default is data.

       --backuplv=string
           Specifies the name used for the snapshot volume. If left empty, _snapshot will simply
           be appended to the original volume name (e.g. data_snapshot).

           It is possible to use selected timestr() formatting sequences to create snapshot
           volume names which contain a dynamic date value. This can be useful if you use thin
           provisioned snapshots as the actual backup, by enabling the keep_snapshot option.

           Currently, the following format strings are supported:

           %Y  4-digit year (e.g. 2009)

           %m  Month (01..12)

           %d  Day of month, leading zero

           %h  Month abbreviation,

           %H  Hour, 24 hour clock, leading zero

           %M  Minute, leading zero

           %S  Seconds, leading zero

           Example: $backuplv=backup-%Y-%m-%d-%H-%M-%S will expand to backup-2013-06-07-14-08-45.

       --keep_snapshot
           If this option is given, mylvmbackup will not remove the snapshot before terminating.
           Note that keeping multiple LVM snapshots open at the same time can reduce I/O
           performance and you will need to manually discard the snapshot before invoking
           mylvmbackup again.

       --keep_mount
           If this option is given, mylvmbackup will not remove the mounted partition before
           terminating. This option also implies keep_snapshot=1, as it would not be useful if
           the snapshot is removed. You need to manually unmount this directory before invoking
           mylvmbackup again.

       --thin
           If this option is given, mylvmbackup will expect that the LVM volume is using thin
           provisioning and that the snapshot will use physical space from the existing thin
           pool. Any size specified with lvsize is ignored.

       --relpath=string
           Relative path on the logical volume to the MySQL data directory (no leading or
           trailing slash). Example: the logical volume is mounted on /var/lib, but the MySQL
           data directory is /var/lib/mysql. In this case, relpath should be set to mysql.  The
           default is the empty string.

       --lvsize=string
           Specifies the size for the snapshot volume.  The default is 5G (5 gigabytes).

       --backuptype=string
           Specifies what type of backup to perform. The available options are tar, rsync, rsnap,
           zbackup and none. Note that using zbackup still requires a tar executable to prepare
           the backup archives.

       --backupretention=string
           Specifies how many previous backups (tar archives or rsync directories only) to keep
           in the backup directory when performing the purge action. The default is 0 (keep all
           backups).

           Note that this feature only works on a local backup directory with a static directory
           name! If you use timestr() formatting sequences for the backup directory, the
           retention mode will not work.

           The script looks at the last modification time (mtime) of each file and directory to
           determine which files will be removed.

           Be advised that this operation deletes all files and directories in the backup
           directory that are older than the last n files (with the exception of hidden (dot)
           files!

       --prefix=string
           Prefix added to the backup file names. It is also appended to the name of the
           directory used to mount the snapshot volume.  The default value is backup.

       --suffix=string
           Suffix added to the backup file names (after the time stamp).  The default value is
           _mysql.

       --datefmt=string
           Format of the time stamp included in the backup file name. See the Date::Format
           perldoc page for a description of the format.  The default value is %Y%m%d_%H%M%S,
           which creates a time stamp like YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS, e.g. 20070531_112549 Can be empty as
           well, to suppress adding a time stamp (e.g. when using rsync to always sync into the
           same backup directory).

       --mountdir=string
           Path for mounting the snapshot volume to.  The default value is
           /var/run/mysqld/mylvmbackup/mnt/.  If the directory does not exist, it will be
           created.

           It is possible to use selected timestr() formatting sequences to create directory
           names which contain a dynamic date value. Currently, the following format strings are
           supported:

           %Y  4-digit year (e.g. 2009)

           %m  Month (01..12)

           %d  Day of month, leading zero

           %h  Month abbreviation,

           %H  Hour, 24 hour clock, leading zero

           %M  Minute, leading zero

           %S  Seconds, leading zero

           Example: $mountdir=/path/to/%Y-%m-%d will expand to /path/to/2009-06-13

       --backupdir=string
           Specifies the pathname of the directory where the archive files will be written to.
           The backup directory must not be on the same volume as the MySQL data directory. If
           the directory does not exist, it will be created.

           It is possible to use selected timestr() formatting sequences to create directory
           names which contain a dynamic date value. Currently, the following format strings are
           supported:

           %Y  4-digit year (e.g. 2009)

           %m  Month (01..12)

           %d  Day of month, leading zero

           %h  Month abbreviation,

           %H  Hour, 24 hour clock, leading zero

           %M  Minute, leading zero

           %S  Seconds, leading zero

           Example: $mountdir=/path/to/%Y-%m-%d will expand to /path/to/2009-06-13

           Instead of a local directory, you can also provide a valid rsync URL here, e.g.
           username@hostname:/path, hostname:path or hostname::rsync-module/path.  This requires
           a properly configured remote rsync setup (e.g. pre-setup SSH keys or a working rsyncd
           configuration).

           Note that the backupretention option does not work for rsync URLs or directory names
           that use format strings. You need to define a static local directory name in backupdir
           if you want to use the purge action to automatically remove older backups from the
           backup directory.

           The default is /var/run/mysqld/mylvmbackup/backup/

       --mount=string
           Specifies the pathname for the mount program.  The default is mount.

       --umount=string
           Specifies the pathname for the umount program.  The default is umount.

       --tar=string
           Specifies the pathname for the tar program.  The default is tar.

       --tararg=string
           Specifies the initial arguments for the tar program.  The default is cvf.

       --tarsuffixarg=string
           Specifies the suffix arguments for the tar program.  The default is the empty string.
           To exclude a database, you would pass --exclude dbname here.

       --tarfilesuffix=string
           Specifies the suffix for the tarball. This value should be set according to the
           selected compression method (e.g. .tar.bz2 for bzip2 compression).  The default is
           .tar.gz.

       --compress=string
           Specifies the name of the compression program. Only used if backuptype is set to tar.
           Some possibilities are gzip, bzip2 or lzma.  The program must support reading the to
           be compressed data from stdin and writing to stdout, without requiring intermediate
           temporary files (for this reason, 7zip cannot be used). It's also possible to use cat.
           In this case, no compression will be done. Make sure to update the compressarg option
           and the tarfilesuffix accordingly.  The default is gzip. Can be left empty.

       --compressarg=string
           Specifies the command line options given to the compress program. For gzip, that would
           be --stdout --verbose --best, for lzma or bzip2 --stdout --verbose -7 and for cat, it
           would be empty.  The default is --stdout --verbose --best.

       --rsnap=string
           Specifies the pathname for the rsnap program.  The default is rsnap.

       --rsnaparg=string
           Specifies the arguments for the rsnap program.  The default is 7, which causes it to
           keep the last 7 snapshot (useful when running mylvmbackup once per day).

       --rsnaprsyncarg=string
           Specifies the arguments for the rsync process that is spawned by rsnap, e.g. --exclude
           \*.o --bwlimit=8. You don't need to provide the double dashes usually required by
           rsnap to separate these arguments.  Default value is the empty string.

       --rsync=string
           Specifies the pathname for the rsync program.  The default is rsync.

       --rsyncarg=string
           Specifies the arguments for the rsync program.  The default is -avWP. You must ensure
           that the recursive option is included either implicitly by -a, or explicitly by using
           -r.

       --zbackup=string
           Specifies the pathname for the zbackup program.  The default is zbackup.

       --zbackuparg=string
           Specifies the arguments for the zbackup program.  The default is --non-encrypted.

           You may use --password-file /path/to/pass to create an encrypted zbackup repository.
           The backup repository located in backupdir will be initialized automatically by
           running zbackup init before the first invocation.

       --xfs
           Use the nouuid mount option to safely mount snapshot partitions that use the XFS file
           system.

       --log_method=string
           How to log output from this script. Valid options are console, syslog or both.  The
           default value is console. Enabling the syslog option requires an installed Sys::Syslog
           Perl module.

       --syslog_socktype=string
           What type of socket to use for connecting to the syslog service. Valid options are
           native, tcp and udp.  The default value is native.

       --syslog_facility=string
           Define a particular syslog facility Default value is the empty string.

       --syslog_remotehost=string
           Host name of a remote syslog server.

       --mail_report_on=string
           Enable sending the logging output via email to a specified email address.

           This option requires an installed MIME::Lite Perl module as well as a functional local
           sendmail (or alternative) facility.

           You should also review and adjust the mail_from, mail_to and mail_subject
           configuration options to match you requirements.

           Supported values are never, this disables the mail reporting completely. A value of
           always sends an email report for each invocation of mylvmbackup, errors only sends a
           report in case of an error condition.

           The default value is never.

       --mail_from=string
           The email address to be used in the From: header for email reports (requires the
           mail_report option to be set).  The default value is root@localhost.

       --mail_to=string
           The email address to be used to send email reports to (requires the mail_report option
           to be set).  The default value is root@localhost.

       --mail_subject=string
           The text to be used in the Subject: header for email reports (requires the mail_report
           option to be set).  The default value is "mylvmbackup report for localhost".

       --configfile=string
           Specify an alternative configuration file.  The default is /etc/mylvmbackup.conf.

       --help
           Displays a help message showing the available options.

FILES

       /etc/mylvbackup.conf
           The mylvmbackup configuration file

       mylvmbackup
           The executable Perl script that performs the work.

REQUIREMENTS

       For proper operation mylvmbackup requires Perl 5 with the DBI and DBD::mysql modules. It
       also needs the Config::IniFiles to read the global configuration file of the program.
       Date::Format is required to create the time stamp used in the backup file names. In
       addition, it utilizes Getopt::Long, File::Basename and File::Temp, which usually are part
       of the default Perl distribution.  File::Copy::Recursive is used to copy the MySQL
       configuration file(s).  Sys::Syslog is only required in case you want to enable the syslog
       log facility.  The MIME::Lite module is required when you enable the mail reporting
       functionality. It also requires a functional local sendmail (or alternative) facility.

       It also requires several other external programs: GNU tar and gzip to back up the data,
       LVM utilities (lvcreate, lvremove and lvs) to create and remove the LVM snapshot, and the
       system utilities mount and umount.  Please note that mylvmbackup requires Linux LVM
       Version 2 or higher. It does not work on LVMv1, as this version does not support writable
       snapshots.

       Optionally, rsync or rsnap may be required instead of tar and gzip, depending on which
       backup type you choose.

SEE ALSO

       mount(8), tar(1), lvcreate(8), lvremove(8), lvs(8), umount(8), rsync(1)

AUTHOR

       This program was initially written by Aleksey "Walrus" Kishkin from MySQL AB, with
       suggestions from Peter Zaitsev and Lenz Grimmer.

       It is currently maintained by Lenz Grimmer <lenz@grimmer.com>

RESOURCES

       Main web site: <http://www.lenzg.net/mylvmbackup>

       Mailing list: <https://launchpad.net/~mylvmbackup-discuss>

       Source code, bug tracker: <https://launchpad.net/mylvmbackup>

CREDITS

       See the file CREDITS included in the distribution for a list of individual contributors.

COPYING

       mylvmbackup is distributed under the GNU public license. See the file COPYING for details.