Provided by: mysql-server-core_8.4.3-0ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       mysqlbinlog - utility for processing binary log files

SYNOPSIS

       mysqlbinlog [options] log_file ...

DESCRIPTION

       The server's binary log consists of files containing “events” that describe modifications
       to database contents. The server writes these files in binary format. To display their
       contents in text format, use the mysqlbinlog utility. You can also use mysqlbinlog to
       display the contents of relay log files written by a replica server in a replication setup
       because relay logs have the same format as binary logs. The binary log and relay log are
       discussed further in Section 7.4.4, “The Binary Log”, and Section 19.2.4, “Relay Log and
       Replication Metadata Repositories”.

       Invoke mysqlbinlog like this:

           mysqlbinlog [options] log_file ...

       For example, to display the contents of the binary log file named binlog.000003, use this
       command:

           mysqlbinlog binlog.000003

       The output includes events contained in binlog.000003. For statement-based logging, event
       information includes the SQL statement, the ID of the server on which it was executed, the
       timestamp when the statement was executed, how much time it took, and so forth. For
       row-based logging, the event indicates a row change rather than an SQL statement. See
       Section 19.2.1, “Replication Formats”, for information about logging modes.

       Events are preceded by header comments that provide additional information. For example:

           # at 141
           #100309  9:28:36 server id 123  end_log_pos 245
             Query thread_id=3350  exec_time=11  error_code=0

       In the first line, the number following at indicates the file offset, or starting
       position, of the event in the binary log file.

       The second line starts with a date and time indicating when the statement started on the
       server where the event originated. For replication, this timestamp is propagated to
       replica servers.  server id is the server_id value of the server where the event
       originated.  end_log_pos indicates where the next event starts (that is, it is the end
       position of the current event + 1).  thread_id indicates which thread executed the event.
       exec_time is the time spent executing the event, on a replication source server. On a
       replica, it is the difference of the end execution time on the replica minus the beginning
       execution time on the source. The difference serves as an indicator of how much
       replication lags behind the source.  error_code indicates the result from executing the
       event. Zero means that no error occurred.

           Note
           When using event groups, the file offsets of events may be grouped together and the
           comments of events may be grouped together. Do not mistake these grouped events for
           blank file offsets.

       The output from mysqlbinlog can be re-executed (for example, by using it as input to
       mysql) to redo the statements in the log. This is useful for recovery operations after an
       unexpected server exit. For other usage examples, see the discussion later in this section
       and in Section 9.5, “Point-in-Time (Incremental) Recovery”. To execute the internal-use
       BINLOG statements used by mysqlbinlog, the user requires the BINLOG_ADMIN privilege (or
       the deprecated SUPER privilege), or the REPLICATION_APPLIER privilege plus the appropriate
       privileges to execute each log event.

       You can use mysqlbinlog to read binary log files directly and apply them to the local
       MySQL server. You can also read binary logs from a remote server by using the
       --read-from-remote-server option. To read remote binary logs, the connection parameter
       options can be given to indicate how to connect to the server. These options are --host,
       --password, --port, --protocol, --socket, and --user.

       When binary log files have been encrypted, mysqlbinlog cannot read them directly, but can
       read them from the server using the --read-from-remote-server option. Binary log files are
       encrypted when the server's binlog_encryption system variable is set to ON. The SHOW
       BINARY LOGS statement shows whether a particular binary log file is encrypted or
       unencrypted. Encrypted and unencrypted binary log files can also be distinguished using
       the magic number at the start of the file header for encrypted log files (0xFD62696E),
       which differs from that used for unencrypted log files (0xFE62696E). Note that mysqlbinlog
       returns a suitable error if you attempt to read an encrypted binary log file directly, but
       older versions of mysqlbinlog do not recognise the file as a binary log file at all. For
       more information on binary log encryption, see Section 19.3.2, “Encrypting Binary Log
       Files and Relay Log Files”.

       When binary log transaction payloads have been compressed, mysqlbinlog automatically
       decompresses and decodes the transaction payloads, and prints them as it would
       uncompressed events. When binlog_transaction_compression is set to ON, transaction
       payloads are compressed and then written to the server's binary log file as a single event
       (a Transaction_payload_event). With the --verbose option, mysqlbinlog adds comments
       stating the compression algorithm used, the compressed payload size that was originally
       received, and the resulting payload size after decompression.

           Note
           The end position (end_log_pos) that mysqlbinlog states for an individual event that
           was part of a compressed transaction payload is the same as the end position of the
           original compressed payload. Multiple decompressed events can therefore have the same
           end position.

           mysqlbinlog's own connection compression does less if transaction payloads are already
           compressed, but still operates on uncompressed transactions and headers.

       For more information on binary log transaction compression, see Section 7.4.4.5, “Binary
       Log Transaction Compression”.

       When running mysqlbinlog against a large binary log, be careful that the filesystem has
       enough space for the resulting files. To configure the directory that mysqlbinlog uses for
       temporary files, use the TMPDIR environment variable.

       mysqlbinlog sets the value of pseudo_replica_mode to true before executing any SQL
       statements. This system variable affects the handling of XA transactions, the
       original_commit_timestamp replication delay timestamp and the original_server_version
       system variable, and unsupported SQL modes.

       mysqlbinlog supports the following options, which can be specified on the command line or
       in the [mysqlbinlog] and [client] groups of an option file. For information about option
       files used by MySQL programs, see Section 6.2.2.2, “Using Option Files”.

       •   --help, -?

           ┌────────────────────┬────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --help │
           └────────────────────┴────────┘
           Display a help message and exit.

       •   --base64-output=value

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --base64-output=value  │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                 │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ AUTO                   │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────┤
           │Valid Values        │                        │
           │                    │            AUTO        │
           │                    │                        │
           │                    │            NEVER       │
           │                    │                        │
           │                    │            DECODE-ROWS │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────┘
           This option determines when events should be displayed encoded as base-64 strings
           using BINLOG statements. The option has these permissible values (not case-sensitive):

           •   AUTO ("automatic") or UNSPEC ("unspecified") displays BINLOG statements
               automatically when necessary (that is, for format description events and row
               events). If no --base64-output option is given, the effect is the same as
               --base64-output=AUTO.

                   Note
                   Automatic BINLOG display is the only safe behavior if you intend to use the
                   output of mysqlbinlog to re-execute binary log file contents. The other option
                   values are intended only for debugging or testing purposes because they may
                   produce output that does not include all events in executable form.

           •   NEVER causes BINLOG statements not to be displayed.  mysqlbinlog exits with an
               error if a row event is found that must be displayed using BINLOG.

           •   DECODE-ROWS specifies to mysqlbinlog that you intend for row events to be decoded
               and displayed as commented SQL statements by also specifying the --verbose option.
               Like NEVER, DECODE-ROWS suppresses display of BINLOG statements, but unlike NEVER,
               it does not exit with an error if a row event is found.

           For examples that show the effect of --base64-output and --verbose on row event
           output, see the section called “MYSQLBINLOG ROW EVENT DISPLAY”.

       •   --bind-address=ip_address

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --bind-address=ip_address │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘
           On a computer having multiple network interfaces, use this option to select which
           interface to use for connecting to the MySQL server.

       •   --binlog-row-event-max-size=N

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --binlog-row-event-max-size=# │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric                       │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ 4294967040                    │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
           │Minimum Value       │ 256                           │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
           │Maximum Value       │ 18446744073709547520          │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────┘
           Specify the maximum size of a row-based binary log event, in bytes. Rows are grouped
           into events smaller than this size if possible. The value should be a multiple of 256.
           The default is 4GB.

       •   --character-sets-dir=dir_name

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --character-sets-dir=dir_name │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Directory name                │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────┘
           The directory where character sets are installed. See Section 12.15, “Character Set
           Configuration”.

       •   --compress

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --compress[={OFF|ON}] │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────┤
           │Deprecated          │ Yes                   │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean               │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ OFF                   │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────┘
           Compress all information sent between the client and the server if possible. See
           Section 6.2.8, “Connection Compression Control”.

           This option is deprecated. Expect it to be removed in a future version of MySQL. See
           the section called “Configuring Legacy Connection Compression”.

       •   --compression-algorithms=value

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --compression-algorithms=value │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Set                            │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ uncompressed                   │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Valid Values        │                                │
           │                    │            zlib                │
           │                    │                                │
           │                    │            zstd                │
           │                    │                                │
           │                    │            uncompressed        │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────┘
           The permitted compression algorithms for connections to the server. The available
           algorithms are the same as for the protocol_compression_algorithms system variable.
           The default value is uncompressed.

           For more information, see Section 6.2.8, “Connection Compression Control”.

       •   --connection-server-id=server_id

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --connection-server-id=#] │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Integer                   │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ 0 (1)                     │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
           │Minimum Value       │ 0 (1)                     │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
           │Maximum Value       │ 4294967295                │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘
           --connection-server-id specifies the server ID that mysqlbinlog reports when it
           connects to the server. It can be used to avoid a conflict with the ID of a replica
           server or another mysqlbinlog process.

           If the --read-from-remote-server option is specified, mysqlbinlog reports a server ID
           of 0, which tells the server to disconnect after sending the last log file
           (nonblocking behavior). If the --stop-never option is also specified to maintain the
           connection to the server, mysqlbinlog reports a server ID of 1 by default instead of
           0, and --connection-server-id can be used to replace that server ID if required. See
           the section called “SPECIFYING THE MYSQLBINLOG SERVER ID”.

       •   --database=db_name, -d db_name

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --database=db_name │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String             │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────┘
           This option causes mysqlbinlog to output entries from the binary log (local log only)
           that occur while db_name is been selected as the default database by USE.

           The --database option for mysqlbinlog is similar to the --binlog-do-db option for
           mysqld, but can be used to specify only one database. If --database is given multiple
           times, only the last instance is used.

           The effects of this option depend on whether the statement-based or row-based logging
           format is in use, in the same way that the effects of --binlog-do-db depend on whether
           statement-based or row-based logging is in use.

           Statement-based logging. The --database option works as follows:

           •   While db_name is the default database, statements are output whether they modify
               tables in db_name or a different database.

           •   Unless db_name is selected as the default database, statements are not output,
               even if they modify tables in db_name.

           •   There is an exception for CREATE DATABASE, ALTER DATABASE, and DROP DATABASE. The
               database being created, altered, or dropped is considered to be the default
               database when determining whether to output the statement.

           Suppose that the binary log was created by executing these statements using
           statement-based-logging:

               INSERT INTO test.t1 (i) VALUES(100);
               INSERT INTO db2.t2 (j)  VALUES(200);
               USE test;
               INSERT INTO test.t1 (i) VALUES(101);
               INSERT INTO t1 (i)      VALUES(102);
               INSERT INTO db2.t2 (j)  VALUES(201);
               USE db2;
               INSERT INTO test.t1 (i) VALUES(103);
               INSERT INTO db2.t2 (j)  VALUES(202);
               INSERT INTO t2 (j)      VALUES(203);

           mysqlbinlog --database=test does not output the first two INSERT statements because
           there is no default database. It outputs the three INSERT statements following USE
           test, but not the three INSERT statements following USE db2.

           mysqlbinlog --database=db2 does not output the first two INSERT statements because
           there is no default database. It does not output the three INSERT statements following
           USE test, but does output the three INSERT statements following USE db2.

           Row-based logging. mysqlbinlog outputs only entries that change tables belonging to
           db_name. The default database has no effect on this. Suppose that the binary log just
           described was created using row-based logging rather than statement-based logging.
           mysqlbinlog --database=test outputs only those entries that modify t1 in the test
           database, regardless of whether USE was issued or what the default database is.  If a
           server is running with binlog_format set to MIXED and you want it to be possible to
           use mysqlbinlog with the --database option, you must ensure that tables that are
           modified are in the database selected by USE. (In particular, no cross-database
           updates should be used.)

           When used together with the --rewrite-db option, the --rewrite-db option is applied
           first; then the --database option is applied, using the rewritten database name. The
           order in which the options are provided makes no difference in this regard.

       •   --debug[=debug_options], -# [debug_options]

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --debug[=debug_options]      │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                       │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ d:t:o,/tmp/mysqlbinlog.trace │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────┘
           Write a debugging log. A typical debug_options string is d:t:o,file_name. The default
           is d:t:o,/tmp/mysqlbinlog.trace.

           This option is available only if MySQL was built using WITH_DEBUG. MySQL release
           binaries provided by Oracle are not built using this option.

       •   --debug-check

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --debug-check │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean       │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ FALSE         │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────┘
           Print some debugging information when the program exits.

           This option is available only if MySQL was built using WITH_DEBUG. MySQL release
           binaries provided by Oracle are not built using this option.

       •   --debug-info

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --debug-info │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean      │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ FALSE        │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────┘
           Print debugging information and memory and CPU usage statistics when the program
           exits.

           This option is available only if MySQL was built using WITH_DEBUG. MySQL release
           binaries provided by Oracle are not built using this option.

       •   --default-auth=plugin

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --default-auth=plugin │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────┘
           A hint about which client-side authentication plugin to use. See Section 8.2.17,
           “Pluggable Authentication”.

       •   --defaults-extra-file=file_name

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --defaults-extra-file=file_name │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ File name                       │
           └────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘
           Read this option file after the global option file but (on Unix) before the user
           option file. If the file does not exist or is otherwise inaccessible, an error occurs.
           If file_name is not an absolute path name, it is interpreted relative to the current
           directory.

           For additional information about this and other option-file options, see
           Section 6.2.2.3, “Command-Line Options that Affect Option-File Handling”.

       •   --defaults-file=file_name

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --defaults-file=file_name │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ File name                 │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘
           Use only the given option file. If the file does not exist or is otherwise
           inaccessible, an error occurs. If file_name is not an absolute path name, it is
           interpreted relative to the current directory.

           Exception: Even with --defaults-file, client programs read .mylogin.cnf.

           For additional information about this and other option-file options, see
           Section 6.2.2.3, “Command-Line Options that Affect Option-File Handling”.

       •   --defaults-group-suffix=str

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --defaults-group-suffix=str │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                      │
           └────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
           Read not only the usual option groups, but also groups with the usual names and a
           suffix of str. For example, mysqlbinlog normally reads the [client] and [mysqlbinlog]
           groups. If this option is given as --defaults-group-suffix=_other, mysqlbinlog also
           reads the [client_other] and [mysqlbinlog_other] groups.

           For additional information about this and other option-file options, see
           Section 6.2.2.3, “Command-Line Options that Affect Option-File Handling”.

       •   --disable-log-bin, -D

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --disable-log-bin │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────┘
           Disable binary logging. This is useful for avoiding an endless loop if you use the
           --to-last-log option and are sending the output to the same MySQL server. This option
           also is useful when restoring after an unexpected exit to avoid duplication of the
           statements you have logged.

           This option causes mysqlbinlog to include a SET sql_log_bin = 0 statement in its
           output to disable binary logging of the remaining output. Manipulating the session
           value of the sql_log_bin system variable is a restricted operation, so this option
           requires that you have privileges sufficient to set restricted session variables. See
           Section 7.1.9.1, “System Variable Privileges”.

       •   --exclude-gtids=gtid_set

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --exclude-gtids=gtid_set │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                   │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │                          │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
           Do not display any of the groups listed in the gtid_set.

       •   --force-if-open, -F

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --force-if-open │
           └────────────────────┴─────────────────┘
           Read binary log files even if they are open or were not closed properly (IN_USE flag
           is set); do not fail if the file ends with a truncated event.

           The IN_USE flag is set only for the binary log that is currently written by the
           server; if the server has crashed, the flag remains set until the server is started up
           again and recovers the binary log. Without this option, mysqlbinlog refuses to process
           a file with this flag set. Since the server may be in the process of writing the file,
           truncation of the last event is considered normal.

       •   --force-read, -f

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --force-read │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────┘
           With this option, if mysqlbinlog reads a binary log event that it does not recognize,
           it prints a warning, ignores the event, and continues. Without this option,
           mysqlbinlog stops if it reads such an event.

       •   --get-server-public-key

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --get-server-public-key │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean                 │
           └────────────────────┴─────────────────────────┘
           Request from the server the public key required for RSA key pair-based password
           exchange. This option applies to clients that authenticate with the
           caching_sha2_password authentication plugin. For that plugin, the server does not send
           the public key unless requested. This option is ignored for accounts that do not
           authenticate with that plugin. It is also ignored if RSA-based password exchange is
           not used, as is the case when the client connects to the server using a secure
           connection.

           If --server-public-key-path=file_name is given and specifies a valid public key file,
           it takes precedence over --get-server-public-key.

           For information about the caching_sha2_password plugin, see Section 8.4.1.2, “Caching
           SHA-2 Pluggable Authentication”.

       •   --hexdump, -H

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --hexdump │
           └────────────────────┴───────────┘
           Display a hex dump of the log in comments, as described in the section called
           “MYSQLBINLOG HEX DUMP FORMAT”. The hex output can be helpful for replication
           debugging.

       •   --host=host_name, -h host_name

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --host=host_name │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String           │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ localhost        │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────┘
           Get the binary log from the MySQL server on the given host.

       •   --idempotent

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --idempotent │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean      │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ true         │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────┘
           Tell the MySQL Server to use idempotent mode while processing updates; this causes
           suppression of any duplicate-key or key-not-found errors that the server encounters in
           the current session while processing updates. This option may prove useful whenever it
           is desirable or necessary to replay one or more binary logs to a MySQL Server which
           may not contain all of the data to which the logs refer.

           The scope of effect for this option includes the current mysqlbinlog client and
           session only.

       •   --include-gtids=gtid_set

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --include-gtids=gtid_set │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                   │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │                          │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
           Display only the groups listed in the gtid_set.

       •   --local-load=dir_name, -l dir_name

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --local-load=dir_name │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Directory name        │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────┘
           For data loading operations corresponding to LOAD DATA statements, mysqlbinlog
           extracts the files from the binary log events, writes them as temporary files to the
           local file system, and writes LOAD DATA LOCAL statements to cause the files to be
           loaded. By default, mysqlbinlog writes these temporary files to an operating
           system-specific directory. The --local-load option can be used to explicitly specify
           the directory where mysqlbinlog should prepare local temporary files.

           Because other processes can write files to the default system-specific directory, it
           is advisable to specify the --local-load option to mysqlbinlog to designate a
           different directory for data files, and then designate that same directory by
           specifying the --load-data-local-dir option to mysql when processing the output from
           mysqlbinlog. For example:

               mysqlbinlog --local-load=/my/local/data ...
                   | mysql --load-data-local-dir=/my/local/data ...

               Important
               These temporary files are not automatically removed by mysqlbinlog or any other
               MySQL program.

       •   --login-path=name

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --login-path=name │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String            │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────┘
           Read options from the named login path in the .mylogin.cnf login path file. A “login
           path” is an option group containing options that specify which MySQL server to connect
           to and which account to authenticate as. To create or modify a login path file, use
           the mysql_config_editor utility. See mysql_config_editor(1).

           For additional information about this and other option-file options, see
           Section 6.2.2.3, “Command-Line Options that Affect Option-File Handling”.

       •   --no-login-paths

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --no-login-paths │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────┘
           Skips reading options from the login path file.

           See --login-path for related information.

           For additional information about this and other option-file options, see
           Section 6.2.2.3, “Command-Line Options that Affect Option-File Handling”.

       •   --no-defaults

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --no-defaults │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────┘
           Do not read any option files. If program startup fails due to reading unknown options
           from an option file, --no-defaults can be used to prevent them from being read.

           The exception is that the .mylogin.cnf file is read in all cases, if it exists. This
           permits passwords to be specified in a safer way than on the command line even when
           --no-defaults is used. To create .mylogin.cnf, use the mysql_config_editor utility.
           See mysql_config_editor(1).

           For additional information about this and other option-file options, see
           Section 6.2.2.3, “Command-Line Options that Affect Option-File Handling”.

       •   --offset=N, -o N

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --offset=# │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric    │
           └────────────────────┴────────────┘
           Skip the first N entries in the log.

       •   --open-files-limit=N

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --open-files-limit=# │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric              │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ 8                    │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
           │Minimum Value       │ 1                    │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
           │Maximum Value       │ [platform dependent] │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────┘
           Specify the number of open file descriptors to reserve.

       •   --password[=password], -p[password]

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --password[=password] │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────┘
           The password of the MySQL account used for connecting to the server. The password
           value is optional. If not given, mysqlbinlog prompts for one. If given, there must be
           no space between --password= or -p and the password following it. If no password
           option is specified, the default is to send no password.

           Specifying a password on the command line should be considered insecure. To avoid
           giving the password on the command line, use an option file. See Section 8.1.2.1,
           “End-User Guidelines for Password Security”.

           To explicitly specify that there is no password and that mysqlbinlog should not prompt
           for one, use the --skip-password option.

       •   --plugin-dir=dir_name

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --plugin-dir=dir_name │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Directory name        │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────┘
           The directory in which to look for plugins. Specify this option if the --default-auth
           option is used to specify an authentication plugin but mysqlbinlog does not find it.
           See Section 8.2.17, “Pluggable Authentication”.

       •   --port=port_num, -P port_num

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --port=port_num │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric         │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ 3306            │
           └────────────────────┴─────────────────┘
           The TCP/IP port number to use for connecting to a remote server.

       •   --print-defaults

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --print-defaults │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────┘
           Print the program name and all options that it gets from option files.

           For additional information about this and other option-file options, see
           Section 6.2.2.3, “Command-Line Options that Affect Option-File Handling”.

       •   --print-table-metadata

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --print-table-metadata │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────┘
           Print table related metadata from the binary log. Configure the amount of table
           related metadata binary logged using binlog-row-metadata.

       •   --protocol={TCP|SOCKET|PIPE|MEMORY}

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --protocol=type   │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String            │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ [see text]        │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
           │Valid Values        │                   │
           │                    │            TCP    │
           │                    │                   │
           │                    │            SOCKET │
           │                    │                   │
           │                    │            PIPE   │
           │                    │                   │
           │                    │            MEMORY │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────┘
           The transport protocol to use for connecting to the server. It is useful when the
           other connection parameters normally result in use of a protocol other than the one
           you want. For details on the permissible values, see Section 6.2.7, “Connection
           Transport Protocols”.

       •   --raw

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --raw   │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────┤
           │Default Value       │ FALSE   │
           └────────────────────┴─────────┘
           By default, mysqlbinlog reads binary log files and writes events in text format. The
           --raw option tells mysqlbinlog to write them in their original binary format. Its use
           requires that --read-from-remote-server also be used because the files are requested
           from a server.  mysqlbinlog writes one output file for each file read from the server.
           The --raw option can be used to make a backup of a server's binary log. With the
           --stop-never option, the backup is “live” because mysqlbinlog stays connected to the
           server. By default, output files are written in the current directory with the same
           names as the original log files. Output file names can be modified using the
           --result-file option. For more information, see the section called “USING MYSQLBINLOG
           TO BACK UP BINARY LOG FILES”.

       •   --read-from-remote-source=type

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --read-from-remote-source=type │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────┘
           This option reads binary logs from a MySQL server with the COM_BINLOG_DUMP or
           COM_BINLOG_DUMP_GTID commands by setting the option value to either
           BINLOG-DUMP-NON-GTIDS or BINLOG-DUMP-GTIDS, respectively. If
           --read-from-remote-source=BINLOG-DUMP-GTIDS is combined with --exclude-gtids,
           transactions can be filtered out on the source, avoiding unnecessary network traffic.

           The connection parameter options are used with these options or the
           --read-from-remote-server option. These options are --host, --password, --port,
           --protocol, --socket, and --user. If none of the remote options is specified, the
           connection parameter options are ignored.

           The REPLICATION SLAVE privilege is required to use these options.

       •   --read-from-remote-master=type

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --read-from-remote-master=type │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Deprecated          │ Yes                            │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────┘
           Deprecated synonym for --read-from-remote-source.

       •   --read-from-remote-server=file_name, -R

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --read-from-remote- │
           │                    │ server=file_name    │
           └────────────────────┴─────────────────────┘
           Read the binary log from a MySQL server rather than reading a local log file. This
           option requires that the remote server be running. It works only for binary log files
           on the remote server and not relay log files. This accepts the binary log file name
           (including the numeric suffix) without the file path.

           The connection parameter options are used with this option or the
           --read-from-remote-source option. These options are --host, --password, --port,
           --protocol, --socket, and --user. If neither of the remote options is specified, the
           connection parameter options are ignored.

           The REPLICATION SLAVE privilege is required to use this option.

           This option is like --read-from-remote-source=BINLOG-DUMP-NON-GTIDS.

       •   --result-file=name, -r name

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --result-file=name │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────┘
           Without the --raw option, this option indicates the file to which mysqlbinlog writes
           text output. With --raw, mysqlbinlog writes one binary output file for each log file
           transferred from the server, writing them by default in the current directory using
           the same names as the original log file. In this case, the --result-file option value
           is treated as a prefix that modifies output file names.

       •   --require-row-format

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --require-row-format │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean              │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ false                │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────┘
           Require row-based binary logging format for events. This option enforces row-based
           replication events for mysqlbinlog output. The stream of events produced with this
           option would be accepted by a replication channel that is secured using the
           REQUIRE_ROW_FORMAT option of the CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO statement.
           binlog_format=ROW must be set on the server where the binary log was written. When you
           specify this option, mysqlbinlog stops with an error message if it encounters any
           events that are disallowed under the REQUIRE_ROW_FORMAT restrictions, including LOAD
           DATA INFILE instructions, creating or dropping temporary tables, INTVAR, RAND, or
           USER_VAR events, and non-row-based events within a DML transaction.  mysqlbinlog also
           prints a SET @@session.require_row_format statement at the start of its output to
           apply the restrictions when the output is executed, and does not print the SET
           @@session.pseudo_thread_id statement.

       •   --rewrite-db='from_name->to_name'

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --rewrite-db='oldname->newname' │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                          │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ [none]                          │
           └────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘
           When reading from a row-based or statement-based log, rewrite all occurrences of
           from_name to to_name. Rewriting is done on the rows, for row-based logs, as well as on
           the USE clauses, for statement-based logs.

               Warning
               Statements in which table names are qualified with database names are not
               rewritten to use the new name when using this option.
           The rewrite rule employed as a value for this option is a string having the form
           'from_name->to_name', as shown previously, and for this reason must be enclosed by
           quotation marks.

           To employ multiple rewrite rules, specify the option multiple times, as shown here:

               mysqlbinlog --rewrite-db='dbcurrent->dbold' --rewrite-db='dbtest->dbcurrent' \
                   binlog.00001 > /tmp/statements.sql

           When used together with the --database option, the --rewrite-db option is applied
           first; then --database option is applied, using the rewritten database name. The order
           in which the options are provided makes no difference in this regard.

           This means that, for example, if mysqlbinlog is started with
           --rewrite-db='mydb->yourdb' --database=yourdb, then all updates to any tables in
           databases mydb and yourdb are included in the output. On the other hand, if it is
           started with --rewrite-db='mydb->yourdb' --database=mydb, then mysqlbinlog outputs no
           statements at all: since all updates to mydb are first rewritten as updates to yourdb
           before applying the --database option, there remain no updates that match
           --database=mydb.

       •   --server-id=id

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --server-id=id │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric        │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────┘
           Display only those events created by the server having the given server ID.

       •   --server-id-bits=N

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --server-id-bits=# │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric            │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ 32                 │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
           │Minimum Value       │ 7                  │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
           │Maximum Value       │ 32                 │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────┘
           Use only the first N bits of the server_id to identify the server. If the binary log
           was written by a mysqld with server-id-bits set to less than 32 and user data stored
           in the most significant bit, running mysqlbinlog with --server-id-bits set to 32
           enables this data to be seen.

           This option is supported only by the version of mysqlbinlog supplied with the NDB
           Cluster distribution, or built with NDB Cluster support.

       •   --server-public-key-path=file_name

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --server-public-key- │
           │                    │ path=file_name       │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ File name            │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────┘
           The path name to a file in PEM format containing a client-side copy of the public key
           required by the server for RSA key pair-based password exchange. This option applies
           to clients that authenticate with the sha256_password (deprecated) or
           caching_sha2_password authentication plugin. This option is ignored for accounts that
           do not authenticate with one of those plugins. It is also ignored if RSA-based
           password exchange is not used, as is the case when the client connects to the server
           using a secure connection.

           If --server-public-key-path=file_name is given and specifies a valid public key file,
           it takes precedence over --get-server-public-key.

           For sha256_password (deprecated), this option applies only if MySQL was built using
           OpenSSL.

           For information about the sha256_password and caching_sha2_password plugins, see
           Section 8.4.1.3, “SHA-256 Pluggable Authentication”, and Section 8.4.1.2, “Caching
           SHA-2 Pluggable Authentication”.

       •   --set-charset=charset_name

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --set-charset=charset_name │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                     │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────────┘
           Add a SET NAMES charset_name statement to the output to specify the character set to
           be used for processing log files.

       •   --shared-memory-base-name=name

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --shared-memory-base-name=name │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Platform Specific   │ Windows                        │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────┘
           On Windows, the shared-memory name to use for connections made using shared memory to
           a local server. The default value is MYSQL. The shared-memory name is case-sensitive.

           This option applies only if the server was started with the shared_memory system
           variable enabled to support shared-memory connections.

       •   --short-form, -s

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --short-form │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────┘
           Display only the statements contained in the log, without any extra information or
           row-based events. This is for testing only, and should not be used in production
           systems. It is deprecated, and you should expect it to be removed in a future release.

       •   --skip-gtids[=(true|false)]

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --skip-gtids[=true|false] │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean                   │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ false                     │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘
           Do not include the GTIDs from the binary log files in the output dump file. For
           example:

               mysqlbinlog --skip-gtids binlog.000001 >  /tmp/dump.sql
               mysql -u root -p -e "source /tmp/dump.sql"

           You should not normally use this option in production or in recovery, except in the
           specific, and rare, scenarios where the GTIDs are actively unwanted. For example, an
           administrator might want to duplicate selected transactions (such as table
           definitions) from a deployment to another, unrelated, deployment that will not
           replicate to or from the original. In that scenario, --skip-gtids can be used to
           enable the administrator to apply the transactions as if they were new, and ensure
           that the deployments remain unrelated. However, you should only use this option if the
           inclusion of the GTIDs causes a known issue for your use case.

       •   --socket=path, -S path

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --socket={file_name|pipe_name} │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                         │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────┘
           For connections to localhost, the Unix socket file to use, or, on Windows, the name of
           the named pipe to use.

           On Windows, this option applies only if the server was started with the named_pipe
           system variable enabled to support named-pipe connections. In addition, the user
           making the connection must be a member of the Windows group specified by the
           named_pipe_full_access_group system variable.

       •   --ssl* Options that begin with --ssl specify whether to connect to the server using
           encryption and indicate where to find SSL keys and certificates. See the section
           called “Command Options for Encrypted Connections”.

       •   --ssl-fips-mode={OFF|ON|STRICT}

           ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --ssl-fips-mode={OFF|ON|STRICT} │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
           │Deprecated          │ Yes                             │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Enumeration                     │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ OFF                             │
           ├────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┤
           │Valid Values        │                                 │
           │                    │            OFF                  │
           │                    │                                 │
           │                    │            ON                   │
           │                    │                                 │
           │                    │            STRICT               │
           └────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────┘
           Controls whether to enable FIPS mode on the client side. The --ssl-fips-mode option
           differs from other --ssl-xxx options in that it is not used to establish encrypted
           connections, but rather to affect which cryptographic operations to permit. See
           Section 8.8, “FIPS Support”.

           These --ssl-fips-mode values are permitted:

           •   OFF: Disable FIPS mode.

           •   ON: Enable FIPS mode.

           •   STRICT: Enable “strict” FIPS mode.

               Note
               If the OpenSSL FIPS Object Module is not available, the only permitted value for
               --ssl-fips-mode is OFF. In this case, setting --ssl-fips-mode to ON or STRICT
               causes the client to produce a warning at startup and to operate in non-FIPS mode.
           This option is deprecated. Expect it to be removed in a future version of MySQL.

       •   --start-datetime=datetime

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --start-datetime=datetime │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Datetime                  │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘
           Start reading the binary log at the first event having a timestamp equal to or later
           than the datetime argument. The datetime value is relative to the local time zone on
           the machine where you run mysqlbinlog. The value should be in a format accepted for
           the DATETIME or TIMESTAMP data types. For example:

               mysqlbinlog --start-datetime="2005-12-25 11:25:56" binlog.000003

           This option is useful for point-in-time recovery. See Section 9.5, “Point-in-Time
           (Incremental) Recovery”.

       •   --start-position=N, -j N

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --start-position=# │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric            │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────┘
           Start decoding the binary log at the log position N, including in the output any
           events that begin at position N or after. The position is a byte point in the log
           file, not an event counter; it needs to point to the starting position of an event to
           generate useful output. This option applies to the first log file named on the command
           line.

           The maximum value supported for this option is 18446744073709551616 (264-1), unless
           --read-from-remote-server or --read-from-remote-source is also used, in which case the
           maximum is 4294967295.

           This option is useful for point-in-time recovery. See Section 9.5, “Point-in-Time
           (Incremental) Recovery”.

       •   --stop-datetime=datetime

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --stop-datetime=datetime │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
           Stop reading the binary log at the first event having a timestamp equal to or later
           than the datetime argument. See the description of the --start-datetime option for
           information about the datetime value.

           This option is useful for point-in-time recovery. See Section 9.5, “Point-in-Time
           (Incremental) Recovery”.

       •   --stop-never

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --stop-never │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────┤
           │Type                │ Boolean      │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ FALSE        │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────┘
           This option is used with --read-from-remote-server. It tells mysqlbinlog to remain
           connected to the server. Otherwise mysqlbinlog exits when the last log file has been
           transferred from the server.  --stop-never implies --to-last-log, so only the first
           log file to transfer need be named on the command line.

           --stop-never is commonly used with --raw to make a live binary log backup, but also
           can be used without --raw to maintain a continuous text display of log events as the
           server generates them.

           With --stop-never, by default, mysqlbinlog reports a server ID of 1 when it connects
           to the server. Use --connection-server-id to explicitly specify an alternative ID to
           report. It can be used to avoid a conflict with the ID of a replica server or another
           mysqlbinlog process. See the section called “SPECIFYING THE MYSQLBINLOG SERVER ID”.

       •   --stop-never-slave-server-id=id

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --stop-never-slave-server-id=# │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric                        │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │ 65535                          │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────┤
           │Minimum Value       │ 1                              │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────┘
           This option is deprecated; expect it to be removed in a future release. Use the
           --connection-server-id option instead to specify a server ID for mysqlbinlog to
           report.

       •   --stop-position=N

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --stop-position=# │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Numeric           │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────┘
           Stop decoding the binary log at the log position N, excluding from the output any
           events that begin at position N or after. The position is a byte point in the log
           file, not an event counter; it needs to point to a spot after the starting position of
           the last event you want to include in the output. The event starting before position N
           and finishing at or after the position is the last event to be processed. This option
           applies to the last log file named on the command line.

           This option is useful for point-in-time recovery. See Section 9.5, “Point-in-Time
           (Incremental) Recovery”.

       •   --tls-ciphersuites=ciphersuite_list

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --tls-                        │
           │                    │ ciphersuites=ciphersuite_list │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                        │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────┘
           The permissible ciphersuites for encrypted connections that use TLSv1.3. The value is
           a list of one or more colon-separated ciphersuite names. The ciphersuites that can be
           named for this option depend on the SSL library used to compile MySQL. For details,
           see Section 8.3.2, “Encrypted Connection TLS Protocols and Ciphers”.

       •   --tls-sni-servername=server_name

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --tls-sni-servername=server_name │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                           │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────┘
           When specified, the name is passed to the libmysqlclient C API library using the
           MYSQL_OPT_TLS_SNI_SERVERNAME option of mysql_options(). The server name is not
           case-sensitive. To show which server name the client specified for the current
           session, if any, check the Tls_sni_server_name status variable.

           Server Name Indication (SNI) is an extension to the TLS protocol (OpenSSL must be
           compiled using TLS extensions for this option to function). The MySQL implementation
           of SNI represents the client-side only.

       •   --tls-version=protocol_list

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --tls-version=protocol_list              │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String                                   │
           ├────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────┤
           │Default Value       │                                          │
           │                    │            TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2,TLSv1.3 │
           │                    │            (OpenSSL 1.1.1 or             │
           │                    │            higher)                       │
           │                    │                                          │
           │                    │            TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2         │
           │                    │            (otherwise)                   │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────┘
           The permissible TLS protocols for encrypted connections. The value is a list of one or
           more comma-separated protocol names. The protocols that can be named for this option
           depend on the SSL library used to compile MySQL. For details, see Section 8.3.2,
           “Encrypted Connection TLS Protocols and Ciphers”.

       •   --to-last-log, -t

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --to-last-log │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────┘
           Do not stop at the end of the requested binary log from a MySQL server, but rather
           continue printing until the end of the last binary log. If you send the output to the
           same MySQL server, this may lead to an endless loop. This option requires
           --read-from-remote-server.

       •   --user=user_name, -u user_name

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --user=user_name, │
           ├────────────────────┼───────────────────┤
           │Type                │ String            │
           └────────────────────┴───────────────────┘
           The user name of the MySQL account to use when connecting to a remote server.

           If you are using the Rewriter plugin, you should grant this user the
           SKIP_QUERY_REWRITE privilege.

       •   --verbose, -v

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --verbose │
           └────────────────────┴───────────┘
           Reconstruct row events and display them as commented SQL statements, with table
           partition information where applicable. If this option is given twice (by passing in
           either "-vv" or "--verbose --verbose"), the output includes comments to indicate
           column data types and some metadata, and informational log events such as row query
           log events if the binlog_rows_query_log_events system variable is set to TRUE.

           For examples that show the effect of --base64-output and --verbose on row event
           output, see the section called “MYSQLBINLOG ROW EVENT DISPLAY”.

       •   --verify-binlog-checksum, -c

           ┌────────────────────┬──────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --verify-binlog-checksum │
           └────────────────────┴──────────────────────────┘
           Verify checksums in binary log files.

       •   --version, -V

           ┌────────────────────┬───────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --version │
           └────────────────────┴───────────┘
           Display version information and exit.

       •   --zstd-compression-level=level

           ┌────────────────────┬────────────────────────────┐
           │Command-Line Format │ --zstd-compression-level=# │
           ├────────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
           │Type                │ Integer                    │
           └────────────────────┴────────────────────────────┘
           The compression level to use for connections to the server that use the zstd
           compression algorithm. The permitted levels are from 1 to 22, with larger values
           indicating increasing levels of compression. The default zstd compression level is 3.
           The compression level setting has no effect on connections that do not use zstd
           compression.

           For more information, see Section 6.2.8, “Connection Compression Control”.

       You can pipe the output of mysqlbinlog into the mysql client to execute the events
       contained in the binary log. This technique is used to recover from an unexpected exit
       when you have an old backup (see Section 9.5, “Point-in-Time (Incremental) Recovery”). For
       example:

           mysqlbinlog binlog.000001 | mysql -u root -p

       Or:

           mysqlbinlog binlog.[0-9]* | mysql -u root -p

       If the statements produced by mysqlbinlog may contain BLOB values, these may cause
       problems when mysql processes them. In this case, invoke mysql with the --binary-mode
       option.

       You can also redirect the output of mysqlbinlog to a text file instead, if you need to
       modify the statement log first (for example, to remove statements that you do not want to
       execute for some reason). After editing the file, execute the statements that it contains
       by using it as input to the mysql program:

           mysqlbinlog binlog.000001 > tmpfile
           ... edit tmpfile ...
           mysql -u root -p < tmpfile

       When mysqlbinlog is invoked with the --start-position option, it displays only those
       events with an offset in the binary log greater than or equal to a given position (the
       given position must match the start of one event). It also has options to stop and start
       when it sees an event with a given date and time. This enables you to perform
       point-in-time recovery using the --stop-datetime option (to be able to say, for example,
       “roll forward my databases to how they were today at 10:30 a.m.”).

       Processing multiple files. 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:

           mysqlbinlog binlog.000001 | mysql -u root -p # DANGER!!
           mysqlbinlog binlog.000002 | mysql -u root -p # DANGER!!

       Processing binary logs this way using multiple 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 mysql process to execute the contents of all
       binary logs that you want to process. Here is one way to do so:

           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:

           mysqlbinlog binlog.000001 >  /tmp/statements.sql
           mysqlbinlog binlog.000002 >> /tmp/statements.sql
           mysql -u root -p -e "source /tmp/statements.sql"

       You can also supply multiple binary log files to mysqlbinlog as streamed input using a
       shell pipe. An archive of compressed binary log files can be decompressed and provided
       directly to mysqlbinlog. In this example, binlog-files_1.gz contains multiple binary log
       files for processing. The pipeline extracts the contents of binlog-files_1.gz, pipes the
       binary log files to mysqlbinlog as standard input, and pipes the output of mysqlbinlog
       into the mysql client for execution:

           gzip -cd binlog-files_1.gz | ./mysqlbinlog - | ./mysql -uroot  -p

       You can specify more than one archive file, for example:

           gzip -cd binlog-files_1.gz binlog-files_2.gz | ./mysqlbinlog - | ./mysql -uroot  -p

       For streamed input, do not use --stop-position, because mysqlbinlog cannot identify the
       last log file to apply this option.

       LOAD DATA operations. mysqlbinlog can produce output that reproduces a LOAD DATA operation
       without the original data file.  mysqlbinlog copies the data to a temporary file and
       writes a LOAD DATA LOCAL statement that refers to the file. The default location of the
       directory where these files are written is system-specific. To specify a directory
       explicitly, use the --local-load option.

       Because mysqlbinlog converts LOAD DATA statements to LOAD DATA LOCAL statements (that is,
       it adds LOCAL), both the client and the server that you use to process the statements must
       be configured with the LOCAL capability enabled. See Section 8.1.6, “Security
       Considerations for LOAD DATA LOCAL”.

           Warning
           The temporary files created for LOAD DATA LOCAL statements are not automatically
           deleted because they are needed until you actually execute those statements. You
           should delete the temporary files yourself after you no longer need the statement log.
           The files can be found in the temporary file directory and have names like
           original_file_name-#-#.

MYSQLBINLOG HEX DUMP FORMAT

       The --hexdump option causes mysqlbinlog to produce a hex dump of the binary log contents:

           mysqlbinlog --hexdump source-bin.000001

       The hex output consists of comment lines beginning with #, so the output might look like
       this for the preceding command:

           /*!40019 SET @@SESSION.max_insert_delayed_threads=0*/;
           /*!50003 SET @OLD_COMPLETION_TYPE=@@COMPLETION_TYPE,COMPLETION_TYPE=0*/;
           # at 4
           #051024 17:24:13 server id 1  end_log_pos 98
           # Position  Timestamp   Type   Master ID        Size      Master Pos    Flags
           # 00000004 9d fc 5c 43   0f   01 00 00 00   5e 00 00 00   62 00 00 00   00 00
           # 00000017 04 00 35 2e 30 2e 31 35  2d 64 65 62 75 67 2d 6c |..5.0.15.debug.l|
           # 00000027 6f 67 00 00 00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |og..............|
           # 00000037 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00  00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 |................|
           # 00000047 00 00 00 00 9d fc 5c 43  13 38 0d 00 08 00 12 00 |.......C.8......|
           # 00000057 04 04 04 04 12 00 00 4b  00 04 1a                |.......K...|
           #       Start: binlog v 4, server v 5.0.15-debug-log created 051024 17:24:13
           #       at startup
           ROLLBACK;

       Hex dump output currently contains the elements in the following list. This format is
       subject to change. For more information about binary log format, see MySQL Internals: The
       Binary Log[1].

       •   Position: The byte position within the log file.

       •   Timestamp: The event timestamp. In the example shown, '9d fc 5c 43' is the
           representation of '051024 17:24:13' in hexadecimal.

       •   Type: The event type code.

       •   Master ID: The server ID of the replication source server that created the event.

       •   Size: The size in bytes of the event.

       •   Master Pos: The position of the next event in the original source's binary log file.

       •   Flags: Event flag values.

MYSQLBINLOG ROW EVENT DISPLAY

       The following examples illustrate how mysqlbinlog displays row events that specify data
       modifications. These correspond to events with the WRITE_ROWS_EVENT, UPDATE_ROWS_EVENT,
       and DELETE_ROWS_EVENT type codes. The --base64-output=DECODE-ROWS and --verbose options
       may be used to affect row event output.

       Suppose that the server is using row-based binary logging and that you execute the
       following sequence of statements:

           CREATE TABLE t
           (
             id   INT NOT NULL,
             name VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
             date DATE NULL
           ) ENGINE = InnoDB;
           START TRANSACTION;
           INSERT INTO t VALUES(1, 'apple', NULL);
           UPDATE t SET name = 'pear', date = '2009-01-01' WHERE id = 1;
           DELETE FROM t WHERE id = 1;
           COMMIT;

       By default, mysqlbinlog displays row events encoded as base-64 strings using BINLOG
       statements. Omitting extraneous lines, the output for the row events produced by the
       preceding statement sequence looks like this:

           $> mysqlbinlog log_file
           ...
           # at 218
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 258   Write_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAANoAAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBcBAAAAKAAAAAIBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA//8AQAAAAVhcHBsZQ==
           '/*!*/;
           ...
           # at 302
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 356   Update_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAAC4BAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBgBAAAANgAAAGQBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA////AEAAAAFYXBwbGX4AQAAAARwZWFyIbIP
           '/*!*/;
           ...
           # at 400
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 442   Delete_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAAJABAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBkBAAAAKgAAALoBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA//4AQAAAARwZWFyIbIP
           '/*!*/;

       To see the row events as comments in the form of “pseudo-SQL” statements, run mysqlbinlog
       with the --verbose or -v option. This output level also shows table partition information
       where applicable. The output contains lines beginning with ###:

           $> mysqlbinlog -v log_file
           ...
           # at 218
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 258   Write_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAANoAAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBcBAAAAKAAAAAIBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA//8AQAAAAVhcHBsZQ==
           '/*!*/;
           ### INSERT INTO test.t
           ### SET
           ###   @1=1
           ###   @2='apple'
           ###   @3=NULL
           ...
           # at 302
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 356   Update_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAAC4BAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBgBAAAANgAAAGQBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA////AEAAAAFYXBwbGX4AQAAAARwZWFyIbIP
           '/*!*/;
           ### UPDATE test.t
           ### WHERE
           ###   @1=1
           ###   @2='apple'
           ###   @3=NULL
           ### SET
           ###   @1=1
           ###   @2='pear'
           ###   @3='2009:01:01'
           ...
           # at 400
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 442   Delete_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAAJABAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBkBAAAAKgAAALoBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA//4AQAAAARwZWFyIbIP
           '/*!*/;
           ### DELETE FROM test.t
           ### WHERE
           ###   @1=1
           ###   @2='pear'
           ###   @3='2009:01:01'

       Specify --verbose or -v twice to also display data types and some metadata for each
       column, and informational log events such as row query log events if the
       binlog_rows_query_log_events system variable is set to TRUE. The output contains an
       additional comment following each column change:

           $> mysqlbinlog -vv log_file
           ...
           # at 218
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 258   Write_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAANoAAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBcBAAAAKAAAAAIBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA//8AQAAAAVhcHBsZQ==
           '/*!*/;
           ### INSERT INTO test.t
           ### SET
           ###   @1=1 /* INT meta=0 nullable=0 is_null=0 */
           ###   @2='apple' /* VARSTRING(20) meta=20 nullable=0 is_null=0 */
           ###   @3=NULL /* VARSTRING(20) meta=0 nullable=1 is_null=1 */
           ...
           # at 302
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 356   Update_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAAC4BAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBgBAAAANgAAAGQBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA////AEAAAAFYXBwbGX4AQAAAARwZWFyIbIP
           '/*!*/;
           ### UPDATE test.t
           ### WHERE
           ###   @1=1 /* INT meta=0 nullable=0 is_null=0 */
           ###   @2='apple' /* VARSTRING(20) meta=20 nullable=0 is_null=0 */
           ###   @3=NULL /* VARSTRING(20) meta=0 nullable=1 is_null=1 */
           ### SET
           ###   @1=1 /* INT meta=0 nullable=0 is_null=0 */
           ###   @2='pear' /* VARSTRING(20) meta=20 nullable=0 is_null=0 */
           ###   @3='2009:01:01' /* DATE meta=0 nullable=1 is_null=0 */
           ...
           # at 400
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 442   Delete_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           BINLOG '
           fAS3SBMBAAAALAAAAJABAAAAABEAAAAAAAAABHRlc3QAAXQAAwMPCgIUAAQ=
           fAS3SBkBAAAAKgAAALoBAAAQABEAAAAAAAEAA//4AQAAAARwZWFyIbIP
           '/*!*/;
           ### DELETE FROM test.t
           ### WHERE
           ###   @1=1 /* INT meta=0 nullable=0 is_null=0 */
           ###   @2='pear' /* VARSTRING(20) meta=20 nullable=0 is_null=0 */
           ###   @3='2009:01:01' /* DATE meta=0 nullable=1 is_null=0 */

       You can tell mysqlbinlog to suppress the BINLOG statements for row events by using the
       --base64-output=DECODE-ROWS option. This is similar to --base64-output=NEVER but does not
       exit with an error if a row event is found. The combination of --base64-output=DECODE-ROWS
       and --verbose provides a convenient way to see row events only as SQL statements:

           $> mysqlbinlog -v --base64-output=DECODE-ROWS log_file
           ...
           # at 218
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 258   Write_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           ### INSERT INTO test.t
           ### SET
           ###   @1=1
           ###   @2='apple'
           ###   @3=NULL
           ...
           # at 302
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 356   Update_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           ### UPDATE test.t
           ### WHERE
           ###   @1=1
           ###   @2='apple'
           ###   @3=NULL
           ### SET
           ###   @1=1
           ###   @2='pear'
           ###   @3='2009:01:01'
           ...
           # at 400
           #080828 15:03:08 server id 1  end_log_pos 442   Delete_rows: table id 17 flags: STMT_END_F
           ### DELETE FROM test.t
           ### WHERE
           ###   @1=1
           ###   @2='pear'
           ###   @3='2009:01:01'

           Note
           You should not suppress BINLOG statements if you intend to re-execute mysqlbinlog
           output.

       The SQL statements produced by --verbose for row events are much more readable than the
       corresponding BINLOG statements. However, they do not correspond exactly to the original
       SQL statements that generated the events. The following limitations apply:

       •   The original column names are lost and replaced by @N, where N is a column number.

       •   Character set information is not available in the binary log, which affects string
           column display:

           •   There is no distinction made between corresponding binary and nonbinary string
               types (BINARY and CHAR, VARBINARY and VARCHAR, BLOB and TEXT). The output uses a
               data type of STRING for fixed-length strings and VARSTRING for variable-length
               strings.

           •   For multibyte character sets, the maximum number of bytes per character is not
               present in the binary log, so the length for string types is displayed in bytes
               rather than in characters. For example, STRING(4) is used as the data type for
               values from either of these column types:

                   CHAR(4) CHARACTER SET latin1
                   CHAR(2) CHARACTER SET ucs2

           •   Due to the storage format for events of type UPDATE_ROWS_EVENT, UPDATE statements
               are displayed with the WHERE clause preceding the SET clause.

       Proper interpretation of row events requires the information from the format description
       event at the beginning of the binary log. Because mysqlbinlog does not know in advance
       whether the rest of the log contains row events, by default it displays the format
       description event using a BINLOG statement in the initial part of the output.

       If the binary log is known not to contain any events requiring a BINLOG statement (that
       is, no row events), the --base64-output=NEVER option can be used to prevent this header
       from being written.

USING MYSQLBINLOG TO BACK UP BINARY LOG FILES

       By default, mysqlbinlog reads binary log files and displays their contents in text format.
       This enables you to examine events within the files more easily and to re-execute them
       (for example, by using the output as input to mysql).  mysqlbinlog can read log files
       directly from the local file system, or, with the --read-from-remote-server option, it can
       connect to a server and request binary log contents from that server.  mysqlbinlog writes
       text output to its standard output, or to the file named as the value of the
       --result-file=file_name option if that option is given.

       •   mysqlbinlog Backup Capabilities

       •   mysqlbinlog Backup Options

       •   Static and Live Backups

       •   Output File Naming

       •   Example: mysqldump + mysqlbinlog for Backup and Restore

       •   mysqlbinlog Backup Restrictions
       mysqlbinlog Backup Capabilities

       mysqlbinlog can read binary log files and write new files containing the same content—that
       is, in binary format rather than text format. This capability enables you to easily back
       up a binary log in its original format.  mysqlbinlog can make a static backup, backing up
       a set of log files and stopping when the end of the last file is reached. It can also make
       a continuous (“live”) backup, staying connected to the server when it reaches the end of
       the last log file and continuing to copy new events as they are generated. In
       continuous-backup operation, mysqlbinlog runs until the connection ends (for example, when
       the server exits) or mysqlbinlog is forcibly terminated. When the connection ends,
       mysqlbinlog does not wait and retry the connection, unlike a replica server. To continue a
       live backup after the server has been restarted, you must also restart mysqlbinlog.

           Important
           mysqlbinlog can back up both encrypted and unencrypted binary log files . However,
           copies of encrypted binary log files that are generated using mysqlbinlog are stored
           in an unencrypted format.
       mysqlbinlog Backup Options

       Binary log backup requires that you invoke mysqlbinlog with two options at minimum:

       •   The --read-from-remote-server (or -R) option tells mysqlbinlog to connect to a server
           and request its binary log. (This is similar to a replica server connecting to its
           replication source server.)

       •   The --raw option tells mysqlbinlog to write raw (binary) output, not text output.

       Along with --read-from-remote-server, it is common to specify other options: --host
       indicates where the server is running, and you may also need to specify connection options
       such as --user and --password.

       Several other options are useful in conjunction with --raw:

       •   --stop-never: Stay connected to the server after reaching the end of the last log file
           and continue to read new events.

       •   --connection-server-id=id: The server ID that mysqlbinlog reports when it connects to
           a server. When --stop-never is used, the default reported server ID is 1. If this
           causes a conflict with the ID of a replica server or another mysqlbinlog process, use
           --connection-server-id to specify an alternative server ID. See the section called
           “SPECIFYING THE MYSQLBINLOG SERVER ID”.

       •   --result-file: A prefix for output file names, as described later.
       Static and Live Backups

       To back up a server's binary log files with mysqlbinlog, you must specify file names that
       actually exist on the server. If you do not know the names, connect to the server and use
       the SHOW BINARY LOGS statement to see the current names. Suppose that the statement
       produces this output:

           mysql> SHOW BINARY LOGS;
           +---------------+-----------+-----------+
           | Log_name      | File_size | Encrypted |
           +---------------+-----------+-----------+
           | binlog.000130 |     27459 | No        |
           | binlog.000131 |     13719 | No        |
           | binlog.000132 |     43268 | No        |
           +---------------+-----------+-----------+

       With that information, you can use mysqlbinlog to back up the binary log to the current
       directory as follows (enter each command on a single line):

       •   To make a static backup of binlog.000130 through binlog.000132, use either of these
           commands:

               mysqlbinlog --read-from-remote-server --host=host_name --raw
                 binlog.000130 binlog.000131 binlog.000132
               mysqlbinlog --read-from-remote-server --host=host_name --raw
                 --to-last-log binlog.000130

           The first command specifies every file name explicitly. The second names only the
           first file and uses --to-last-log to read through the last. A difference between these
           commands is that if the server happens to open binlog.000133 before mysqlbinlog
           reaches the end of binlog.000132, the first command does not read it, but the second
           command does.

       •   To make a live backup in which mysqlbinlog starts with binlog.000130 to copy existing
           log files, then stays connected to copy new events as the server generates them:

               mysqlbinlog --read-from-remote-server --host=host_name --raw
                 --stop-never binlog.000130

           With --stop-never, it is not necessary to specify --to-last-log to read to the last
           log file because that option is implied.
       Output File Naming

       Without --raw, mysqlbinlog produces text output and the --result-file option, if given,
       specifies the name of the single file to which all output is written. With --raw,
       mysqlbinlog writes one binary output file for each log file transferred from the server.
       By default, mysqlbinlog writes the files in the current directory with the same names as
       the original log files. To modify the output file names, use the --result-file option. In
       conjunction with --raw, the --result-file option value is treated as a prefix that
       modifies the output file names.

       Suppose that a server currently has binary log files named binlog.000999 and up. If you
       use mysqlbinlog --raw to back up the files, the --result-file option produces output file
       names as shown in the following table. You can write the files to a specific directory by
       beginning the --result-file value with the directory path. If the --result-file value
       consists only of a directory name, the value must end with the pathname separator
       character. Output files are overwritten if they exist.

       ┌─────────────────────┬────────────────────────────┐
       │--result-file Option │ Output File Names          │
       ├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │--result-file=x      │ xbinlog.000999 and up      │
       ├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │--result-file=/tmp/  │ /tmp/binlog.000999 and up  │
       ├─────────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
       │--result-file=/tmp/x │ /tmp/xbinlog.000999 and up │
       └─────────────────────┴────────────────────────────┘
       Example: mysqldump + mysqlbinlog for Backup and Restore

       The following example describes a simple scenario that shows how to use mysqldump and
       mysqlbinlog together to back up a server's data and binary log, and how to use the backup
       to restore the server if data loss occurs. The example assumes that the server is running
       on host host_name and its first binary log file is named binlog.000999. Enter each command
       on a single line.

       Use mysqlbinlog to make a continuous backup of the binary log:

           mysqlbinlog --read-from-remote-server --host=host_name --raw
             --stop-never binlog.000999

       Use mysqldump to create a dump file as a snapshot of the server's data. Use
       --all-databases, --events, and --routines to back up all data, and --source-data=2 to
       include the current binary log coordinates in the dump file.

           mysqldump --host=host_name --all-databases --events --routines --source-data=2> dump_file

       Execute the mysqldump command periodically to create newer snapshots as desired.

       If data loss occurs (for example, if the server unexpectedly exits), use the most recent
       dump file to restore the data:

           mysql --host=host_name -u root -p < dump_file

       Then use the binary log backup to re-execute events that were written after the
       coordinates listed in the dump file. Suppose that the coordinates in the file look like
       this:

           -- CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO SOURCE_LOG_FILE='binlog.001002', SOURCE_LOG_POS=27284;

       If the most recent backed-up log file is named binlog.001004, re-execute the log events
       like this:

           mysqlbinlog --start-position=27284 binlog.001002 binlog.001003 binlog.001004
             | mysql --host=host_name -u root -p

       You might find it easier to copy the backup files (dump file and binary log files) to the
       server host to make it easier to perform the restore operation, or if MySQL does not allow
       remote root access.  mysqlbinlog Backup Restrictions

       Binary log backups with mysqlbinlog are subject to these restrictions:

       •   mysqlbinlog does not automatically reconnect to the MySQL server if the connection is
           lost (for example, if a server restart occurs or there is a network outage).

       •   The delay for a backup is similar to the delay for a replica server.

SPECIFYING THE MYSQLBINLOG SERVER ID

       When invoked with the --read-from-remote-server option, mysqlbinlog connects to a MySQL
       server, specifies a server ID to identify itself, and requests binary log files from the
       server. You can use mysqlbinlog to request log files from a server in several ways:

       •   Specify an explicitly named set of files: For each file, mysqlbinlog connects and
           issues a Binlog dump command. The server sends the file and disconnects. There is one
           connection per file.

       •   Specify the beginning file and --to-last-log: mysqlbinlog connects and issues a Binlog
           dump command for all files. The server sends all files and disconnects.

       •   Specify the beginning file and --stop-never (which implies --to-last-log): mysqlbinlog
           connects and issues a Binlog dump command for all files. The server sends all files,
           but does not disconnect after sending the last one.

       With --read-from-remote-server only, mysqlbinlog connects using a server ID of 0, which
       tells the server to disconnect after sending the last requested log file.

       With --read-from-remote-server and --stop-never, mysqlbinlog connects using a nonzero
       server ID, so the server does not disconnect after sending the last log file. The server
       ID is 1 by default, but this can be changed with --connection-server-id.

       Thus, for the first two ways of requesting files, the server disconnects because
       mysqlbinlog specifies a server ID of 0. It does not disconnect if --stop-never is given
       because mysqlbinlog specifies a nonzero server ID.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 1997, 2024, Oracle and/or its affiliates.

       This documentation is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it only under
       the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation;
       version 2 of the License.

       This documentation is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
       WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
       PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with the program;
       if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
       Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA or see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

NOTES

        1. MySQL Internals: The Binary Log
           https://dev.mysql.com/doc/internals/en/binary-log.html

SEE ALSO

       For more information, please refer to the MySQL Reference Manual, which may already be
       installed locally and which is also available online at http://dev.mysql.com/doc/.

AUTHOR

       Oracle Corporation (http://dev.mysql.com/).