Provided by: mysql-utilities_1.3.5-2_all bug

NAME

       mysqldbexport - Export Object Definitions or Data from a Database

SYNOPSIS

       mysqldbexport [options] db_name ...

DESCRIPTION

       This utility exports metadata (object definitions) or data or both from one or more
       databases. By default, the export includes only definitions.

       mysqldbexport differs from mysqldump in that it can produce output in a variety of formats
       to make your data extraction/transport much easier. It permits you to export your data in
       the format most suitable to an external tool, another MySQL server, or other use without
       the need to reformat the data.

       To exclude specific objects by name, use the --exclude option with a name in db.*obj*
       format, or you can supply a search pattern. For example, --exclude=db1.trig1 excludes the
       single trigger and --exclude=trig_ excludes all objects from all databases having a name
       that begins with trig and has a following character.

       To skip objects by type, use the --skip option with a list of the objects to skip. This
       enables you to extract a particular set of objects, say, for exporting only events (by
       excluding all other types). Similarly, to skip creation of UPDATE statements for BLOB
       data, specify the --skip-blobs option.

       To specify how to display output, use one of the following values with the --format
       option:

       •   sql (default)

           Display output using SQL statements. For definitions, this consists of the appropriate
           CREATE and GRANT statements. For data, this is an INSERT statement (or bulk insert if
           the --bulk-insert option is specified).

       •   grid

           Display output in grid or table format like that of the mysql monitor.

       •   csv

           Display output in comma-separated values format.

       •   tab

           Display output in tab-separated format.

       •   vertical

           Display output in single-column format like that of the \G command for the mysql
           monitor.

       To specify how much data to display, use one of the following values with the --display
       option:

       •   brief

           Display only the minimal columns for recreating the objects.

       •   full

           Display the complete column list for recreating the objects.

       •   names

           Display only the object names.

       Note: For SQL-format output, the --display option is ignored.

       To turn off the headers for csv or tab display format, specify the --no-headers option.

       To turn off all feedback information, specify the --quiet option.

       To write the data for individual tables to separate files, use the --file-per-table
       option. The name of each file is composed of the database and table names followed by the
       file format. For example, the following command produces files named db1.*table_name*.csv:

           mysqldbexport --server=root@server1:3306 --format=csv db1 --export=data

       By default, the operation uses a consistent snapshot to read the source databases. To
       change the locking mode, use the --locking option with a locking type value. Use a value
       of no-locks to turn off locking altogether or lock-all to use only table locks. The
       default value is snapshot. Additionally, the utility uses WRITE locks to lock the
       destination tables during the copy.

       You can include replication statements for exporting data among a master and slave or
       between slaves. The --rpl option permits you to select from the following replication
       statements to include in the export.

       •   master

           Include the CHANGE MASTER statement to start a new slave with the current server
           acting as the master. This places the appropriate STOP and START slave statements in
           the export whereby the STOP SLAVE statement is placed at the start of the export and
           the CHANGE MASTER followed by the START SLAVE statements are placed after the export
           stream.

       •   slave

           Include the CHANGE MASTER statement to start a new slave using the current server's
           master information. This places the appropriate STOP and START slave statements in the
           export whereby the STOP SLAVE statement is placed at the start of the export and the
           CHANGE MASTER followed by the START SLAVE statements are placed after the export
           stream.

       •   both

           Include both the 'master' and 'slave' information for CHANGE MASTER statements for
           either spawning a new slave with the current server's master or using the current
           server as the master. All statements generated are labeled and commented to enable the
           user to choose which to include when imported.

       To include the replication user in the CHANGE MASTER statement, use the --rpl-user option
       to specify the user and password. If this option is omitted, the utility attempts to
       identify the replication user. In the event that there are multiple candidates or the user
       requires a password, these statements are placed inside comments for the CHANGE MASTER
       statement.

       You can also use the --comment-rpl option to place the replication statements inside
       comments for later examination.

       If you specify the --rpl-file option, the utility writes the replication statements to the
       file specified instead of including them in the export stream.

       If you attempt to export databases on a server with GTIDs enabled (GTID_MODE = ON), a
       warning will be generated if the export does not include all databases. This is because
       the GTID statements generated include the GTIDs for all databases and not only those
       databases in the export.

       The utility will also generate a warning if you export databases on a GTID enabled server
       but use the --skip-gtid option.

       To make the most use of GTIDs and export/import, you should export all of the databases on
       the server with the --all option. This will generate an export file with all of the
       databases and the GTIDs executed to that point.

       Importing this file on another server will ensure that server has all of the data as well
       as all of the GTIDs recorded correctly in its logs.
             OPTIONS

       mysqldbexport accepts the following command-line options:

       •   --help

           Display a help message and exit.

       •   --bulk-insert, -b

           Use bulk insert statements for data.

       •   --comment-rpl

           Place the replication statements in comment statements. Valid only with the --rpl
           option.

       •   --display=<display>, -d<display>

           Control the number of columns shown. Permitted display values are brief (minimal
           columns for object creation), full* (all columns), and **names (only object names; not
           valid for --format=sql). The default is brief.

       •   --exclude=<exclude>, -x<exclude>

           Exclude one or more objects from the operation using either a specific name such as
           db1.t1 or a search pattern. Use this option multiple times to specify multiple
           exclusions. By default, patterns use LIKE matching. With the --regexp option, patterns
           use REGEXP matching.

           This option does not apply to grants.

       •   --export=<export>, -e<export>

           Specify the export format. Permitted format values are definitions = export only the
           definitions (metadata) for the objects in the database list, data = export only the
           table data for the tables in the database list, and both = export the definitions and
           the data. The default is definitions.

       •   --file-per-table

           Write table data to separate files. This is Valid only if the export output includes
           data (that is, if --export=data or --export=both are given). This option produces
           files named db_name.*tbl_name*.*format*. For example, a csv export of two tables named
           t1 and t2 in database d1, results in files named db1.t1.csv and db1.t2.csv. If table
           definitions are included in the export, they are written to stdout as usual.

       •   --format=<format>, -f<format>

           Specify the output display format. Permitted format values are sql, grid, tab, csv,
           and vertical. The default is sql.

       •   --locking=<locking>

           Choose the lock type for the operation. Permitted lock values are no-locks (do not use
           any table locks), lock-all (use table locks but no transaction and no consistent
           read), and snapshot (consistent read using a single transaction). The default is
           snapshot.

       •   --no-headers, -h

           Do not display column headers. This option applies only for csv and tab output.

       •   --quiet, -q

           Turn off all messages for quiet execution.

       •   --regexp, --basic-regexp, -G

           Perform pattern matches using the REGEXP operator. The default is to use LIKE for
           matching.

       •   --rpl=<dump_option>, --replication=<dump_option>

           Include replication information. Permitted values are master (include the CHANGE
           MASTER statement using the source server as the master), slave (include the CHANGE
           MASTER statement using the destination server's master information), and both (include
           the master and slave options where applicable).

       •   --rpl-file=RPL_FILE, --replication-file=RPL_FILE

           The path and file name where the generated replication information should be written.
           Valid only with the --rpl option.

       •   --rpl-user=<replication_user>

           The user and password for the replication user requirement, in the format:
           <user>[:<password>] or <login-path>. For example, rpl:passwd. The default is None.

       •   --server=<server>

           Connection information for the server in <user>[:<passwd>]@<host>[:<port>][:<socket>]
           or <login-path>[::<port>][::<socket>].

       •   --skip=<skip-objects>

           Specify objects to skip in the operation as a comma-separated list (no spaces).
           Permitted values are CREATE_DB, DATA, EVENTS, FUNCTIONS, GRANTS, PROCEDURES, TABLES,
           TRIGGERS, and VIEWS.

       •   --skip-blobs

           Do not export BLOB data.

       •   --skip-gtid

           Skip creation of GTID_PURGED statements.

       •   --all

           Generate an export file with all of the databases and the GTIDs executed to that
           point.

       •   --verbose, -v

           Specify how much information to display. Use this option multiple times to increase
           the amount of information. For example, -v = verbose, -vv = more verbose, -vvv =
           debug.

       •   --version

           Display version information and exit.
             NOTES

       You must provide connection parameters (user, host, password, and so forth) for an account
       that has the appropriate privileges to access all objects in the operation.

       To export all objects from a source database, the user must have these privileges: SELECT
       and SHOW VIEW on the database as well as SELECT on the mysql database.

       Actual privileges needed may differ from installation to installation depending on the
       security privileges present and whether the database contains certain objects such as
       views or events.

       Some combinations of the options may result in errors when the export is imported later.
       For example, eliminating tables but not views may result in an error when a view is
       imported on another server.

       For the --format, --export, and --display options, the permitted values are not case
       sensitive. In addition, values may be specified as any unambiguous prefix of a valid
       value. For example, --format=g specifies the grid format. An error occurs if a prefix
       matches more than one valid value.

       The path to the MySQL client tools should be included in the PATH environment variable in
       order to use the authentication mechanism with login-paths. This will allow the utility to
       use the my_print_defaults tools which is required to read the login-path values from the
       login configuration file (.mylogin.cnf).

       If any database identifier specified as an argument contains special characters or is a
       reserved word, then it must be appropriately quoted with backticks (`). In turn, names
       quoted with backticks must also be quoted with single or double quotes depending on the
       operating system, i.e. (") in Windows or (') in non-Windows systems, in order for the
       utilities to read backtick quoted identifiers as a single argument. For example, to export
       a database with the name weird`db.name, it must be specified as argument using the
       following syntax (in non-Windows): '`weird``db.name`'.
             EXAMPLES

       To export the definitions of the database dev from a MySQL server on the local host via
       port 3306, producing output consisting of CREATE statements, use this command:

           $ mysqldbexport --server=root:pass@localhost \
             --skip=GRANTS --export=DEFINITIONS util_test
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           # Exporting metadata from util_test
           DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS util_test;
           CREATE DATABASE util_test;
           USE util_test;
           # TABLE: util_test.t1
           CREATE TABLE `t1` (
             `a` char(30) DEFAULT NULL
           ) ENGINE=MEMORY DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
           # TABLE: util_test.t2
           CREATE TABLE `t2` (
             `a` char(30) DEFAULT NULL
           ) ENGINE=MyISAM DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
           # TABLE: util_test.t3
           CREATE TABLE `t3` (
             `a` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
             `b` char(30) DEFAULT NULL,
             PRIMARY KEY (`a`)
           ) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=4 DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
           # TABLE: util_test.t4
           CREATE TABLE `t4` (
             `c` int(11) NOT NULL,
             `d` int(11) NOT NULL,
             KEY `ref_t3` (`c`),
             CONSTRAINT `ref_t3` FOREIGN KEY (`c`) REFERENCES `t3` (`a`)
           ) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
           # VIEW: util_test.v1
           [...]
           #...done.

       Similarly, to export the data of the database util_test, producing bulk insert statements,
       use this command:

           $ mysqldbexport --server=root:pass@localhost \
             --export=DATA --bulk-insert util_test
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           USE util_test;
           # Exporting data from util_test
           # Data for table util_test.t1:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES  ('01 Test Basic database example'),
             ('02 Test Basic database example'),
             ('03 Test Basic database example'),
             ('04 Test Basic database example'),
             ('05 Test Basic database example'),
             ('06 Test Basic database example'),
             ('07 Test Basic database example');
           # Data for table util_test.t2:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t2 VALUES  ('11 Test Basic database example'),
             ('12 Test Basic database example'),
             ('13 Test Basic database example');
           # Data for table util_test.t3:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t3 VALUES  (1, '14 test fkeys'),
             (2, '15 test fkeys'),
             (3, '16 test fkeys');
           # Data for table util_test.t4:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t4 VALUES  (3, 2);
           #...done.

       If the database to be exported does not contain only InnoDB tables and you want to ensure
       data integrity of the exported data by locking the tables during the read step, add a
       --locking=lock-all option to the command:

           $ mysqldbexport --server=root:pass@localhost \
             --export=DATA --bulk-insert util_test --locking=lock-all
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           USE util_test;
           # Exporting data from util_test
           # Data for table util_test.t1:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES  ('01 Test Basic database example'),
             ('02 Test Basic database example'),
             ('03 Test Basic database example'),
             ('04 Test Basic database example'),
             ('05 Test Basic database example'),
             ('06 Test Basic database example'),
             ('07 Test Basic database example');
           # Data for table util_test.t2:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t2 VALUES  ('11 Test Basic database example'),
             ('12 Test Basic database example'),
             ('13 Test Basic database example');
           # Data for table util_test.t3:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t3 VALUES  (1, '14 test fkeys'),
             (2, '15 test fkeys'),
             (3, '16 test fkeys');
           # Data for table util_test.t4:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t4 VALUES  (3, 2);
           #...done.

       To export a database and include the replication commands to use the current server as the
       master (for example, to start a new slave using the current server as the master), use the
       following command:

           $ mysqldbexport --server=root@localhost:3311 util_test \
             --export=both --rpl-user=rpl:rpl --rpl=master -v
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           #
           # Stopping slave
           STOP SLAVE;
           #
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           # Exporting metadata from util_test
           DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS util_test;
           CREATE DATABASE util_test;
           USE util_test;
           # TABLE: util_test.t1
           CREATE TABLE `t1` (
             `a` char(30) DEFAULT NULL
           ) ENGINE=MEMORY DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
           #...done.
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           USE util_test;
           # Exporting data from util_test
           # Data for table util_test.t1:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('01 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('02 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('03 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('04 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('05 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('06 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('07 Test Basic database example');
           #...done.
           #
           # Connecting to the current server as master
           CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST = 'localhost',
             MASTER_USER = 'rpl',
             MASTER_PASSWORD = 'rpl',
             MASTER_PORT = 3311,
             MASTER_LOG_FILE = 'clone-bin.000001' ,
             MASTER_LOG_POS = 106;
           #
           # Starting slave
           START SLAVE;
           #

       Similarly, to export a database and include the replication commands to use the current
       server's master (for example, to start a new slave using the same the master), use the
       following command:

           $ mysqldbexport --server=root@localhost:3311 util_test \
             --export=both --rpl-user=rpl:rpl --rpl=slave -v
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           #
           # Stopping slave
           STOP SLAVE;
           #
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           # Exporting metadata from util_test
           DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS util_test;
           CREATE DATABASE util_test;
           USE util_test;
           # TABLE: util_test.t1
           CREATE TABLE `t1` (
             `a` char(30) DEFAULT NULL
           ) ENGINE=MEMORY DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
           #...done.
           # Source on localhost: ... connected.
           USE util_test;
           # Exporting data from util_test
           # Data for table util_test.t1:
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('01 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('02 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('03 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('04 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('05 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('06 Test Basic database example');
           INSERT INTO util_test.t1 VALUES ('07 Test Basic database example');
           #...done.
           #
           # Connecting to the current server's master
           CHANGE MASTER TO MASTER_HOST = 'localhost',
             MASTER_USER = 'rpl',
             MASTER_PASSWORD = 'rpl',
             MASTER_PORT = 3310,
             MASTER_LOG_FILE = 'clone-bin.000001' ,
             MASTER_LOG_POS = 1739;
           #
           # Starting slave
           START SLAVE;
           #

COPYRIGHT

SEE ALSO

       For more information, please refer to the MySQL Utilities section of the MySQL Workbench
       Reference Manual, which is available online at http://dev.mysql.com/doc/workbench/en/.

AUTHOR

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