Back up MySQL Databases with a Simple Bash Script
Productivity Sauce
If you host your own blog or any Web-based application running on the Apache/MySQL/PHP stack, you should have a backup system in place for keeping data stored in MySQL databases safe. There are several solutions that can help you with that, but nothing beats a simple Bash script I stumbled upon in a blog post comment. Here is the script in all its beauty:
#!/bin/bash
NOW=`date +"%Y-%m"`;
BACKUPDIR="location/of/your/backup/dir/$NOW";
### Server Setup ###
#* MySQL login user name *#
MUSER="user";
#* MySQL login PASSWORD name *#
MPASS="pass";
#* MySQL login HOST name *#
MHOST="your-mysql-ip";
MPORT="your-mysql-port";
# DO NOT BACKUP these databases
IGNOREDB="
information_schema
mysql
test
"
#* MySQL binaries *#
MYSQL=`which mysql`;
MYSQLDUMP=`which mysqldump`;
GZIP=`which gzip`;
# assuming that /nas is mounted via /etc/fstab
if [ ! -d $BACKUPDIR ]; then
mkdir -p $BACKUPDIR
else
:
fi
# get all database listing
DBS="$(mysql -u $MUSER -p$MPASS -h $MHOST -P $MPORT -Bse 'show databases')"
# SET DATE AND TIME FOR THE FILE
NOW=`date +"d%dh%Hm%Ms%S"`; # day-hour-minute-sec format
# start to dump database one by one
for db in $DBS
do
DUMP="yes";
if [ "$IGNOREDB" != "" ]; then
for i in $IGNOREDB # Store all value of $IGNOREDB ON i
do
if [ "$db" == "$i" ]; then # If result of $DBS(db) is equal to $IGNOREDB(i) then
DUMP="NO"; # SET value of DUMP to "no"
#echo "$i database is being ignored!";
fi
done
fi
if [ "$DUMP" == "yes" ]; then # If value of DUMP is "yes" then backup database
FILE="$BACKUPDIR/$NOW-$db.gz";
echo "BACKING UP $db";
$MYSQLDUMP --add-drop-database --opt --lock-all-tables -u $MUSER -p$MPASS -h $MHOST -P $MPORT $db | gzip > $FILE
fi
doneThe best part is that you only need to specify a handful of parameters to make the script work. This includes BACKUPDIR (the destination for storing backups), MUSER (MySQL user), MPASS (MySQL user password), MHOST (the IP address of the MySQL server, e.g. localhost), and MPORT (the port the MySQL database is running on, default is 3306).
You can run the script manually, or you can set up a cron job which will perform backups on a regular basis. To do this, run the crontab -e command and add the following line (replace the sample path with the actual path and backup script name):
@daily /path/to/mysqlbackupscript.sh
Don't forget to make the script executable using the chmod a+x mysqlbackupscript.sh command.
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simple & compact version
NOW=`date +%Y-%m-%d`;
BKPDIR=/path/to/backup/$NOW;
mkdir -p $BKPDIR;
for DB in $(echo 'SHOW DATABASES;' | mysql -uuser -ppassword | grep -v '^Database$'); do
if [[ "${IGNOREDB}" =~ "#${DB}#" ]]; then continue; fi
mysqldump -uuser -ppassword --opt --add-drop-database --lock-all-tables --max_allowed_packet=500M $DB | bzip2 > $BKPDIR/$NOW-$DB.sql.bz2;
done;
Oh the horror
A shorter script using regular expression support
# DO NOT BACKUP these databases
IGNOREDB="#information_schema#mysql#test#"
...
for db in $DBS
do
if [ "${IGNOREDB}" =~ "#${db}#" ]; then continue; fi
FILE="$BACKUPDIR/$NOW-$db.gz";
echo "BACKING UP $db";
$MYSQLDUMP --add-drop-database --opt --lock-all-tables -u $MUSER -p$MPASS -h $MHOST -P $MPORT $db | gzip > $FILE
done
Avoiding the second inner loop and the $DUMP variable.
My two cents!
Backing up large databases
You'll want to add something like --max_allowed_packet=500M to the mysqldump command line to work around that.