3.5 KiB
MySQL / MariaDB backup script
Allows you to create and restore local MySQL / MariaDB backups.
Requirements
Method 1: Enter username and password in configuration section and uncomment.
Example:
...
# MySQL administrative user, uncomment if you want to use this instead of
# the value in /root/.my.cnf
MYSQL_USER='root'
# MySQL administrative user password, uncomment if you want to use this instead of
# the value in /root/.my.cnf
MYSQL_PW='ThisIsMyMySQLRootPassword'
...
Method 2: Requires a /root/.my.cnf file which contains credentials so the user root can login to the MySQL / MariaDB server with sufficient privileges without entering a password. Example /root/.my.cnf contents:
[client]
user=root
password=mysecretpassword
Don't forget to change the permissions:
sudo chmod 600 /root/.my.cnf
Test if it works with:
sudo mysqladmin status >> /dev/null 2>&1
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
clear && echo 'Error: Unable to connect to MySQL Server!'
else
clear && echo 'Successfully connected to the MySQL server!'
fi
Method 3: Plesk server use the admin user
sed -i "s|^#MYSQL_USER='root'|MYSQL_USER='admin'|g" /usr/local/sbin/backup_mysql.sh
sed -i "s|^#MYSQL_PW='ThisIsMyMySQLRootPassword'|MYSQL_PW=\$\(cat /etc/psa/.psa.shadow\)|g" /usr/local/sbin/backup_mysql.sh
Install script
sudo wget -O /usr/local/sbin/backup_mysql.sh https://git.snel.com/snelcom/backup-mysql/raw/branch/master/backup_mysql.sh
sudo chmod 700 /usr/local/sbin/backup_mysql.sh
Install cronjob
This will add a cronjob to root which will run this script daily at 0:10 am. Adjust as necessary.
(sudo crontab -l 2>/dev/null; sudo echo '10 0 * * * test -x /usr/local/sbin/backup_mysql.sh && /usr/local/sbin/backup_mysql.sh') | sudo crontab -
Recover database
Method 1: Assuming you want to restore my-testdb from your backups made on 20211012-0010, define variables:
DB='my-testdb'
NEWDB='my-testdb'
BACKUPDIR='/var/backup/mysql/20211012-0010'
TIP: You can change NEWDB to any other name if you wish to restore to an alternate database name!
Make sure you have a backup of the current database which will be replaced:
sudo mysqldump ${NEWDB} > /root/${NEWDB}-$(date +%Y%m%d).sql
And now the actual recovery (Need to be in the same session! Do not enter this in another SSH window / terminal):
sudo mysql -e 'DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS `'${NEWDB}'`'
sudo mysql -e 'CREATE DATABASE `'${NEWDB}'`'
for table in ${BACKUPDIR}/${DB}/*; do gunzip -c $table | sudo mysql ${NEWDB}; done
Method 2 - Plesk Servers: Assuming you want to restore my-testdb from your backups made on 20211012-0010, define variables:
DB='my-testdb'
NEWDB='my-testdb'
BACKUPDIR='/var/backup/mysql/20211012-0010'
TIP: You can change NEWDB to any other name if you wish to restore to an alternate database name!
Make sure you have a backup of the current database which will be replaced:
sudo mysqldump -u admin -p$(cat /etc/psa/.psa.shadow) ${NEWDB} > /root/${NEWDB}-$(date +%Y%m%d).sql
And now the actual recovery (Need to be in the same session! Do not enter this in another SSH window / terminal):
sudo mysql -u admin -p$(cat /etc/psa/.psa.shadow) -e 'DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS `'${NEWDB}'`'
sudo mysql -u admin -p$(cat /etc/psa/.psa.shadow) -e 'CREATE DATABASE `'${NEWDB}'`'
for table in ${BACKUPDIR}/${DB}/*; do gunzip -c $table | sudo mysql -u admin -p$(cat /etc/psa/.psa.shadow) ${NEWDB}; done