XTRABACKUP(1) Percona XtraBackup XTRABACKUP(1)

xtrabackup - Percona XtraBackup 8.0 Documentation

The xtrabackup binary is a compiled C program that is linked with the InnoDB libraries and the standard MySQL client libraries.

xtrabackup enables point-in-time backups of InnoDB / XtraDB tables together with the schema definitions, MyISAM tables, and other portions of the server.

The InnoDB libraries provide the functionality to apply a log to data files. The MySQL client libraries are used to parse command-line options and configuration file.

The tool runs in either --backup or --prepare mode, corresponding to the two main functions it performs. There are several variations on these functions to accomplish different tasks, and there are two less commonly used modes, --stats and --print-param.

xtrabackup supports incremental backups. It copies only the data that has changed since the last full backup. You can perform many incremental backups between each full backup, so you can set up a backup process such as a full backup once a week and an incremental backup every day, or full backups every day and incremental backups every hour.

NOTE:

Incremental backups on the MyRocks storage engine do not determine if an earlier full backup or incremental backup contains the same files. Percona XtraBackup copies all of the MyRocks files each time it takes a backup.

Incremental backups work because each InnoDB page (usually 16kb in size) contains a log sequence number, or LSN. The LSN is the system version number for the entire database. Each page's LSN shows how recently it was changed. An incremental backup copies each page whose LSN is newer than the previous incremental or full backup's LSN. There are two algorithms in use to find the set of such pages to be copied. The first one, available with all the server types and versions, is to check the page LSN directly by reading all the data pages. The second one, available with Percona Server for MySQL, is to enable the changed page tracking feature on the server, which will note the pages as they are being changed. This information will be then written out in a compact separate so-called bitmap file. The xtrabackup binary will use that file to read only the data pages it needs for the incremental backup, potentially saving many read requests. The latter algorithm is enabled by default if the xtrabackup binary finds the bitmap file. It is possible to specify --incremental-force-scan to read all the pages even if the bitmap data is available.

Incremental backups do not actually compare the data files to the previous backup's data files. In fact, you can use --incremental-lsn to perform an incremental backup without even having the previous backup, if you know its LSN. Incremental backups simply read the pages and compare their LSN to the last backup's LSN. You still need a full backup to recover the incremental changes, however; without a full backup to act as a base, the incremental backups are useless.

To make an incremental backup, begin with a full backup as usual. The xtrabackup binary writes a file called xtrabackup_checkpoints into the backup's target directory. This file contains a line showing the to_lsn, which is the database's LSN at the end of the backup. Create the full backup with a command such as the following:

$ xtrabackup --backup --target-dir=/data/backups/base --datadir=/var/lib/mysql/

If you look at the xtrabackup_checkpoints file, you should see contents similar to the following:

backup_type = full-backuped
from_lsn = 0
to_lsn = 1291135

Now that you have a full backup, you can make an incremental backup based on it. Use a command such as the following:

$ xtrabackup --backup --target-dir=/data/backups/inc1 \
--incremental-basedir=/data/backups/base --datadir=/var/lib/mysql/

The /data/backups/inc1/ directory should now contain delta files, such as ibdata1.delta and test/table1.ibd.delta. These represent the changes since the LSN 1291135. If you examine the xtrabackup_checkpoints file in this directory, you should see something similar to the following:

backup_type = incremental
from_lsn = 1291135
to_lsn = 1291340

The meaning should be self-evident. It's now possible to use this directory as the base for yet another incremental backup:

$ xtrabackup --backup --target-dir=/data/backups/inc2 \
--incremental-basedir=/data/backups/inc1 --datadir=/var/lib/mysql/

The --prepare step for incremental backups is not the same as for normal backups. In normal backups, two types of operations are performed to make the database consistent: committed transactions are replayed from the log file against the data files, and uncommitted transactions are rolled back. You must skip the rollback of uncommitted transactions when preparing a backup, because transactions that were uncommitted at the time of your backup may be in progress, and it is likely that they will be committed in the next incremental backup. You should use the --apply-log-only option to prevent the rollback phase.

NOTE:

If you do not use the --apply-log-only option to prevent the rollback phase, then your incremental backups will be useless. After transactions have been rolled back, further incremental backups cannot be applied.

Beginning with the full backup you created, you can prepare it, and then apply the incremental differences to it. Recall that you have the following backups:

/data/backups/base
/data/backups/inc1
/data/backups/inc2

To prepare the base backup, you need to run --prepare as usual, but prevent the rollback phase:

xtrabackup --prepare --apply-log-only --target-dir=/data/backups/base

The output should end with some text such as the following:

101107 20:49:43  InnoDB: Shutdown completed; log sequence number 1291135

The log sequence number should match the to_lsn of the base backup, which you saw previously.

This backup is actually safe to restore as-is now, even though the rollback phase has been skipped. If you restore it and start MySQL, InnoDB will detect that the rollback phase was not performed, and it will do that in the background, as it usually does for a crash recovery upon start. It will notify you that the database was not shut down normally.

To apply the first incremental backup to the full backup, you should use the following command:

xtrabackup --prepare --apply-log-only --target-dir=/data/backups/base \
--incremental-dir=/data/backups/inc1

This applies the delta files to the files in /data/backups/base, which rolls them forward in time to the time of the incremental backup. It then applies the redo log as usual to the result. The final data is in /data/backups/base, not in the incremental directory. You should see some output such as the following:

incremental backup from 1291135 is enabled.
xtrabackup: cd to /data/backups/base/
xtrabackup: This target seems to be already prepared.
xtrabackup: xtrabackup_logfile detected: size=2097152, start_lsn=(1291340)
Applying /data/backups/inc1/ibdata1.delta ...
Applying /data/backups/inc1/test/table1.ibd.delta ...
.... snip
101107 20:56:30  InnoDB: Shutdown completed; log sequence number 1291340

Again, the LSN should match what you saw from your earlier inspection of the first incremental backup. If you restore the files from /data/backups/base, you should see the state of the database as of the first incremental backup.

Preparing the second incremental backup is a similar process: apply the deltas to the (modified) base backup, and you will roll its data forward in time to the point of the second incremental backup:

xtrabackup --prepare --target-dir=/data/backups/base \
--incremental-dir=/data/backups/inc2

NOTE:

--apply-log-only should be used when merging all incrementals except the last one. That's why the previous line doesn't contain the --apply-log-only option. Even if the --apply-log-only was used on the last step, backup would still be consistent but in that case server would perform the rollback phase.

If you wish to avoid the notice that InnoDB was not shut down normally, when you applied the desired deltas to the base backup, you can run --prepare again without disabling the rollback phase.

After preparing the incremental backups, the base directory contains the same data as the full backup. To restoring this backup, you can use this command: xtrabackup --copy-back --target-dir=BASE-DIR

You may have to change the ownership as detailed on restoring_a_backup.

Incremental streaming backups can be performed with the xbstream streaming option. Currently backups are packed in custom xbstream format. With this feature, you need to take a BASE backup as well. Making a base backup.INDENT 0.0

$ xtrabackup --backup --target-dir=/data/backups


Taking a local backup.INDENT 0.0
$ xtrabackup --backup --incremental-lsn=LSN-number --stream=xbstream --target-dir=./ > incremental.xbstream


Unpacking the backup.INDENT 0.0
$ xbstream -x < incremental.xbstream


Taking a local backup and streaming it to the remote server and unpacking it.INDENT 0.0
$ xtrabackup --backup --incremental-lsn=LSN-number --stream=xbstream --target-dir=./
$ ssh user@hostname " cat - | xbstream -x -C > /backup-dir/"


xtrabackup supports taking partial backups when the innodb_file_per_table option is enabled. There are three ways to create partial backups:

1.
matching the tables names with a regular expression
2.
providing a list of table names in a file
3.
providing a list of databases

WARNING:

Do not copy back the prepared backup.

Restoring partial backups should be done by importing the tables, not by using the --copy-back option. It is not recommended to run incremental backups after running a partial backup.

Although there are some scenarios where restoring can be done by copying back the files, this may lead to database inconsistencies in many cases and it is not a recommended way to do it.

For the purposes of this manual page, we will assume that there is a database named test which contains tables named t1 and t2.

WARNING:

If any of the matched or listed tables is deleted during the backup, xtrabackup will fail.

There are multiple ways of specifying which part of the whole data is backed up:

  • Use the --tables option to list the table names
  • Use the --tables-file option to list the tables in a file
  • Use the --databases option to list the databases
  • Use the --databases-file option to list the databases

The --tables Option

The first method involves the xtrabackup --tables option. The option's value is a regular expression that is matched against the fully-qualified database name and table name using the databasename.tablename format.

To back up only tables in the test database, use the following command:

$ xtrabackup --backup --datadir=/var/lib/mysql --target-dir=/data/backups/ \
--tables="^test[.].*"

To back up only the test.t1 table, use the following command:

$ xtrabackup --backup --datadir=/var/lib/mysql --target-dir=/data/backups/ \
--tables="^test[.]t1"

The --tables-file Option

The --tables-file option specifies a file that can contain multiple table names, one table name per line in the file. Only the tables named in the file will be backed up. Names are matched exactly, case-sensitive, with no pattern or regular expression matching. The table names must be fully-qualified in databasename.tablename format.

$ echo "mydatabase.mytable" > /tmp/tables.txt
$ xtrabackup --backup --tables-file=/tmp/tables.txt

The --databases and --databases-file options

The ` --databases` option accepts a space-separated list of the databases and tables to backup in the databasename[.tablename] format. In addition to this list, make sure to specify the mysql, sys, and

performance_schema databases. These databases are required when restoring the databases using xtrabackup --copy-back.

NOTE:

Tables processed during the --prepare step may also be added to the backup even if they are not explicitly listed by the parameter if they were created after the backup started.
$ xtrabackup --databases='mysql sys performance_schema test ...'

The --databases-file Option

The --databases-file option specifies a file that can contain multiple databases and tables in the databasename[.tablename] format, one element name per line in the file. Names are matched exactly, case-sensitive, with no pattern or regular expression matching.

NOTE:

Tables processed during the --prepare step may also be added to the backup even if they are not explicitly listed by the parameter if they were created after the backup started.

The procedure is analogous to restoring individual tables : apply the logs and use the --export option:

$ xtrabackup --prepare --export --target-dir=/path/to/partial/backup

When you use the --prepare option on a partial backup, you will see warnings about tables that don't exist. This is because these tables exist in the data dictionary inside InnoDB, but the corresponding .ibd files don't exist. They were not copied into the backup directory. These tables will be removed from the data dictionary, and when you restore the backup and start InnoDB, they will no longer exist and will not cause any errors or warnings to be printed to the log file.

Could not find any file associated with the tablespace ID: 5

Use --innodb-directories to find the tablespace files. If that fails then use --innodb-force-recovery=1 to ignore this and to permanently lose all changes to the missing tablespace(s).

Restoring should be done by restoring individual tables in the partial backup to the server.

It can also be done by copying back the prepared backup to a "clean" datadir (in that case, make sure to include the mysql database) to the datadir you are moving the backup to. A system database can be created with the following:

$ sudo mysql --initialize --user=mysql

Once you start the server, you may see mysql complaining about missing tablespaces:

2021-07-19T12:42:11.077200Z 1 [Warning] [MY-012351] [InnoDB] Tablespace 4, name 'test1/t1', file './d2/test1.ibd' is missing!
2021-07-19T12:42:11.077300Z 1 [Warning] [MY-012351] [InnoDB] Tablespace 4, name 'test1/t1', file './d2/test1.ibd' is missing!

In order to clean the orphan database from the data dictionary, you must manually create the missing database directory and then DROP this database from the server.

Example of creating the missing database:

$ mkdir /var/lib/mysql/test1/d2

Example of dropping the database from the server:

mysql> DROP DATABASE d2;
Query OK, 2 rows affected (0.5 sec)

The xtrabackup binary can analyze InnoDB data files in read-only mode to give statistics about them. To do this, you should use the --stats option. You can combine this with the --tables option to limit the files to examine. It also uses the --use-memory option.

You can perform the analysis on a running server, with some chance of errors due to the data being changed during analysis. Or, you can analyze a backup copy of the database. Either way, to use the statistics feature, you need a clean copy of the database including correctly sized log files, so you need to execute with --prepare twice to use this functionality on a backup.

The result of running on a backup might look like the following:

<INDEX STATISTICS>
  table: test/table1, index: PRIMARY, space id: 12, root page 3
  estimated statistics in dictionary:
    key vals: 25265338, leaf pages 497839, size pages 498304
  real statistics:
     level 2 pages: pages=1, data=5395 bytes, data/pages=32%
     level 1 pages: pages=415, data=6471907 bytes, data/pages=95%
        leaf pages: recs=25958413, pages=497839, data=7492026403 bytes, data/pages=91%

This can be interpreted as follows:

  • The first line simply shows the table and index name and its internal identifiers. If you see an index named GEN_CLUST_INDEX, that is the table's clustered index, automatically created because you did not explicitly create a PRIMARY KEY.
  • The estimated statistics in dictionary information is similar to the data that's gathered through ANALYZE TABLE inside of InnoDB to be stored as estimated cardinality statistics and passed to the query optimizer.
  • The real statistics information is the result of scanning the data pages and computing exact information about the index.
  • The level <X> pages: output means that the line shows information about pages at that level in the index tree. The larger <X> is, the farther it is from the leaf pages, which are level 0. The first line is the root page.
  • The leaf pages output shows the leaf pages, of course. This is where the table's data is stored.
  • The external pages: output (not shown) shows large external pages that hold values too long to fit in the row itself, such as long BLOB and TEXT values.
  • The recs is the real number of records (rows) in leaf pages.
  • The pages is the page count.
  • The data is the total size of the data in the pages, in bytes.
  • The data/pages is calculated as (data / (pages * PAGE_SIZE)) * 100%. It will never reach 100% because of space reserved for page headers and footers.

A more detailed example is posted as a MySQL Performance Blog post.

The following script can be used to summarize and tabulate the output of the statistics information:

tabulate-xtrabackup-stats.pl
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings FATAL => 'all';
my $script_version = "0.1";
my $PG_SIZE = 16_384; # InnoDB defaults to 16k pages, change if needed.
my ($cur_idx, $cur_tbl);
my (%idx_stats, %tbl_stats);
my ($max_tbl_len, $max_idx_len) = (0, 0);
while ( my $line = <> ) {
   if ( my ($t, $i) = $line =~ m/table: (.*), index: (.*), space id:/ ) {
      $t =~ s!/!.!;
      $cur_tbl = $t;
      $cur_idx = $i;
      if ( length($i) > $max_idx_len ) {
         $max_idx_len = length($i);
      }
      if ( length($t) > $max_tbl_len ) {
         $max_tbl_len = length($t);
      }
   }
   elsif ( my ($kv, $lp, $sp) = $line =~ m/key vals: (\d+), \D*(\d+), \D*(\d+)/ ) {
      @{$idx_stats{$cur_tbl}->{$cur_idx}}{qw(est_kv est_lp est_sp)} = ($kv, $lp, $sp);
      $tbl_stats{$cur_tbl}->{est_kv} += $kv;
      $tbl_stats{$cur_tbl}->{est_lp} += $lp;
      $tbl_stats{$cur_tbl}->{est_sp} += $sp;
   }
   elsif ( my ($l, $pages, $bytes) = $line =~ m/(?:level (\d+)|leaf) pages:.*pages=(\d+), data=(\d+) bytes/ ) {
      $l ||= 0;
      $idx_stats{$cur_tbl}->{$cur_idx}->{real_pages} += $pages;
      $idx_stats{$cur_tbl}->{$cur_idx}->{real_bytes} += $bytes;
      $tbl_stats{$cur_tbl}->{real_pages} += $pages;
      $tbl_stats{$cur_tbl}->{real_bytes} += $bytes;
   }
}
my $hdr_fmt = "%${max_tbl_len}s %${max_idx_len}s %9s %10s %10s\n";
my @headers = qw(TABLE INDEX TOT_PAGES FREE_PAGES PCT_FULL);
printf $hdr_fmt, @headers;
my $row_fmt = "%${max_tbl_len}s %${max_idx_len}s %9d %10d %9.1f%%\n";
foreach my $t ( sort keys %tbl_stats ) {
   my $tbl = $tbl_stats{$t};
   printf $row_fmt, $t, "", $tbl->{est_sp}, $tbl->{est_sp} - $tbl->{real_pages},
      $tbl->{real_bytes} / ($tbl->{real_pages} * $PG_SIZE) * 100;
   foreach my $i ( sort keys %{$idx_stats{$t}} ) {
      my $idx = $idx_stats{$t}->{$i};
      printf $row_fmt, $t, $i, $idx->{est_sp}, $idx->{est_sp} - $idx->{real_pages},
         $idx->{real_bytes} / ($idx->{real_pages} * $PG_SIZE) * 100;
   }
}
Sample Script Output

The output of the above Perl script, when run against the sample shown in the previously mentioned blog post, will appear as follows:

          TABLE           INDEX TOT_PAGES FREE_PAGES   PCT_FULL
art.link_out104                    832383      38561      86.8%
art.link_out104         PRIMARY    498304         49      91.9%
art.link_out104       domain_id     49600       6230      76.9%
art.link_out104     domain_id_2     26495       3339      89.1%
art.link_out104 from_message_id     28160        142      96.3%
art.link_out104    from_site_id     38848       4874      79.4%
art.link_out104   revert_domain    153984      19276      71.4%
art.link_out104    site_message     36992       4651      83.4%

The columns are the table and index, followed by the total number of pages in that index, the number of pages not actually occupied by data, and the number of bytes of real data as a percentage of the total size of the pages of real data. The first line in the above output, in which the INDEX column is empty, is a summary of the entire table.

The xtrabackup binary integrates with the log_status table. This integration enables xtrabackup to print out the backup's corresponding binary log position, so that you can use this binary log position to provision a new replica or perform point-in-time recovery.

You can find the binary log position corresponding to a backup after the backup has been taken. If your backup is from a server with binary logging enabled, xtrabackup creates a file named xtrabackup_binlog_info in the target directory. This file contains the binary log file name and position of the exact point when the backup was taken.

The output is similar to the following during the backup stage:

210715 14:14:59 Backup created in directory '/backup/'
MySQL binlog position: filename 'binlog.000002', position '156'
. . .
210715 14:15:00 completed OK!

NOTE:

As of Percona XtraBackup 8.0.26-18.0, xtrabackup no longer creates the xtrabackup_binlog_pos_innodb file. This change is because MySQL and Percona Server no longer update the binary log information on global transaction system section of ibdata. You should rely on xtrabackup_binlog_info regardless of the storage engine in use.

Point-In-Time Recovery

To perform a point-in-time recovery from an xtrabackup backup, you should prepare and restore the backup, and then replay binary logs from the point shown in the xtrabackup_binlog_info file.

A more detailed procedure is found here.

To set up a new replica, you should prepare the backup, and restore it to the data directory of your new replication replica. If you are using version 8.0.22 or earlier, in your CHANGE MASTER TO command, use the binary log filename and position shown in the xtrabackup_binlog_info file to start replication.

If you are using 8.0.23 or later, use the CHANGE_REPLICATION_SOURCE_TO and the appropriate options. CHANGE_MASTER_TO is deprecated.

A more detailed procedure is found in ../howtos/setting_up_replication.

Percona XtraBackup can export a table that is contained in its own .ibd file. With Percona XtraBackup, you can export individual tables from any InnoDB database, and import them into Percona Server for MySQL with XtraDB or MySQL 8.0. The source doesn't have to be XtraDB or MySQL 8.0, but the destination does. This method only works on individual .ibd files.

The following example exports and imports the following table:

CREATE TABLE export_test (
a int(11) DEFAULT NULL
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;

Created the table in innodb_file_per_table mode, so after taking a backup as usual with the --backup option, the .ibd file exists in the target directory:

$ find /data/backups/mysql/ -name export_test.*
/data/backups/mysql/test/export_test.ibd

when you prepare the backup, add the --export option to the command. Here is an example:

$ xtrabackup --prepare --export --target-dir=/data/backups/mysql/

NOTE:

If you restore an encrypted InnoDB tablespace table, add the keyring file:
$ xtrabackup --prepare --export --target-dir=/tmp/table \
--keyring-file-data=/var/lib/mysql-keyring/keyring

Now you should see an .exp file in the target directory:

$ find /data/backups/mysql/ -name export_test.*
/data/backups/mysql/test/export_test.exp
/data/backups/mysql/test/export_test.ibd
/data/backups/mysql/test/export_test.cfg

These three files are the only files required to import the table into a server running Percona Server for MySQL with XtraDB or MySQL 8.0. In case the server uses InnoDB Tablespace Encryption adds an additional .cfp file which contains the transfer key and an encrypted tablespace key.

NOTE:

The .cfg metadata file contains an InnoDB dictionary dump in a special format. This format is different from the .exp one which is used in XtraDB for the same purpose. A .cfg` file is not required to import a tablespace to MySQL 8.0 or Percona Server for MySQL 8.0.

A tablespace is imported successfully even if the table is from another server, but InnoDB performs a schema validation if the corresponding .cfg file is located in the same directory.

On the destination server running Percona Server for MySQL with XtraDB and innodb_import_table_from_xtrabackup option enabled, or MySQL 8.0, create a table with the same structure, and then perform the following steps:

1.
Run the ALTER TABLE test.export_test DISCARD TABLESPACE; command. If you see the following error, enable innodb_file_per_table and create the table again.

ERROR 1030 (HY000): Got error -1 from storage engine

2.
Copy the exported files to the test/ subdirectory of the destination server's data directory
3.
Run ALTER TABLE test.export_test IMPORT TABLESPACE;

The table is imported, and you can run a SELECT to see the imported data.

Percona XtraBackup includes a saved buffer pool dump into a backup to enable reducing the warm up time. It restores the buffer pool state from ib_buffer_pool file after restart. Percona XtraBackup discovers ib_buffer_pool and backs it up automatically. [image]

If the buffer restore option is enabled in my.cnf buffer pool will be in the warm state after backup is restored.

SEE ALSO:

Percona XtraBackup supports streaming mode. Streaming mode sends a backup to STDOUT in the xbstream format instead of copying the files to the backup directory.

This method allows you to use other programs to filter the output of the backup, providing greater flexibility for storage of the backup. For example, compression is achieved by piping the output to a compression utility. One of the benefits of streaming backups and using Unix pipes is that the backups can be automatically encrypted.

To use the streaming feature, you must use the --stream, providing the format of the stream (xbstream ) and where to store the temporary files:

$ xtrabackup --stream=xbstream --target-dir=/tmp

xtrabackup uses xbstream to stream all of the data files to STDOUT, in a special xbstream format. After it finishes streaming all of the data files to STDOUT, it stops xtrabackup and streams the saved log file too.

SEE ALSO:

When compression is enabled, xtrabackup compresses the output data, except for the meta and non-InnoDB files which are not compressed, using the specified compression algorithm. The only currently supported algorithm is quicklz. The resulting files have the qpress archive format, i.e. every *.qp file produced by xtrabackup is essentially a one-file qpress archive and can be extracted and uncompressed by the qpress file archiver which is available from Percona Software repositories.

Using xbstream as a stream option, backups can be copied and compressed in parallel. This option can significantly improve the speed of the backup process. In case backups were both compressed and encrypted, they must be decrypted before they are uncompressed.

Task Command
Stream the backup into an archive named backup.xbstream xtrabackup --backup --stream=xbstream --target-dir=./ > backup.xbstream
Stream the backup into a compressed archive named backup.xbstream xtrabackup --backup --stream=xbstream --compress --target-dir=./ > backup.xbstream
Encrypt the backup $ xtrabackup --backup --stream=xbstream ./ > backup.xbstream gzip - | openssl des3 -salt -k "password" > backup.xbstream.gz.des3
Unpack the backup to the current directory xbstream -x < backup.xbstream
Send the backup compressed directly to another host and unpack it xtrabackup --backup --compress --stream=xbstream --target-dir=./ | ssh user@otherhost "xbstream -x"
Send the backup to another server using netcat. On the destination host: 0.0 3.5 $ nc -l 9999 | cat - > /data/backups/backup.xbstream 168u 168u On the source host: 0.0 3.5 $ xtrabackup --backup --stream=xbstream ./ | nc desthost 9999 168u 168u


Send the backup to another server using a one-liner: $ ssh user@desthost "( nc -l 9999 > /data/backups/backup.xbstream & )" && xtrabackup --backup --stream=xbstream ./ | nc desthost 9999
Throttle the throughput to 10MB/sec using the pipe viewer tool [1] $ xtrabackup --backup --stream=xbstream ./ | pv -q -L10m ssh user@desthost "cat - > /data/backups/backup.xbstream"
Checksumming the backup during the streaming: On the destination host: 0.0 3.5 $ nc -l 9999 | tee >(sha1sum > destination_checksum) > /data/backups/backup.xbstream 168u 168u On the source host: 0.0 3.5 $ xtrabackup --backup --stream=xbstream ./ | tee >(sha1sum > source_checksum) | nc desthost 9999 168u 168u Compare the checksums on the source host: 0.0 3.5 $ cat source_checksum 65e4f916a49c1f216e0887ce54cf59bf3934dbad - 168u 168u Compare the checksums on the destination host: 0.0 3.5 $ cat destination_checksum 65e4f916a49c1f216e0887ce54cf59bf3934dbad - 168u 168u




Parallel compression with parallel copying backup xtrabackup --backup --compress --compress-threads=8 --stream=xbstream --parallel=4 --target-dir=./ > backup.xbstream

[1]
Install from the official site or from the distribution package (apt install pv)

Note that the streamed backup will need to be prepared before restoration. Streaming mode does not prepare the backup.

Percona XtraBackup supports encrypting and decrypting local and streaming backups with xbstream option adding another layer of protection. The encryption is implemented using the libgcrypt library from GnuPG.

To make an encrypted backup the following options need to be specified (options --encrypt-key and --encrypt-key-file are mutually exclusive, i.e. just one of them needs to be provided):

  • --encrypt
  • :option:` --encrypt-key`
  • :option:` --encrypt-key-file`

Both the --encrypt-key option and --encrypt-key-file option can be used to specify the encryption key. An encryption key can be generated with a command like openssl rand -base64 32

Example output of that command should look like this:

U2FsdGVkX19VPN7VM+lwNI0fePhjgnhgqmDBqbF3Bvs=

This value then can be used as the encryption key

The --encrypt-key Option

Example of the xtrabackup command using the --encrypt-key should look like this:

$  xtrabackup --backup --encrypt=AES256 --encrypt-key="U2FsdGVkX19VPN7VM+lwNI0fePhjgnhgqmDBqbF3Bvs=" --target-dir=/data/backup

The --encrypt-key-file Option

Use the --encrypt-key-file option as follows:

$ xtrabackup --backup --encrypt=AES256 --encrypt-key-file=/data/backups/keyfile --target-dir=/data/backup

NOTE:

Depending on the text editor that you use to make the KEYFILE, the editor can automatically insert the CRLF (end of line) character. This will cause the key size to grow and thus making it invalid. The suggested way to create the file is by using the command line: echo -n "U2FsdGVkX19VPN7VM+lwNI0fePhjgnhgqmDBqbF3Bvs=" > /data/backups/keyfile.

Two new options are available for encrypted backups that can be used to speed up the encryption process. These are --encrypt-threads and --encrypt-chunk-size. By using the --encrypt-threads option multiple threads can be specified to be used for encryption in parallel. Option --encrypt-chunk-size can be used to specify the size (in bytes) of the working encryption buffer for each encryption thread (default is 64K).

Backups can be decrypted with xbcrypt. The following one-liner can be used to encrypt the whole folder:

$ for i in `find . -iname "*\.xbcrypt"`; do xbcrypt -d --encrypt-key-file=/root/secret_key --encrypt-algo=AES256 < $i > $(dirname $i)/$(basename $i .xbcrypt) && rm $i; done

Percona XtraBackup --decrypt option has been implemented that can be used to decrypt the backups:

$ xtrabackup --decrypt=AES256 --encrypt-key="U2FsdGVkX19VPN7VM+lwNI0fePhjgnhgqmDBqbF3Bvs=" --target-dir=/data/backup/

Percona XtraBackup doesn't automatically remove the encrypted files. In order to clean up the backup directory users should remove the *.xbcrypt files.

NOTE:

--parallel can be used with --decrypt option to decrypt multiple files simultaneously.

When the files are decrypted, the backup can be prepared.

After the backups have been decrypted, they can be prepared in the same way as the standard full backups with the --prepare option:

$ xtrabackup --prepare --target-dir=/data/backup/

xtrabackup offers the --copy-back option to restore a backup to the server's datadir:

$ xtrabackup --copy-back --target-dir=/data/backup/

It will copy all the data-related files back to the server's datadir, determined by the server's my.cnf configuration file. You should check the last line of the output for a success message:

150318 11:08:13  xtrabackup: completed OK!

SEE ALSO:

FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK option

The FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK option does the following with a global read lock:

  • Closes all open tables
  • Locks all tables for all databases

Release the lock with UNLOCK TABLES.

NOTE:

FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK does not prevent inserting rows into the log tables.

To ensure consistent backups, use the FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK option before taking a non-InnoDB file backup. The option does not affect long-running queries.

Long-running queries with FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK enabled can leave the server in a read-only mode until the queries finish. Killing the FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK does not help if the database is in either the Waiting for table flush or Waiting for master to send event state. To return to normal operation, you must kill any long-running queries.

NOTE:

All described in this section has no effect when backup locks are used. Percona XtraBackup will use Backup locks where available as a lightweight alternative to FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK. This feature is available in Percona Server for MySQL 5.6+. Percona XtraBackup uses this automatically to copy non-InnoDB data to avoid blocking DML queries that modify InnoDB tables.

In order to prevent this from happening two things have been implemented:

  • xtrabackup waits for a good moment to issue the global lock
  • xtrabackup kills all queries or only the SELECT queries which prevent the global lock from being acquired

You should issue a global lock when no long queries are running. Waiting to issue the global lock for extended period of time is not a good method. The wait can extend the time needed for backup to take place. The --ftwrl-wait-timeout option can limit the waiting time. If it cannot issue the lock during this time, xtrabackup stops the option, exits with an error message, and backup is not be taken.

The default value for this option is zero (0) value which turns off the option.

Another possibility is to specify the type of query to wait on. In this case --ftwrl-wait-query-type. Possible values are all and update. When all is used xtrabackup will wait for all long running queries (execution time longer than allowed by --ftwrl-wait-threshold) to finish before running the FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK. When update is used xtrabackup will wait on UPDATE/ALTER/REPLACE/INSERT queries to finish.

The time needed for a specific query to complete is hard to predict. We assume that the long-running queries will not finish in a timely manner. Other queries which run for a short time finish quickly. xtrabackup uses the value of --ftwrl-wait-threshold option to specify the long-running queries and will block a global lock. In order to use this option xtrabackup user should have PROCESS and SUPER privileges.

The second option is to kill all the queries which prevent from acquiring the global lock. In this case, all queries which run longer than FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK are potential blockers. Although all queries can be killed, additional time can be specified for the short running queries to finish using the --kill-long-queries-timeout option. This option specifies the time for queries to complete, after the value is reached, all the running queries will be killed. The default value is zero, which turns this feature off.

The --kill-long-query-type option can be used to specify all or only SELECT queries that are preventing global lock from being acquired. In order to use this option xtrabackup user should have PROCESS and SUPER privileges.

  • --ftwrl-wait-timeout (seconds) - how long to wait for a good moment. Default is 0, not to wait.
  • --ftwrl-wait-query-type - which long queries should be finished before FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK is run. Default is all.
  • --ftwrl-wait-threshold (seconds) - how long query should be running before we consider it long running and potential blocker of global lock.
  • --kill-long-queries-timeout (seconds) - how many time we give for queries to complete after FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK is issued before start to kill. Default if 0, not to kill.
  • --kill-long-query-type - which queries should be killed once kill-long-queries-timeout has expired.

Running the xtrabackup with the following options will cause xtrabackup to spend no longer than 3 minutes waiting for all queries older than 40 seconds to complete.

$  xtrabackup --backup --ftwrl-wait-threshold=40 \
--ftwrl-wait-query-type=all --ftwrl-wait-timeout=180 \
--kill-long-queries-timeout=20 --kill-long-query-type=all \
--target-dir=/data/backups/

After FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK is issued, xtrabackup will wait for 20 seconds for lock to be acquired. If lock is still not acquired after 20 seconds, it will kill all queries which are running longer that the FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK.

Copying with the --parallel and --compress-threads Options

When making a local or streaming backup with xbstream option, multiple files can be copied at the same time when using the --parallel option. This option specifies the number of threads created by xtrabackup to copy data files.

To take advantage of this option either the multiple tablespaces option must be enabled (innodb_file_per_table) or the shared tablespace must be stored in multiple ibdata files with the innodb_data_file_path option. Having multiple files for the database (or splitting one into many) doesn't have a measurable impact on performance.

As this feature is implemented at the file level, concurrent file transfer can sometimes increase I/O throughput when doing a backup on highly fragmented data files, due to the overlap of a greater number of random read requests. You should consider tuning the filesystem also to obtain the maximum performance (e.g. checking fragmentation).

If the data is stored on a single file, this option will have no effect.

To use this feature, simply add the option to a local backup, for example:

$ xtrabackup --backup --parallel=4 --target-dir=/path/to/backup

By using the xbstream in streaming backups, you can additionally speed up the compression process with the --compress-threads option. This option specifies the number of threads created by xtrabackup for for parallel data compression. The default value for this option is 1.

To use this feature, simply add the option to a local backup, for example:

$ xtrabackup --backup --stream=xbstream --compress --compress-threads=4 --target-dir=./ > backup.xbstream

Before applying logs, compressed files will need to be uncompressed.

The --rsync Option

In order to speed up the backup process and to minimize the time FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK is blocking the writes, the option --rsync should be used. When this option is specified, xtrabackup uses rsync to copy all non-InnoDB files instead of spawning a separate cp for each file, which can be much faster for servers with a large number of databases or tables. xtrabackup will call the rsync twice, once before the FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK and once during to minimize the time the read lock is being held. During the second rsync call, it will only synchronize the changes to non-transactional data (if any) since the first call performed before the FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK. Note that Percona XtraBackup will use Backup locks where available as a lightweight alternative to FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK. This feature is available in Percona Server for MySQL 5.6+. Percona XtraBackup uses this automatically to copy non-InnoDB data to avoid blocking DML queries that modify InnoDB tables.

NOTE:

This option cannot be used together with the --stream option.

Point-In-Time recovery

Recovering up to particular moment in database's history can be done with xtrabackup and the binary logs of the server.

Note that the binary log contains the operations that modified the database from a point in the past. You need a full datadir as a base, and then you can apply a series of operations from the binary log to make the data match what it was at the point in time you want.

$ xtrabackup --backup --target-dir=/path/to/backup
$ xtrabackup --prepare --target-dir=/path/to/backup

For more details on these procedures, see creating_a_backup and preparing_a_backup.

Now, suppose that some time has passed, and you want to restore the database to a certain point in the past, having in mind that there is the constraint of the point where the snapshot was taken.

To find out what is the situation of binary logging in the server, execute the following queries:

mysql> SHOW BINARY LOGS;
+------------------+-----------+
| Log_name         | File_size |
+------------------+-----------+
| mysql-bin.000001 |       126 |
| mysql-bin.000002 |      1306 |
| mysql-bin.000003 |       126 |
| mysql-bin.000004 |       497 |
+------------------+-----------+

and

mysql> SHOW MASTER STATUS;
+------------------+----------+--------------+------------------+
| File             | Position | Binlog_Do_DB | Binlog_Ignore_DB |
+------------------+----------+--------------+------------------+
| mysql-bin.000004 |      497 |              |                  |
+------------------+----------+--------------+------------------+

The first query will tell you which files contain the binary log and the second one which file is currently being used to record changes, and the current position within it. Those files are stored usually in the datadir (unless other location is specified when the server is started with the --log-bin= option).

To find out the position of the snapshot taken, see the xtrabackup_binlog_info at the backup's directory:

$ cat /path/to/backup/xtrabackup_binlog_info
mysql-bin.000003      57

This will tell you which file was used at moment of the backup for the binary log and its position. That position will be the effective one when you restore the backup:

$ xtrabackup --copy-back --target-dir=/path/to/backup

As the restoration will not affect the binary log files (you may need to adjust file permissions, see restoring_a_backup), the next step is extracting the queries from the binary log with mysqlbinlog starting from the position of the snapshot and redirecting it to a file

$ mysqlbinlog /path/to/datadir/mysql-bin.000003 /path/to/datadir/mysql-bin.000004 \
    --start-position=57 > mybinlog.sql

Note that if you have multiple files for the binary log, as in the example, you have to extract the queries with one process, as shown above.

Inspect the file with the queries to determine which position or date corresponds to the point-in-time wanted. Once determined, pipe it to the server. Assuming the point is 11-12-25 01:00:00:

$ mysqlbinlog /path/to/datadir/mysql-bin.000003 /path/to/datadir/mysql-bin.000004 \
    --start-position=57 --stop-datetime="11-12-25 01:00:00" | mysql -u root -p

and the database will be rolled forward up to that Point-In-Time.

There are options specific to back up from a replication replica.

The --slave-info Option

This option is useful when backing up a replication replica server. It prints the binary log position and name of the source server. It also writes this information to the xtrabackup_slave_info file as a CHANGE MASTER statement.

This option is useful for setting up a new replica for this source. You can start a replica server with this backup and issue the statement saved in the xtrabackup_slave_info file. More details of this procedure can be found in replication_howto.

The --safe-slave-backup Option

In order to assure a consistent replication state, this option stops the replication SQL thread and waits to start backing up until Slave_open_temp_tables in SHOW STATUS is zero. If there are no open temporary tables, the backup will take place, otherwise the SQL thread will be started and stopped until there are no open temporary tables. The backup will fail if Slave_open_temp_tables does not become zero after --safe-slave-backup-timeout seconds (defaults to 300 seconds). The replication SQL thread will be restarted when the backup finishes.

Using this option is always recommended when taking backups from a replica server.

WARNING:

Make sure your replica is a true replica of the source before using it as a source for backup. A good tool to validate a replica is pt-table-checksum.

Percona XtraBackup supports storing the backups history on the server. This feature was implemented in Percona XtraBackup 2.2. Storing backup history on the server was implemented to provide users with additional information about backups that are being taken. Backup history information will be stored in the PERCONA_SCHEMA.XTRABACKUP_HISTORY table.

To use this feature the following options are available:

  • --history =<name> : This option enables the history feature and allows the user to specify a backup series name that will be placed within the history record.
  • --incremental-history-name =<name> : This option allows an incremental backup to be made based on a specific history series by name. xtrabackup will search the history table looking for the most recent (highest to_lsn) backup in the series and take the to_lsn value to use as it's starting lsn. This is mutually exclusive with --incremental-history-uuid, --incremental-basedir and --incremental-lsn options. If no valid LSN can be found (no series by that name) xtrabackup will return with an error.
  • --incremental-history-uuid =<uuid> : Allows an incremental backup to be made based on a specific history record identified by UUID. xtrabackup will search the history table looking for the record matching UUID and take the to_lsn value to use as it's starting LSN. This options is mutually exclusive with --incremental-basedir, --incremental-lsn and --incremental-history-name options. If no valid LSN can be found (no record by that UUID or missing to_lsn), xtrabackup will return with an error.

NOTE:

Backup that's currently being performed will NOT exist in the xtrabackup_history table within the resulting backup set as the record will not be added to that table until after the backup has been taken.

If you want access to backup history outside of your backup set in the case of some catastrophic event, you will need to either perform a mysqldump, partial backup or SELECT * on the history table after xtrabackup completes and store the results with you backup set.

For the necessary privileges, see pxb.privilege. PERCONA_SCHEMA.XTRABACKUP_HISTORY table

This table contains the information about the previous server backups. Information about the backups will only be written if the backup was taken with --history option.

Limitations.INDENT 0.0
Column Name Description
uuid Unique backup id
name User provided name of backup series. There may be multiple entries with the same name used to identify related backups in a series.
tool_name Name of tool used to take backup
tool_command Exact command line given to the tool with --password and --encryption_key obfuscated
tool_version Version of tool used to take backup
ibbackup_version Version of the xtrabackup binary used to take backup
server_version Server version on which backup was taken
start_time Time at the start of the backup
end_time Time at the end of the backup
lock_time Amount of time, in seconds, spent calling and holding locks for FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
binlog_pos Binlog file and position at end of FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK
innodb_from_lsn LSN at beginning of backup which can be used to determine prior backups
innodb_to_lsn LSN at end of backup which can be used as the starting lsn for the next incremental
partial Is this a partial backup, if N that means that it's the full backup
incremental Is this an incremental backup
format Description of result format (xbstream)
compact Is this a compact backup
compressed Is this a compressed backup
encrypted Is this an encrypted backup
  • --history option must be specified only on the command line and not within a configuration file in order to be effective.
  • --incremental-history-name and --incremental-history-uuid options must be specified only on the command line and not within a configuration file in order to be effective.


This page contains notes on various internal aspects of the xtrabackup tool's operation.

xtrabackup opens the source data files in read-write mode, although it does not modify the files. This means that you must run xtrabackup as a user who has permission to write the data files. The reason for opening the files in read-write mode is that xtrabackup uses the embedded InnoDB libraries to open and read the files, and InnoDB opens them in read-write mode because it normally assumes it is going to write to them.

Because xtrabackup reads large amounts of data from the filesystem, it uses posix_fadvise() where possible, to instruct the operating system not to try to cache the blocks it reads from disk. Without this hint, the operating system would prefer to cache the blocks, assuming that xtrabackup is likely to need them again, which is not the case. Caching such large files can place pressure on the operating system's virtual memory and cause other processes, such as the database server, to be swapped out. The xtrabackup tool avoids this with the following hint on both the source and destination files:

posix_fadvise(file, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_DONTNEED)

In addition, xtrabackup asks the operating system to perform more aggressive read-ahead optimizations on the source files:

posix_fadvise(file, 0, 0, POSIX_FADV_SEQUENTIAL)

When copying the data files to the target directory, xtrabackup reads and writes 1 MB of data at a time. This is not configurable. When copying the log file, xtrabackup reads and writes 512 bytes at a time. This is also not possible to configure, and matches InnoDB's behavior (workaround exists in Percona Server for MySQL because it has an option to tune innodb_log_block_size for XtraDB, and in that case Percona XtraBackup will match the tuning).

After reading from the files, xtrabackup iterates over the 1MB buffer a page at a time, and checks for page corruption on each page with InnoDB's buf_page_is_corrupted() function. If the page is corrupt, it re-reads and retries up to 10 times for each page. It skips this check on the doublewrite buffer.

xtrabackup Exit Codes

The xtrabackup binary exits with the traditional success value of 0 after a backup when no error occurs. If an error occurs during the backup, the exit value is 1.

In certain cases, the exit value can be something other than 0 or 1, due to the command-line option code included from the MySQL libraries. An unknown command-line option, for example, will cause an exit code of 255.

The xtrabackup Option Reference

This page documents all of the command-line options for the xtrabackup binary.

You invoke xtrabackup in one of the following modes:

  • --backup mode to make a backup in a target directory
  • --prepare mode to restore data from a backup (created in --backup mode)
  • --copy-back to copy data from a backup to the location that contained the original data; to move data instead of copying use the alternate --move-back mode.
  • --stats mode to scan the specified data files and print out index statistics.

When you intend to run xtrabackup in any of these modes, use the following syntax:

$ xtrabackup [--defaults-file=#] --backup|--prepare|--copy-back|--stats [OPTIONS]

For example, the --prepare mode is applied as follows:

$ xtrabackup --prepare --target-dir=/data/backup/mysql/

For all modes, the default options are read from the xtrabackup and mysqld configuration groups from the following files in the given order:

1.
/etc/my.cnf
2.
/etc/mysql/my.cnf
3.
/usr/etc/my.cnf
4.
~/.my.cnf.

As the first parameter to xtrabackup (in place of the --defaults-file, you may supply one of the following:

  • --print-defaults to have xtrabackup print the argument list and exit.
  • --no-defaults to forbid reading options from any file but the login file.
  • --defaults-file to read the default options from the given file.
  • --defaults-extra-file to read the specified additional file after the global files have been read.
  • --defaults-group-suffix to read the configuration groups with the given suffix. The effective group name is constructed by concatenating the default configuration groups (xtrabackup and mysqld) with the given suffix.
  • --login-path to read the given path from the login file.
InnoDB Options

There is a large group of InnoDB options that are normally read from the my.cnf configuration file, so that xtrabackup boots up its embedded InnoDB in the same configuration as your current server. You normally do not need to specify them explicitly. These options have the same behavior in InnoDB and XtraDB. See --innodb-miscellaneous for more information.

This option causes only the redo stage to be performed when preparing a backup. It is very important for incremental backups.
Make a backup and place it in --target-dir. See Creating a backup.
--backup-lock-timeout
The timeout in seconds for attempts to acquire metadata locks.
--backup-lock-retry-count
The number of attempts to acquire metadata locks.
--backup-locks
This option controls if backup locks should be used instead of FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK on the backup stage. The option has no effect when backup locks are not supported by the server. This option is enabled by default, disable with --no-backup-locks.
This option checks if Percona XtraBackup has all required privileges. If a missing privilege is required for the current operation, it will terminate and print out an error message. If a missing privilege is not required for the current operation, but may be necessary for some other XtraBackup operation, the process is not aborted and a warning is printed.
xtrabackup: Error: missing required privilege LOCK TABLES on *.*
xtrabackup: Warning: missing required privilege REPLICATION CLIENT on *.*
Do not keep files opened. When xtrabackup opens tablespace it normally doesn't close its file handle in order to handle the DDL operations correctly. However, if the number of tablespaces is really huge and can not fit into any limit, there is an option to close file handles once they are no longer accessed. Percona XtraBackup can produce inconsistent backups with this option enabled. Use at your own risk.
This option tells xtrabackup to compress all output data, including the transaction log file and meta data files, using either the quicklz or lz4 compression algorithm. quicklz is chosen by default.

When using --compress=quicklz or --compress, the resulting files have the qpress archive format, i.e. every *.qp file produced by xtrabackup is essentially a one-file qpress archive and can be extracted and uncompressed by the qpress file archiver.

--compress=lz4 produces *.lz4 files. You can extract the contents of these files by using a program such as lz4.

SEE ALSO:

--compress-chunk-size=#
Size of working buffer(s) for compression threads in bytes. The default value is 64K.
--compress-threads=#
This option specifies the number of worker threads used by xtrabackup for parallel data compression. This option defaults to 1. Parallel compression (--compress-threads) can be used together with parallel file copying (--parallel). For example, --parallel=4 --compress --compress-threads=2 will create 4 I/O threads that will read the data and pipe it to 2 compression threads.
Copy all the files in a previously made backup from the backup directory to their original locations. This option will not copy over existing files unless --force-non-empty-directories option is specified.
Write core on fatal signals.
This option specifies a list of databases and tables that should be backed up. The option accepts the list of the form "databasename1[.table_name1] databasename2[.table_name2] . . .".
Excluding databases based on name, Operates the same way as --databases, but matched names are excluded from backup. Note that this option has a higher priority than --databases.
This option specifies the path to the file containing the list of databases and tables that should be backed up. The file can contain the list elements of the form databasename1[.table_name1], one element per line.
The source directory for the backup. This should be the same as the datadir for your MySQL server, so it should be read from my.cnf if that exists; otherwise you must specify it on the command line.

When combined with the --copy-back or --move-back option, --datadir refers to the destination directory.

Once connected to the server, in order to perform a backup you will need READ and EXECUTE permissions at a filesystem level in the server's datadir.

This is a debug-only option used by the xtrabackup test suite.
The debug sync point. This option is only used by the xtrabackup test suite.
Decompresses all files with the .qp extension in a backup previously made with the --compress option. The --parallel option will allow multiple files to be decrypted simultaneously. In order to decompress, the qpress utility MUST be installed and accessible within the path. Percona XtraBackup does not automatically remove the compressed files. In order to clean up the backup directory users should use --remove-original option.

The --decompress option may be used with xbstream to decompress individual qpress files.

If you used the lz4 compression algorithm to compress the files (--compress=lz4), change the --decompress parameter accordingly: --decompress=lz4.

--decompress-threads=#
Force xbstream to use the specified number of threads for decompressing.
Decrypts all files with the .xbcrypt extension in a backup previously made with --encrypt option. The --parallel option will allow multiple files to be decrypted simultaneously. Percona XtraBackup doesn't automatically remove the encrypted files. In order to clean up the backup directory users should use --remove-original option.
Read this file after the global files are read. Must be given as the first option on the command-line.
Only read default options from the given file. Must be given as the first option on the command-line. Must be a real file; it cannot be a symbolic link.
This option is to set the group which should be read from the configuration file. This is used by xtrabackup if you use the --defaults-group option. It is needed for mysqld_multi deployments.
Also reads groups with concat(group, suffix).
This option controls whether or not a new dump of buffer pool content should be done.

With --dump-innodb-buffer-pool, xtrabackup makes a request to the server to start the buffer pool dump (it takes some time to complete and is done in background) at the beginning of a backup provided the status variable innodb_buffer_pool_dump_status reports that the dump has been completed.

$ xtrabackup --backup --dump-innodb-buffer-pool --target-dir=/home/user/backup

By default, this option is set to OFF.

If innodb_buffer_pool_dump_status reports that there is running dump of buffer pool, xtrabackup waits for the dump to complete using the value of --dump-innodb-buffer-pool-timeout

The file ib_buffer_pool stores tablespace ID and page ID data used to warm up the buffer pool sooner.

SEE ALSO:

This option contains the number of seconds that xtrabackup should monitor the value of innodb_buffer_pool_dump_status to determine if buffer pool dump has completed.

This option is used in combination with --dump-innodb-buffer-pool. By default, it is set to 10 seconds.

This option contains the percentage of the most recently used buffer pool pages to dump.

This option is effective if --dump-innodb-buffer-pool option is set to ON. If this option contains a value, xtrabackup sets the MySQL system variable innodb_buffer_pool_dump_pct. As soon as the buffer pool dump completes or it is stopped (see --dump-innodb-buffer-pool-timeout), the value of the MySQL system variable is restored.

SEE ALSO:

This option instructs xtrabackup to encrypt backup copies of InnoDB data files using the algorithm specified in the ENCRYPTION_ALGORITHM. Currently supported algorithms are: AES128, AES192 and AES256
A proper length encryption key to use. It is not recommended to use this option where there is uncontrolled access to the machine as the command line and thus the key can be viewed as part of the process info.
The name of a file where the raw key of the appropriate length can be read from. The file must be a simple binary (or text) file that contains exactly the key to be used.

It is passed directly to the xtrabackup child process. See the xtrabackup documentation for more details.

This option specifies the number of worker threads that will be used for parallel encryption/decryption. See the xtrabackup documentation for more details.
This option specifies the size of the internal working buffer for each encryption thread, measured in bytes. It is passed directly to the xtrabackup child process. See the xtrabackup documentation for more details.
Create files necessary for exporting tables. See Restoring Individual Tables.
(for --backup): save an extra copy of the xtrabackup_checkpoints and xtrabackup_info files in this directory.
When specified, it makes --copy-back and --move-back option transfer files to non-empty directories. No existing files will be overwritten. If files that need to be copied/moved from the backup directory already exist in the destination directory, it will still fail with an error.
This option specifies time in seconds that xtrabackup should wait for queries that would block FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK before running it. If there are still such queries when the timeout expires, xtrabackup terminates with an error. Default is 0, in which case it does not wait for queries to complete and starts FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK immediately. Where supported xtrabackup will automatically use Backup Locks as a lightweight alternative to FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK to copy non-InnoDB data to avoid blocking DML queries that modify InnoDB tables.
This option specifies the query run time threshold which is used by xtrabackup to detect long-running queries with a non-zero value of --ftwrl-wait-timeout. FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK is not started until such long-running queries exist. This option has no effect if --ftwrl-wait-timeout is 0. Default value is 60 seconds. Where supported xtrabackup will automatically use Backup Locks as a lightweight alternative to FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK to copy non-InnoDB data to avoid blocking DML queries that modify InnoDB tables.
This option specifies which types of queries are allowed to complete before xtrabackup will issue the global lock. Default is all.
This option creates the xtrabackup_galera_info file which contains the local node state at the time of the backup. Option should be used when performing the backup of Percona XtraDB Cluster. It has no effect when backup locks are used to create the backup.
Generate a new master key when doing a copy-back.
xtrabackup needs to access the same keyring file or vault server during prepare and copy-back but it should not depend on whether the server keys have been purged.

--generate-transition-key creates and adds to the keyring a transition key for xtrabackup to use if the master key used for encryption is not found because it has been rotated and purged.

Get the server public key

SEE ALSO:

When run with this option or without any options xtrabackup displays information about how to run the program on the command line along with all supported options and variables with default values where appropriate.
This option enables the tracking of backup history in the PERCONA_SCHEMA.xtrabackup_history table. An optional history series name may be specified that will be placed with the history record for the current backup being taken.
This option accepts a string argument that specifies the host to use when connecting to the database server with TCP/IP. It is passed to the mysql child process without alteration. See mysql --help for details.
This option tells xtrabackup to create an incremental backup. It is passed to the xtrabackup child process. When this option is specified, either --incremental-lsn or --incremental-basedir can also be given. If neither option is given, option --incremental-basedir is passed to xtrabackup by default, set to the first timestamped backup directory in the backup base directory.

SEE ALSO:

See section xb_incremental
--incremental-basedir=DIRECTORY
When creating an incremental backup, this is the directory containing the full backup that is the base dataset for the incremental backups.
--incremental-dir=DIRECTORY
When preparing an incremental backup, this is the directory where the incremental backup is combined with the full backup to make a new full backup.
--incremental-force-scan
When creating an incremental backup, force a full scan of the data pages in the instance being backuped even if the complete changed page bitmap data is available.
--incremental-history-name=name
This option specifies the name of the backup series stored in the PERCONA_SCHEMA.xtrabackup_history history record to base an incremental backup on. xtrabackup will search the history table looking for the most recent (highest innodb_to_lsn), successful backup in the series and take the to_lsn value to use as the starting lsn for the incremental backup. This will be mutually exclusive with --incremental-history-uuid, --incremental-basedir and --incremental-lsn. If no valid lsn can be found (no series by that name, no successful backups by that name) xtrabackup will return with an error. It is used with the --incremental option.
--incremental-history-uuid=name
This option specifies the UUID of the specific history record stored in the PERCONA_SCHEMA.xtrabackup_history to base an incremental backup on. --incremental-history-name, --incremental-basedir and --incremental-lsn. If no valid lsn can be found (no success record with that UUID) xtrabackup will return with an error. It is used with the --incremental option.
--incremental-lsn=LSN
When creating an incremental backup, you can specify the log sequence number (LSN) instead of specifying --incremental-basedir. For databases created in 5.1 and later, specify the LSN as a single 64-bit integer. ATTENTION: If a wrong LSN value is specified (a user error which Percona XtraBackup is unable to detect), the backup will be unusable. Be careful!
This option is ignored for MySQL option compatibility.
There is a large group of InnoDB options that are normally read from the my.cnf configuration file, so that xtrabackup boots up its embedded InnoDB in the same configuration as your current server. You normally do not need to specify these explicitly. These options have the same behavior in InnoDB and XtraDB:
  • --innodb-adaptive-hash-index
  • --innodb-additional-mem-pool-size
  • --innodb-autoextend-increment
  • --innodb-buffer-pool-size
  • --innodb-buffer-pool-filename
  • --innodb-checksum-algorithm
  • --innodb-checksums
  • --innodb-data-file-path
  • --innodb-data-home-dir
  • --innodb-directories
  • --innodb-doublewrite-file
  • --innodb-doublewrite
  • --innodb-extra-undoslots
  • --innodb-fast-checksum
  • --innodb-file-io-threads
  • --innodb-file-per-table
  • --innodb-flush-log-at-trx-commit
  • --innodb-flush-method
  • --innodb-io-capacity
  • --innodb-lock-wait-timeout
  • --innodb-log-block-size
  • --innodb-log-buffer-size
  • --innodb-log-checksums
  • --innodb-log-files-in-group
  • --innodb-log-file-size
  • --innodb-log-group-home-dir
  • --innodb-max-dirty-pages-pct
  • --innodb-open-files
  • --innodb-page-size
  • --innodb-read-io-threads
  • --innodb-redo-log-encrypt
  • --innodb-undo-directory
  • --innodb-undo-log-encrypt
  • --innodb-undo-tablespaces`
  • --innodb-use-native-aio
  • --innodb-write-io-threads
The path to the keyring file. Combine this option with --xtrabackup-plugin-dir.
This option specifies the number of seconds xtrabackup waits between starting FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK and killing those queries that block it. Default is 0 seconds, which means xtrabackup will not attempt to kill any queries. In order to use this option xtrabackup user should have the PROCESS and SUPER privileges. Where supported, xtrabackup automatically uses Backup Locks as a lightweight alternative to FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK to copy non-InnoDB data to avoid blocking DML queries that modify InnoDB tables.
This option specifies which types of queries should be killed to unblock the global lock. Default is "select".
Issue LOCK TABLES FOR BACKUP if it is supported by server (otherwise use LOCK INSTANCE FOR BACKUP) at the beginning of the backup to block all DDL operations.

NOTE:

Prior to Percona XtraBackup 8.0.22-15.0, using a safe-slave-backup stops the SQL replica thread after the InnoDB tables and before the non-InnoDB tables are backed up.

As of Percona XtraBackup 8.0.22-15.0, using a safe-slave-backup option stops the SQL replica thread before copying the InnoDB files.

Lock DDL for each table before xtrabackup starts to copy it and until the backup is completed.

NOTE:

As of Percona XtraBackup 8.0.15, the --lock-ddl-per-table option is deprecated. Use the --lock-ddl option instead.
If LOCK TABLES FOR BACKUP or LOCK INSTANCE FOR BACKUP does not return within given timeout, abort the backup.
This option is ignored for MySQL
--log-bin
The base name for the log sequence.
--log-bin-index=name
File that holds the names for binary log files.
--log-copy-interval=#
This option specifies the time interval between checks done by the log copying thread in milliseconds (default is 1 second).
Read the given path from the login file.
Move all the files in a previously made backup from the backup directory to their original locations. As this option removes backup files, it must be used with caution.
Explicity disables the --backup-locks option which is enabled by default.
The default options are only read from the login file.
Use this option to disable table lock with FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK. Use it only if ALL your tables are InnoDB and you DO NOT CARE about the binary log position of the backup. This option shouldn't be used if there are any DDL statements being executed or if any updates are happening on non-InnoDB tables (this includes the system MyISAM tables in the mysql database), otherwise it could lead to an inconsistent backup. Where supported xtrabackup will automatically use Backup Locks as a lightweight alternative to FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK to copy non-InnoDB data to avoid blocking DML queries that modify InnoDB tables. If you are considering to use this because your backups are failing to acquire the lock, this could be because of incoming replication events are preventing the lock from succeeding. Please try using --safe-slave-backup to momentarily stop the replication replica thread, this may help the backup to succeed and you do not need to use this option.
Implemented in Percona XtraBackup 8.0.21.

The --no-server-version-check option disables the server version check.

The default behavior runs a check that compares the source system version to the Percona XtraBackup version. If the source system version is higher than the XtraBackup version, the backup is aborted with a message.

Adding the option overrides this check, and the backup proceeds, but there may be issues with the backup.

See comparison for more information.

This option disables the version check. If you do not pass this option, the automatic version check is enabled implicitly when xtrabackup runs in the --backup mode. To disable the version check, you should pass explicitly the --no-version-check option when invoking xtrabackup.

When the automatic version check is enabled, xtrabackup performs a version check against the server on the backup stage after creating a server connection. xtrabackup sends the following information to the server:

  • MySQL flavour and version
  • Operating system name
  • Percona Toolkit version
  • Perl version

Each piece of information has a unique identifier. This is a MD5 hash value that Percona Toolkit uses to obtain statistics about how it is used. This is a random UUID; no client information is either collected or stored.

The maximum number of file descriptors to reserve with setrlimit().
This option specifies the number of threads to use to copy multiple data files concurrently when creating a backup. The default value is 1 (i.e., no concurrent transfer). In Percona XtraBackup 2.3.10 and newer, this option can be used with the --copy-back option to copy the user data files in parallel (redo logs and system tablespaces are copied in the main thread).
This option specifies the password to use when connecting to the database. It accepts a string argument. See mysql --help for details.
List of plugins to load.
This option accepts a string argument that specifies the port to use when connecting to the database server with TCP/IP. It is passed to the mysql child process without alteration. See mysql --help for details.
Makes xtrabackup perform a recovery on a backup created with --backup, so that it is ready to use. See preparing a backup.
Print the program argument list and exit. Must be given as the first option on the command-line.
Makes xtrabackup print out parameters that can be used for copying the data files back to their original locations to restore them.
Set the datafile read buffer size, given value is scaled up to page size. Default is 10Mb.
Rebuilds indexes in a compact backup. This option only has effect when the --prepare and --rebuild-threads options are provided.
Uses the given number of threads to rebuild indexes in a compact backup. This option only has effect with the --prepare and --rebuild-indexes options.
Implemented in Percona XtraBackup 2.4.6, this option when specified will remove .qp, .xbcrypt and .qp.xbcrypt files after decryption and decompression.
RocksDB data directory
RocksDB WAL directory.
The checkpoint cannot be older than this number of seconds when the backup completes.
Complete the backup even if the checkpoint age requirement has not been met after this number of checkpoints.
Force rollback prepared InnoDB transactions.
Uses the rsync utility to optimize local file transfers. When this option is specified, xtrabackup uses rsync to copy all non-InnoDB files instead of spawning a separate cp for each file, which can be much faster for servers with a large number of databases or tables. This option cannot be used together with --stream.
When specified, xtrabackup will stop the replica SQL thread just before running FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK and wait to start backup until Slave_open_temp_tables in SHOW STATUS is zero. If there are no open temporary tables, the backup will take place, otherwise the SQL thread will be started and stopped until there are no open temporary tables. The backup will fail if Slave_open_temp_tables does not become zero after --safe-slave-backup-timeout seconds. The replication SQL thread will be restarted when the backup finishes. This option is implemented in order to deal with replicating temporary tables and isn't neccessary with Row-Based-Replication.
How many seconds --safe-slave-backup should wait for Slave_open_temp_tables to become zero. Defaults to 300 seconds.
Refuse client connecting to server if it uses old (pre-4.1.1) protocol. (Enabled by default; use --skip-secure-auth to disable.)
The server instance being backed up.
See --tables-compatibility-check.
This option is useful when backing up a replication replica server. It prints the binary log position of the source server. It also writes the binary log coordinates to the xtrabackup_slave_info file as a CHANGE MASTER command. A new replica for this source can be set up by starting a replica server on this backup and issuing a CHANGE MASTER command with the binary log position saved in the xtrabackup_slave_info file.
This option accepts a string argument that specifies the socket to use when connecting to the local database server with a UNIX domain socket. It is passed to the mysql child process without alteration. See mysql --help for details.
Enable secure connection. More information can be found in --ssl MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-ca
Path of the file which contains list of trusted SSL CAs. More information can be found in --ssl-ca MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-capath
Directory path that contains trusted SSL CA certificates in PEM format. More information can be found in --ssl-capath MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-cert
Path of the file which contains X509 certificate in PEM format. More information can be found in --ssl-cert MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-cipher
List of permitted ciphers to use for connection encryption. More information can be found in --ssl-cipher MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-crl
Path of the file that contains certificate revocation lists. More information can be found in --ssl-crl MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-crlpath
Path of directory that contains certificate revocation list files. More information can be found in --ssl-crlpath MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-fips-mode
SSL FIPS mode (applies only for OpenSSL); permitted values are: OFF, ON, STRICT.
--ssl-key
Path of file that contains X509 key in PEM format. More information can be found in --ssl-key MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-mode
Security state of connection to server. More information can be found in --ssl-mode MySQL server documentation.
--ssl-verify-server-cert
Verify server certificate Common Name value against host name used when connecting to server. More information can be found in --ssl-verify-server-cert MySQL server documentation.
Causes xtrabackup to scan the specified data files and print out index statistics.
Stream all backup files to the standard output in the specified format. Currently, this option only supports the xbstream format.
If this option is specified, xtrabackup fails with an error when invalid parameters are passed.
A regular expression against which the full tablename, in databasename.tablename format, is matched. If the name matches, the table is backed up. See partial backups.
Enables the engine compatibility warning. The default value is ON. To disable the engine compatibility warning use --skip-tables-compatibility-check.
Filtering by regexp for table names. Operates the same way as --tables, but matched names are excluded from backup. Note that this option has a higher priority than --tables.
A file containing one table name per line, in databasename.tablename format. The backup will be limited to the specified tables.
This option specifies the destination directory for the backup. If the directory does not exist, xtrabackup creates it. If the directory does exist and is empty, xtrabackup will succeed. xtrabackup will not overwrite existing files, however; it will fail with operating system error 17, file exists.

If this option is a relative path, it is interpreted as being relative to the current working directory from which xtrabackup is executed.

In order to perform a backup, you need READ, WRITE, and EXECUTE permissions at a filesystem level for the directory that you supply as the value of --target-dir.

Directory where temp tablespace files live, this path can be absolute.
This option limits the number of chunks copied per second. The chunk size is 10 MB. To limit the bandwidth to 10 MB/s, set the option to 1: --throttle=1.

SEE ALSO:

TLS v1.3 cipher to use.
TLS version to use, permitted values are: TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3.
Specify the directory that will be used to store temporary files during the backup
This option is used to enable processing the backup without accessing the keyring vault server. In this case, xtrabackup derives the AES encryption key from the specified passphrase and uses it to encrypt tablespace keys of tablespaces being backed up.

If --transition-key does not have any value, xtrabackup will ask for it. The same passphrase should be specified for the --prepare command.

This option affects how much memory is allocated for preparing a backup with --prepare, or analyzing statistics with --stats. Its purpose is similar to innodb_buffer_pool_size. It does not do the same thing as the similarly named option in Oracle's InnoDB Hot Backup tool. The default value is 100MB, and if you have enough available memory, 1GB to 2GB is a good recommended value. Multiples are supported providing the unit (e.g. 1MB, 1M, 1GB, 1G).
This option specifies the MySQL username used when connecting to the server, if that's not the current user. The option accepts a string argument. See mysql --help for details.
See --version
This option prints xtrabackup version and exits.

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November 30, 2023 8.0