You can restore to a cluster having fewer data nodes than the original provided that the larger number of nodes is an even multiple of the smaller number. In the following example, we use a backup taken on a cluster having four data nodes to a cluster having two data nodes.
The management server for the original cluster is on host
host10. The original cluster has four data nodes, with the node IDs and host names shown in the following extract from the management server'sconfig.inifile:[ndbd] NodeId=2 HostName=host2 [ndbd] NodeId=4 HostName=host4 [ndbd] NodeId=6 HostName=host6 [ndbd] NodeId=8 HostName=host8We assume that each data node was originally started with ndbmtd
--ndb-connectstring=host10or the equivalent.Perform a backup in the normal manner. See Section 6.8.2, “Using The NDB Cluster Management Client to Create a Backup”, for information about how to do this.
The files created by the backup on each data node are listed here, where
Nis the node ID andBis the backup ID.BACKUP-B-0.N.DataBACKUP-B.N.ctlBACKUP-B.N.log
These files are found under
BackupDataDir/BACKUP/BACKUP-, on each data node. For the rest of this example, we assume that the backup ID is 1.BHave all of these files available for later copying to the new data nodes (where they can be accessed on the data node's local file system by ndb_restore). It is simplest to copy them all to a single location; we assume that this is what you have done.
The management server for the target cluster is on host
host20, and the target has two data nodes, with the node IDs and host names shown, from the management serverconfig.inifile onhost20:[ndbd] NodeId=3 hostname=host3 [ndbd] NodeId=5 hostname=host5Each of the data node processes on
host3andhost5should be started with ndbmtd-c host20--initialor the equivalent, so that the new (target) cluster starts with clean data node file systems.Copy two different sets of two backup files to each of the target data nodes. For this example, copy the backup files from nodes 2 and 4 from the original cluster to node 3 in the target cluster. These files are listed here:
BACKUP-1-0.2.DataBACKUP-1.2.ctlBACKUP-1.2.logBACKUP-1-0.4.DataBACKUP-1.4.ctlBACKUP-1.4.log
Then copy the backup files from nodes 6 and 8 to node 5; these files are shown in the following list:
BACKUP-1-0.6.DataBACKUP-1.6.ctlBACKUP-1.6.logBACKUP-1-0.8.DataBACKUP-1.8.ctlBACKUP-1.8.log
For the remainder of this example, we assume that the respective backup files have been saved to the directory
/BACKUP-1on each of nodes 3 and 5.On each of the two target data nodes, you must restore from both sets of backups. First, restore the backups from nodes 2 and 4 to node 3 by invoking ndb_restore on
host3as shown here:$> ndb_restore -c host20 --nodeid=2 --backupid=1 --restore-data --backup-path=/BACKUP-1 $> ndb_restore -c host20 --nodeid=4 --backupid=1 --restore-data --backup-path=/BACKUP-1Then restore the backups from nodes 6 and 8 to node 5 by invoking ndb_restore on
host5, like this:$> ndb_restore -c host20 --nodeid=6 --backupid=1 --restore-data --backup-path=/BACKUP-1 $> ndb_restore -c host20 --nodeid=8 --backupid=1 --restore-data --backup-path=/BACKUP-1