To select specific data to be backed up or restored, use the partial backup and restore options described in this section.
For an overview of partial backup and restore, as well as usage examples on the following options, see Section 4.3.5, “Making a Partial Backup” and Section 5.1.4, “Table-Level Recovery (TLR)”.
-
Command-Line Format --include-tables=REGEXP
Type String Include for backup or restoration only those tables (both Innodb and non-Innodb) whose fully qualified names (in the form of
) match the regular expressiondb_name
.table_name
REGEXP
. The regular expression syntax used is the extended form specified in the POSIX 1003.2 standard. For example,--include-tables=^mydb\.t[12]$
matches the tablest1
andt2
in the databasemydb
. On Unix-like systems, quote the regular expression appropriately to prevent interpretation of shell meta-characters. mysqlbackup throws an error when the option is used without a regular expression being supplied with it.While mysqlbackup understands the MySQL convention of quoting the database or the table name (or both) by backticks (see Schema Object Names), there is no need to include the backticks in the regular expression for
--include-tables
.The option can also be used with the
backup-dir-to-image
andimage-to-backup-dir
commands to select tables when creating or unpacking a backup image.mysqlbackup throws an error when no table matches the regular expression specified with
--include-tables
.When used together with the
--exclude-tables
option,--include-tables
is applied first, meaning mysqlbackup first selects all tables specified by--include-tables
and then excludes from the set those tables specified by--exclude-tables
.The option cannot be used together with the legacy
--include
option. -
Command-Line Format --exclude-tables=REGEXP
Type String Exclude for backup or restoration all tables (both Innodb and non-Innodb) whose fully qualified names (in the form of
) match the regular expressiondb_name
.table_name
REGEXP
. The regular expression syntax is the extended form specified in the POSIX 1003.2 standard. For example,--exclude-tables=^mydb\.t[12]$
matches the tablest1
andt2
in the databasemydb
. On Unix-like systems, quote the regular expression appropriately to prevent interpretation of shell meta-characters. mysqlbackup throws an error when the option is used without a regular expression being supplied with it.While mysqlbackup understands the MySQL convention of quoting the database or the table name (or both) by backticks (see Schema Object Names), there is no need to include the backticks in the regular expression for
--exclude-tables
.The option can also be used with the
backup-dir-to-image
andimage-to-backup-dir
commands to select tables when creating or unpacking a backup image.The option cannot be used together with the legacy
--include
option.When used together with the
--include-tables
option,--include-tables
is applied first, meaning mysqlbackup first select all tables specified by--include-tables
, and then exclude from the set those tables specified by--exclude-tables
. For back up only. By default, all files in the database subdirectories under the data directory of the server are included in the backup (see Table 1.1, “Types of Files in a Backup” for details). If the
--only-known-file-types
option is specified, mysqlbackup only backs up those types of files that are data files for MySQL or its built-in storage engines, which, besides theibdata*
files, have the following extensions:.ARM
: ARCHIVE table metadata.ARZ
: ARCHIVE table data.CSM
: CSV table metadata.CSV
: CSV table data.ibd
: InnoDB tablespace created using the file-per-table mode.MRG
: Merge storage engine references to other tables.MYD
: MyISAM data.MYI
: MyISAM indexes
For back up only. Back up only InnoDB data and log files. All files created by other storage engines are excluded. Typically used when there is no need to copy MyISAM files.
The option is not compatible with the
--replica-info
option.Default: backups include files from all storage engines.
--use-tts
[={with-minimum-locking|with-full-locking
}]Command-Line Format --use-tts[={with-minimum-locking|with-full-locking}]
Type Enumeration Default Value with-minimum-locking
Valid Values with-minimum-locking
with-full-locking
Enable selective backup of InnoDB tables using transportable tablespaces (TTS). This is to be used in conjunction with the
--include-tables
and--exclude-tables
options for selecting the InnoDB tables to be backed up by regular expressions. Using TTS for backups offers the following advantages:Backups can be restored to a different server
The system tablespace is not backed up, saving disk space and I/O resources
Data consistency of the tables is managed by MySQL Enterprise Backup
However, the option has the following limitations:
Individual partitions cannot be selectively backed up or restored. Tables selected by the
--include-tables
and--exclude-tables
options are always backed up or restored in full.Can only backup tables that are stored in their own individual tablespaces (i.e., tables created with the innodb_file_per_table option enabled)
Non-InnoDB tables are not backed up
Cannot be used for incremental backups
Does not include the binary log or the relay log in the backup
See also Appendix B, Limitations of MySQL Enterprise Backup for some more minor limitations.
There are two possible values for the option:
with-minimum-locking
: Hot copies of the selected tables are backed up, and the tables are then locked in read-only mode while the redo log (with only the portion containing the relevant changes made after the hot backup) is being included in the backup. Any tables created during the locking phase are ignored.with-full-locking
: The selected tables are locked in read-only mode while they are being backed up. The redo log is not included in the backup. Any tables created during the locking phase are ignored.NoteDue to a known issue, when creating a backup using TTS for a server containing tables with a mix of the Antelope and Barracuda file formats, do NOT apply full locking on the tables.
Default:
with-minimum-locking
To use the
--use-tts
option, extra privileges are required of the user through which mysqlbackup connects to the server; see Section 4.1.2, “Grant MySQL Privileges to Backup Administrator” for details.There are some special requirements for restoring backups created with the
--use-tts
option; see Section 5.1.5, “Restoring Backups Created with the--use-tts
Option” for details.--rename
=“old_table_name
tonew_table_name
”Rename a single table when it is selected by the
--include-tables
or--exclude-tables
option (or both together) to be restored to a database server from a backup created using the--use-tts
option. The table namedold_table_name
is renamed tonew_table_name
. Note that when using the option:The
--include-tables
or--exclude-tables
option (or both together) must be used in the restore command for the--rename
option to work, unless there is only one table in the backup. Also, the--include-tables
or--exclude-tables
option (or both together) should specify one and only one table for restore when--rename
is used, or the restore will fail.old_table_name
andnew_table_name
can be fully qualified (containing the database names, in the form ofold_db_name
.old_tb_name
andnew_db_name
.new_tb_name
) or not. By using fully-qualified table names, a table can be restored into a database different from its original one. If the database specified withnew_db_name
does not exist on the target server, it will be created during the restore process. Regular expressions are not accepted in the argument of the option.The restore fails if
old_table_name
does not match with the table specified using the--include-tables
or--exclude-tables
option (or both together), or ifnew_table_name
already exists in the target database.The requirements listed in Section 5.1.5, “Restoring Backups Created with the
--use-tts
Option” apply.
See Section 5.1.5, “Restoring Backups Created with the
--use-tts
Option”, for more information on selective restores, and for an example of table renaming.
Legacy Partial Backup Options
Information in this subsection is only for using the legacy
option of --include
, which has
been deprecated.
For creating partial backups, use the
--include-tables
and
--exclude-tables
options instead.
Besides --include
, some other
options are also discussed below, but the information is only
for using the options together with
--include
.
For an overview of partial backups and usage examples for these legacy options, see Making a Partial Backup with the Legacy Options (Deprecated).
This option is for filtering InnoDB tables for backup. The InnoDB tables' fully qualified names are checked against the regular expression specified by the option. If the REGEXP matches
, the table is included. The regular expression syntax used is the extended form specified in the POSIX 1003.2 standard. For example,db_name
.table_name
--include=mydb\.t[12]
matches the tablest1
andt2
in the databasemydb
. mysqlbackup throws an error when the option is used without a regular expression being supplied with it.This option only applies to InnoDB tables created with the MySQL option
innodb_file_per_table
enabled (which is the default setting for MySQL 5.6 and after), in which case the tables are in separate files that can be included or excluded from the backup. All tables in the InnoDB system tablespace are always backed up.When no InnoDB table names match the specified regular expression, an error is thrown with a message indicating there are no matches.
Default: Backs up all InnoDB tables.
NoteThis option does not filter non-InnoDB tables.
--use-tts
[={with-minimum-locking|with-full-locking
}]Enable selective backup of InnoDB tables using transportable tablespaces (TTS). This is to be used in conjunction with the
--include
option, which selects the InnoDB tables to be backed up by a regular expression. Using TTS for backups offers the following advantages:Backups can be restored to a different server
The system tablespace is not backed up, saving disk space and I/O resources
Data consistency of the tables is managed by MySQL Enterprise Backup
See important discussions here on the limitations with using the
--use-tts
option.There are two possible values for the option:
with-minimum-locking
: Hot copies of the selected tables are backed up, and the tables are then locked in read-only mode while the redo log (with only the portion containing the relevant changes made after the hot backup) is being included in the backup. Any tables created during the locking phase are ignored.with-full-locking
: The selected tables are locked in read-only mode while they are being backed up. The redo log is not included in the backup. Any tables created during the locking phase are ignored.
Default: back up with minimum locking
There are some special requirements for restoring backups created with the
--use-tts
option; see the explanations in Section 5.1, “Performing a Restore Operation” for details.