To ensure the integrity of the backup data, MySQL Enterprise Backup provides a
validate
command for validating a
backup by the checksum values of its data pages after the backup
is created or transferred to another system.
mysqlbackup [STD-OPTIONS]
[--backup-dir=PATH][--backup-image=IMAGE]
[MESSAGE-LOGGING-OPTIONS]
[PROGRESS-REPORT-OPTIONS]
[CLOUD-STORAGE-OPTIONS]
validate
Verifies that a backup is not corrupted, truncated, or damaged. This operation validates the checksum value for each data page in a backup.
To avoid spending excessive time and resources on files that are too heavily corrupted, mysqlbackup stops validating a .ibd file after more than twenty corrupted pages are found in it, and proceeds to the next file instead. In that case, the operation's summary will not give a full count of corrupted pages, but only says “at least 20 pages are corrupted.”
The operation also has the following limitations:
If any
.ibd
files or.sdi
files are missing from the data directory during a backup or have been deleted from a backup after the backup was made, thevalidate
operation will not be able to detect the problem.If a backup has been corrupted by removing or truncating pages from any of the .ibd files inside , the
validate
operation will not be able to detect the problem.For any backup directory, the operation can only validate the InnoDB data files (
ibdata*
and*.ibd
files) in it. Problems with other file types within a backup directory (for example,.sdi
file corruptions) are not detected.
Here is a sample command for validating a backup image:
mysqlbackup -uroot --backup-image=/logs/fullimage.mi validate
Advanced: Here is a sample command for validating a backup directory:
mysqlbackup -uroot --backup-dir=/logs/backupext validate
For more usage examples for the
validate
command, see
Section 4.2.3, “Verifying a Backup”