You can specify mysqlbackup options either on the command line or as configuration parameters inside a configuration file.
      mysqlbackup looks for and reads MySQL
      configuration files as mysqld does (see
      explanations in Using Option Files). You can also
      supply a configuration file to mysqlbackup
      using the --defaults-file option.
      In general, mysqlbackup follows the
      mysql style of processing configuration
      options: [mysqlbackup] and
      [client] group options listed in a
      configuration file are passed as command-line options. Any
      command-line options that you specify when you run
      mysqlbackup override the values from the
      configuration file. In the case of duplicate options, the last
      instance takes precedence.
    
      mysqlbackup also reads the following options in
      the [mysqld] group in the configuration file to
      detect parameters related to the server when it is not connected
      to it (for example, when restoring a
      non-TTS backup):
      If any of these options is also specified in the
      [mysqlbackup] section, the value there takes
      precedence over the value in the [mysqld]
      section. Options other than the ones listed above should be
      specified under the [mysqlbackup] or
      [client] section.
    
      Within a mysqlbackup option name, dashes
      (-) and underscores (_) may usually be
      used interchangeably, similar to mysqld
      parameters that use this same convention (notice that
      log-bin is one exception; see
      Using Options on the Command Line in the MySQL Reference
      Manual for details ). The MySQL server's reference manual
      typically lists the parameter names with underscores, to match the
      output of the SHOW VARIABLES statement.
Server Data Locations and Options Files
mysqlbackup reads the locations of the MySQL data (data files, logs, etc.) to be backed up or restored from the following sources:
- For backup operations and partial restore operations, the information is retrieved from mysqld. 
- For non-partial restore operations, the information is supplied to mysqlbackup as parameters through: - The mysqlbackup command line, as command-line options. 
- A configuration file (see explanation above at the beginning of the chapter). The parameters are read first under the - [mysqlbackup]group, then under the- [client]group, and finally under the- [mysqld]group. You can put common connection parameters used for restore operations (for example, user login, host name, etc.) into the configuration file.
 
Configuration Files Stored Inside the Backups
      Each set of backup data includes a configuration file,
      backup-my.cnf, containing a set of
      configuration parameters. The mysqlbackup
      command generates this file to record the settings that apply to
      the backup data. Here is a sample
      backup-my.cnf file generated by
      mysqlbackup:
Example 21.1 Sample backup-my.cnf file
#
# Generated backup-my.cnf file.
# Auto generated by mysqlbackup program.
#
[mysqld]
innodb_data_file_path=ibdata1:12M:autoextend
innodb_page_size=16384
innodb_checksum_algorithm=crc32
innodb_buffer_pool_filename=ib_buffer_pool
innodb_undo_tablespaces=2
      All file paths contained in the generated
      backup-my.cnf are relative to the data
      directory under the backup
      directory.
      
    
      These configuration parameters are read by
      mysqlbackup during operations like
      apply-log, in which the parameters are read from
      this file to determine how the backup data is structured. These
      parameters can also be used in a restore to compare the InnoDB
      settings of the target server with those of the backed-up server,
      so that any necessary adjustments can be made; see
      Starting the Restored Server for details. Only the
      minimally-required parameters are stored in
      backup-my.cnf: for example, the
      innodb_data_home_dir and
      innodb_log_group_home_dir options are omitted
      from the backup-my.cnf file when they just
      point to the data directory under the
      backup directory
      (backup-dir/datadir usually).