There are two types of operations to bring your backup data up-to-date:
          After a backup job was first completed, the backup data might
          not be in a consistent state, because data could have been
          inserted, updated, or deleted while the backup was running.
          This initial backup file is known as the
          raw backup. During a
          backup, mysqlbackup also copies the
          accumulated InnoDB log to a file called
          ibbackup_logfile. In an apply-log
          operation, the ibbackup_logfile file is
          used to “roll forward” the raw data files, so
          that every page in the data files corresponds to the same log
          sequence number of the InnoDB log. This is similar to the
          operation that takes place during a
          crash recovery.
        
          For single-file backups, the apply-log operation is usually
          performed as part of the
          copy-back-and-apply-log command.
          For directory backups, the
          copy-back-and-apply-log command
          can also be used, but you also have the two alternatives of
- Performing the apply-log operation together with the back up using the - backup-and-apply-logcommand (not applicable for incremental or compressed directory backups)
- Performing the apply-log operation separately with the - apply-logcommand on the raw backup, before running the- copy-backcommand.
mysqlbackup [STD-OPTIONS]
            [--limit-memory=MB] [--uncompress] [--backup-dir=PATH]
            [MESSAGE-LOGGING-OPTIONS]
            [PROGRESS-REPORT-OPTIONS]
            [ENCRYPTED-INNODB-OPTIONS]
            apply-logAdvanced: Brings the InnoDB tables in the directory backup up-to-date, including any changes made to the data while the backup was running.
Example 19.1 Apply Log to Full Backup
mysqlbackup --backup-dir=/path/to/backup apply-log
            It reads the backup-my.cnf file inside
            backup-dir to understand the
            backup. The my.cnf defaults files have
            no effect other than supplying the
            limit-memory=
            value, which limits usage of memory while doing the
            MBapply-log operation.
          Advanced: Use the
          apply-incremental-backup to update
          a backup directory with data in an incremental backup
          directory:
mysqlbackup [STD-OPTIONS]
            [--incremental-backup-dir=PATH] [--backup-dir=PATH]
            [--limit-memory=MB] [--uncompress]
            [MESSAGE-LOGGING-OPTIONS]
            [PROGRESS-REPORT-OPTIONS]
            [ENCRYPTED-INNODB-OPTIONS]
            apply-incremental-backup
          
          Advanced: Brings up-to-date a directory
          backup specified with the
          --backup-dir option, using the
          data from an incremental backup directory specified with the
          --incremental-backup-dir option.
          See Section 5.1.3, “Restoring an Incremental Backup” for instructions on
          restoring incremental backups.
        
          For a single-file incremental backup, you typically use the
          copy-back-and-apply-log
          command
          to apply the data in the incremental image backup to the full
          backup that has already been restored to the data directory of
          the target server.