The --incremental option is not
          needed when restoring an incremental backup.
        There are different ways to use incremental backups to restore a
        database server under different scenarios. The preferred method
        is to first restore the full backup and make it up-to-date to
        the time at which the full backup was performed using the
        copy-back-and-apply-log
        command (see
        Example 5.1, “Restoring a Database Server”
        on how to do it), then use
        copy-back-and-apply-log
        again to restore the incremental backup image on top of the full
        backup that was just restored:
Example 5.6 Restoring an Incremental Backup Image
mysqlbackup --defaults-file=<my.cnf> -uroot --backup-image=<inc_image_name> \
  --backup-dir=<incBackupTmpDir> --datadir=<restoreDir> --incremental \
  copy-back-and-apply-log
        In this example, the incremental backup image named
        <inc_image_name> is restored to
        <restoreDir> on the server (where
        the full backup that the incremental backup image was based on
        has already been restored). The
        --backup-dir option is
        used to specify the temporary directory into which temporary
        output, status files, and backup metadata are saved. Repeat the
        step with other incremental backup images that you have, until
        the data has been restored to a desired point in time.
Advanced: Restoring an Incremental Backup Directory
        Incremental directory backups can be restored in a series of
        copy-back-and-apply-log command, as
        illustrated above for single-file backups. Alternatively, at
        anytime after an incremental backup is taken and before the data
        is restored, you can bring your full backup up-to-date with your
        incremental backup. First, apply to the full backup any changes
        that occurred while the backup was running:
      
$ mysqlbackup --backup-dir=/full-backup/2010-12-08_17-14-11 apply-log
..many lines of output...
101208 17:15:10  mysqlbackup: Full backup prepared for recovery successfully!
101208 17:15:10 mysqlbackup: mysqlbackup completed OK!
        Then, we apply the changes from the incremental backup using the
        apply-incremental-backup command:
      
$ mysqlbackup --incremental-backup-dir=/incr-backup/2010-12-08_17-14-48 \
  --backup-dir=/full-backup/2010-12-08_17-14-11 apply-incremental-backup
...many lines of output...
101208 17:15:12 mysqlbackup: mysqlbackup completed OK!Now, the data files in the full backup directory are fully up-to-date, as of the time of the last incremental backup. You can keep updating it with more incremental backups, so it is ready to be restored anytime.
Binary Log and Relay Log Restore
        When an incremental backup is being restored using either the
        copy-back-and-apply-log
        or apply-incremental-backup command,
        the binary log (and also the relay log, in the case of a replica
        server), if included in the incremental backup, is also restored
        to the target server by default. This default behavior is
        overridden when either (1) the
        --skip-binlog option (or the
        --skip-relaylog option for the relay
        log) is used with the restore command, or (2) if the full backup
        the incremental backup was based on or any prior incremental
        backup that came in between the full backup and this incremental
        backup has the binary log (or relay log) missing (in both case,
        mysqlbackup renamed any binary log (but not
        relay log) files and their index files that have already been
        restored onto the server by adding the .old
        extension to their file names).
      
        Location of the binary log (or relay log) after an incremental
        backup is restored is, by default, the same as the log's
        location on the backed-up server when the incremental backup was
        taken, or as specified by the
        --log-bin (or
        --relay-log) option during the
        restore of the incremental backup.
        
      
See Section 4.3.3, “Making a Differential or Incremental Backup”, and Section 20.7, “Incremental Backup Options”, for more details on incremental backups.