This table provides a way to find the ID of the backup started most recently for this cluster.
The backup_id
table contains a single column
id
, which corresponds to a backup ID taken
using the ndb_mgm client
START BACKUP
command. This
table contains a single row.
Example: Assume the following sequence of
START BACKUP
commands issued in the NDB
management client, with no other backups taken since the cluster
was first started:
ndb_mgm> START BACKUP
Waiting for completed, this may take several minutes
Node 5: Backup 1 started from node 50
Node 5: Backup 1 started from node 50 completed
StartGCP: 27894 StopGCP: 27897
#Records: 2057 #LogRecords: 0
Data: 51580 bytes Log: 0 bytes
ndb_mgm> START BACKUP 5
Waiting for completed, this may take several minutes
Node 5: Backup 5 started from node 50
Node 5: Backup 5 started from node 50 completed
StartGCP: 27905 StopGCP: 27908
#Records: 2057 #LogRecords: 0
Data: 51580 bytes Log: 0 bytes
ndb_mgm> START BACKUP
Waiting for completed, this may take several minutes
Node 5: Backup 6 started from node 50
Node 5: Backup 6 started from node 50 completed
StartGCP: 27912 StopGCP: 27915
#Records: 2057 #LogRecords: 0
Data: 51580 bytes Log: 0 bytes
ndb_mgm> START BACKUP 3
Connected to Management Server at: localhost:1186 (using cleartext)
Waiting for completed, this may take several minutes
Node 5: Backup 3 started from node 50
Node 5: Backup 3 started from node 50 completed
StartGCP: 28149 StopGCP: 28152
#Records: 2057 #LogRecords: 0
Data: 51580 bytes Log: 0 bytes
ndb_mgm>
After this, the backup_id
table contains the
single row shown here, using the mysql
client:
mysql> USE ndbinfo;
Database changed
mysql> SELECT * FROM backup_id;
+------+
| id |
+------+
| 3 |
+------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)
If no backups can be found, the table contains a single row with
0
as the id
value.