The key to safe database management is making regular backups. Depending on your data volume, number of MySQL servers, and database workload, you can use these backup techniques, alone or in combination: hot backup with MySQL Enterprise Backup; cold backup by copying files while the MySQL server is shut down; logical backup with mysqldump for smaller data volumes or to record the structure of schema objects. Hot and cold backups are physical backups that copy actual data files, which can be used directly by the mysqld server for faster restore.
      Using MySQL Enterprise Backup is the recommended method for
      backing up InnoDB data.
        InnoDB does not support databases that are
        restored using third-party backup tools.
Hot Backups
      The mysqlbackup command, part of the MySQL Enterprise Backup
      component, lets you back up a running MySQL instance, including
      InnoDB tables, with minimal disruption to
      operations while producing a consistent snapshot of the database.
      When mysqlbackup is copying
      InnoDB tables, reads and writes to
      InnoDB tables can continue. MySQL Enterprise Backup can also
      create compressed backup files, and back up subsets of tables and
      databases. In conjunction with the MySQL binary log, users can
      perform point-in-time recovery. MySQL Enterprise Backup is part of the MySQL
      Enterprise subscription. For more details, see
      Section 32.1, “MySQL Enterprise Backup Overview”.
Cold Backups
      If you can shut down the MySQL server, you can make a physical
      backup that consists of all files used by
      InnoDB to manage its tables. Use the following
      procedure:
- Perform a slow shutdown of the MySQL server and make sure that it stops without errors. 
- Copy all - InnoDBdata files (- ibdatafiles and- .ibdfiles) into a safe place.
- Copy all - InnoDBredo log files (- #ib_redofiles) to a safe place.- N
- Copy your - my.cnfconfiguration file or files to a safe place.
Logical Backups Using mysqldump
      In addition to physical backups, it is recommended that you
      regularly create logical backups by dumping your tables using
      mysqldump. A binary file might be corrupted
      without you noticing it. Dumped tables are stored into text files
      that are human-readable, so spotting table corruption becomes
      easier. Also, because the format is simpler, the chance for
      serious data corruption is smaller. mysqldump
      also has a --single-transaction
      option for making a consistent snapshot without locking out other
      clients. See Section 9.3.1, “Establishing a Backup Policy”.
    
      Replication works with InnoDB tables,
      so you can use MySQL replication capabilities to keep a copy of
      your database at database sites requiring high availability. See
      Section 17.19, “InnoDB and MySQL Replication”.