If the sources in the multi-source replication topology have existing data, it can save time to provision the replica with the relevant data before starting replication. In a multi-source replication topology, cloning or copying of the data directory cannot be used to provision the replica with data from all of the sources, and you might also want to replicate only specific databases from each source. The best strategy for provisioning such a replica is therefore to use mysqldump to create an appropriate dump file on each source, then use the mysql client to import the dump file on the replica.
      If you are using GTID-based replication, you need to pay attention
      to the SET @@GLOBAL.gtid_purged statement that
      mysqldump places in the dump output. This
      statement transfers the GTIDs for the transactions executed on the
      source to the replica, and the replica requires this information.
      However, for any case more complex than provisioning one new,
      empty replica from one source, you need to check what effect the
      statement has in the version of MySQL used by the replica, and
      handle the statement accordingly. The following guidance
      summarizes suitable actions, but for more details, see the
      mysqldump documentation.
    
      SET @@GLOBAL.gtid_purged adds the GTID set from
      the dump file to the existing
      gtid_purged set on the replica.
      The statement can therefore potentially be left in the dump output
      when you replay the dump files on the replica, and the dump files
      can be replayed at different times. However, it is important to
      note that the value that is included by
      mysqldump for the SET
      @@GLOBAL.gtid_purged statement includes the GTIDs of all
      transactions in the gtid_executed
      set on the source, even those that changed suppressed parts of the
      database, or other databases on the server that were not included
      in a partial dump. If you replay a second or subsequent dump file
      on the replica that contains any of the same GTIDs (for example,
      another partial dump from the same source, or a dump from another
      source that has overlapping transactions), any SET
      @@GLOBAL.gtid_purged statement in the second dump file
      fails, and must therefore be removed from the dump output.
    
      As an alternative to removing the SET
      @@GLOBAL.gtid_purged statement, you caninoke
      mysqldump with
      --set-gtid-purged=COMMENTED to
      include the statement encased in SQL comments, so that it is not
      performed when you load the dump file. If you are provisioning the
      replica with two partial dumps from the same source, and the GTID
      set in the second dump is the same as the first (so no new
      transactions have been executed on the source in between the
      dumps), you can set --set-gtid-purged=OFF instead
      when you export the second dump file, to omit the statement.
    
      In the following provisioning example, we assume that the
      SET @@GLOBAL.gtid_purged statement cannot be
      left in the dump output, and must be removed from the files and
      handled manually. We also assume that there are no wanted
      transactions with GTIDs on the replica before provisioning starts.
- To create dump files for a database named - db1on- source1and a database named- db2on- source2, run mysqldump for- source1as follows:- mysqldump -u<user> -p<password> --single-transaction --triggers --routines --set-gtid-purged=ON --databases db1 > dumpM1.sql- Then run mysqldump for - source2as follows:- mysqldump -u<user> -p<password> --single-transaction --triggers --routines --set-gtid-purged=ON --databases db2 > dumpM2.sql
- Record the - gtid_purgedvalue that mysqldump added to each of the dump files. You can extract the value like this:- cat dumpM1.sql | grep GTID_PURGED | perl -p0 -e 's#/\*.*?\*/##sg' | cut -f2 -d'=' | cut -f2 -d$'\'' cat dumpM2.sql | grep GTID_PURGED | perl -p0 -e 's#/\*.*?\*/##sg' | cut -f2 -d'=' | cut -f2 -d$'\''- The result in each case should be a GTID set, for example: - source1: 2174B383-5441-11E8-B90A-C80AA9429562:1-1029 source2: 224DA167-0C0C-11E8-8442-00059A3C7B00:1-2695
- Remove the line from each dump file that contains the - SET @@GLOBAL.gtid_purgedstatement. For example:- sed '/GTID_PURGED/d' dumpM1.sql > dumpM1_nopurge.sql sed '/GTID_PURGED/d' dumpM2.sql > dumpM2_nopurge.sql
- Use the mysql client to import each edited dump file into the replica. For example: - mysql -u<user> -p<password> < dumpM1_nopurge.sql mysql -u<user> -p<password> < dumpM2_nopurge.sql
- On the replica, issue - RESET BINARY LOGS AND GTIDSto clear the GTID execution history (assuming, as explained above, that all the dump files have been imported and that there are no wanted transactions with GTIDs on the replica). Then issue a- SET @@GLOBAL.gtid_purgedstatement to set the- gtid_purgedvalue to the union of all the GTID sets from all the dump files, as you recorded in Step 2. For example:- mysql> RESET BINARY LOGS AND GTIDS; mysql> SET @@GLOBAL.gtid_purged = "2174B383-5441-11E8-B90A-C80AA9429562:1-1029, 224DA167-0C0C-11E8-8442-00059A3C7B00:1-2695";- If there are, or might be, overlapping transactions between the GTID sets in the dump files, you can use the stored functions described in Section 19.1.3.8, “Stored Function Examples to Manipulate GTIDs” to check this beforehand and to calculate the union of all the GTID sets.