Back up mysql databases to... anywhere!
mysql-backup is a simple way to do MySQL database backups and restores, as well as manage your backups.
It has the following features:
- dump and restore
- dump to local filesystem or to SMB server
- select database user and password
- connect to any container running on the same system
- select how often to run a dump
- select when to start the first dump, whether time of day or relative to container start time
- prune backups older than a specific time period or quantity
Please see CONTRIBUTORS.md for a list of contributors.
This is the latest version, based on the complete rebuild of the codebase for 1.0.0 release based on golang, completed in late 2023.
Support is available at the databack Slack channel; register here. We accept issues here and general support questions on Slack.
If you are interested in commercial support, please contact us via Slack above.
mysql-backup
is available both as a single standalone binary, and as a container image.
To run a backup, launch mysql-backup
- as a container or as a binary - with the correct parameters.
For example:
docker run -d --restart=always -e DB_DUMP_FREQUENCY=60 -e DB_DUMP_BEGIN=2330 -e DB_DUMP_TARGET=/local/file/path -e DB_SERVER=my-db-address -v /local/file/path:/db databack/mysql-backup dump
# or
mysql-backup dump --frequency=60 --begin=2330 --target=/local/file/path --server=my-db-address
# or to connect to a local mysqld via the unix domain socket as the current user
mysql-backup dump --frequency=60 --begin=2330 --target=/local/file/path --server=/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock
Or mysql-backup --config-file=/path/to/config/file.yaml
where /path/to/config/file.yaml
is a file
with the following contents:
server: my-db-address
dump:
frequency: 60
begin: 2330
target: /local/file/path
The above will run a dump every 60 minutes, beginning at the next 2330 local time, from the database accessible in the container my-db-address
.
docker run -d --restart=always -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_DUMP_FREQUENCY=60 -e DB_DUMP_BEGIN=2330 -e DB_DUMP_TARGET=/db -e DB_SERVER=my-db-address -v /local/file/path:/db databack/mysql-backup dump
# or
mysql-backup dump --user=user123 --pass=pass123 --frequency=60 --begin=2330 --target=/local/file/path --server=my-db-address --port=3306
See backup for a more detailed description of performing backups.
See configuration for a detailed list of all configuration options.
To perform a restore, you simply run the process in reverse. You still connect to a database, but instead of the dump command, you pass it the restore command. Instead of a dump target, you pass it a restore target.
If you wish to run a restore to an existing database, you can use mysql-backup to do a restore.
You need only the following environment variables:
You should consider the use of --env-file=
to keep your secrets out of your shell history
DB_SERVER
: hostname or unix domain socket path (starting with a slash) to connect to database. Required.DB_PORT
: port to use to connect to database. Optional, defaults to3306
DB_USER
: username for the databaseDB_PASS
: password for the databaseDB_NAMES
: names of databases to restore separated by spaces. Required ifSINGLE_DATABASE=true
.SINGLE_DATABASE
: If is set totrue
,DB_NAMES
is required and must contain exactly one database name. Mysql command will then run with--database=$DB_NAMES
flag. This avoids the need ofUSE <database>;
statement, which is useful when restoring from a file saved withSINGLE_DATABASE
set totrue
.DB_RESTORE_TARGET
: path to the actual restore file, which should be a compressed dump file. The target can be an absolute path, which should be volume mounted, an smb or S3 URL, similar to the target.DB_DUMP_DEBUG
: iftrue
, dump copious outputs to the container logs while restoring.- To use the S3 driver
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
,AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
andAWS_DEFAULT_REGION
will need to be defined.
Examples:
- Restore from a local file:
docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=/backup/db_backup_201509271627.gz -v /local/path:/backup databack/mysql-backup restore
- Restore from a local file using ssl:
docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=/backup/db_backup_201509271627.gz -e RESTORE_OPTS="--ssl-cert /certs/client-cert.pem --ssl-key /certs/client-key.pem" -v /local/path:/backup -v /local/certs:/certs databack/mysql-backup restore
- Restore from an SMB file:
docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=smb://smbserver/share1/backup/db_backup_201509271627.gz databack/mysql-backup restore
- Restore from an S3 file:
docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=awskeyid -e AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=secret -e AWS_REGION=eu-central-1 -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=s3://bucket/path/db_backup_201509271627.gz databack/mysql-backup restore
If you have multiple schemas in your database, you can choose to restore only some of them.
To do this, you must restore using DB_NAMES
to specify the schemas you want restored.
When doing this, schemas will be restored with their original name. To restore under other names, you must use SINGLE_DATABASE=true
on both dump and restore, and you can only do it one schema at a time.
- Dump a multi-schemas database and restore only some of them:
docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -v /local/path:/backup databack/mysql-backup dump
docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=/backup/db_backup_201509271627.gz -e DB_NAMES="database1 database3" -v /local/path:/backup databack/mysql-backup restore
- Dump and restore a schema under a different name:
docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e SINGLE_DATABASE=true -e DB_NAMES=database1 -v /local/path:/backup databack/mysql-backup dump
docker run -e DB_SERVER=gotodb.example.com -e DB_USER=user123 -e DB_PASS=pass123 -e DB_RESTORE_TARGET=/backup/db_backup_201509271627.gz -e SINGLE_DATABASE=true DB_NAMES=newdatabase1 -v /local/path:/backup databack/mysql-backup restore
See restore for a more detailed description of performing restores.
See configuration for a detailed list of all configuration options.
Released under the MIT License. Copyright Avi Deitcher https://github.com/deitch