The cluster restoration program is implemented as a separate
command-line utility ndb_restore, which
can normally be found in the MySQL bin
directory. This program reads the files created as a result
of the backup and inserts the stored information into the
database.
ndb_restore must be executed once for
each of the backup files that were created by the
START BACKUP command used to create the
backup (see
Section 15.8.2, “Using The Management Client to Create a Backup”).
This is equal to the number of data nodes in the cluster at
the time that the backup was created.
Note: Before using ndb_restore, it is recommended that the cluster be running in single user mode, unless you are restoring multiple data nodes in parallel. See Section 15.7.4, “Single User Mode”, for more information about single user mode.
Typical options for this utility are shown here:
ndb_restore [-cconnectstring] -nnode_id[-s] [-m] -bbackup_id-r [backup_path=]/path/to/backup/files
The -c option is used to specify a
connectstring which tells ndb_restore
where to locate the cluster management server. (See
Section 15.4.4.2, “The Cluster Connectstring”, for
information on connectstrings.) If this option is not used,
then ndb_restore attempts to connect to a
management server on localhost:1186. This
utility acts as a cluster API node, and so requires a free
connection “slot” to connect to the cluster
management server. This means that there must be at least
one [API] or [MYSQLD]
section that can be used by it in the cluster
config.ini file. It is a good idea to
keep at least one empty [API] or
[MYSQLD] section in
config.ini that is not being used for a
MySQL server or other application for this reason (see
Section 15.4.4.6, “Defining SQL and Other API Nodes”).
You can verify that ndb_restore is connected to the cluster by using the SHOW command in the ndb_mgm management client. You can also accomplish this from a system shell, as shown here:
shell> ndb_mgm -e "SHOW"
-n is used to specify the node ID of the
data node on which the backups were taken.
The first time you run the ndb_restore
restoration program, you also need to restore the metadata.
In other words, you must re-create the database tables
— this can be done by running it with the
-m option. Note that the cluster should
have an empty database when starting to restore a backup.
(In other words, you should start ndbd
with --initial prior to performing the
restore. You should also remove manually any Disk Data files
present in the data node's DataDir.)
It is possible to restore data without restoring table metadata. Prior to MySQL 5.1.17, ndb_restore did not perform any checks of table schemas; if a table was altered between the time the backup was taken and when ndb_restore was run, ndb_restore would still attempt to restore the data to the altered table.
Beginning with MySQL 5.1.17, the default behavior is for
ndb_restore is to fail with an error if
table data do not match the table schema; this can be
overridden using the --skip-table-check or
-s option. If this option is used, then
ndb_restore attempts to fit data into the
existing table schema. The result of restoring a
backup to a table schema that does not match the original is
unspecified and is subject to change without
notice. (Bug#24363)
The -b option is used to specify the ID or
sequence number of the backup, and is the same number shown
by the management client in the Backup
message displayed upon completion of a backup. (See
Section 15.8.2, “Using The Management Client to Create a Backup”.)
backup_id completed
The path to the backup directory is required, and must
include the subdirectory corresponding to the ID backup of
the backup to be restored. For example, if the data node's
DataDir is
/var/lib/mysql-cluster, then the backup
directory is
/var/lib/mysql-cluster/BACKUP, and the
backup files for the backup with the ID 3 can be found in
/var/lib/mysql-cluster/BACKUP/BACKUP-3.
The path may be absolute or relative to the directory in
which the ndb_restore executable is
located, and may be optionally prefixed with
backup_path=.
When restoring cluster backups, you must be sure to restore all data nodes from backups having the same backup ID. Using files from different backups will at best result in restoring the cluster to an inconsistent state, and may fail altogether.
It is possible to restore a backup to a database with a
different configuration than it was created from. For
example, suppose that a backup with backup ID
12, created in a cluster with two
database nodes having the node IDs 2 and
3, is to be restored to a cluster with
four nodes. Then ndb_restore must be run
twice — once for each database node in the cluster
where the backup was taken. However,
ndb_restore cannot always restore backups
made from a cluster running one version of MySQL to a
cluster running a different MySQL version. See
Section 15.5.2, “Cluster Upgrade and Downgrade Compatibility”,
for more information.
For more rapid restoration, the data may be restored in
parallel, provided that there is a sufficient number of
cluster connections available. That is, when restoring to
multiple nodes in parallel, you must have an
[API] or [MYSQLD]
section in the cluster config.ini
file available for each concurrent
ndb_restore process. However, the data
files must always be applied before the logs.
Most of the options available for this program are shown in the following table:
| Long Form | Short Form | Description | Default Value |
--backup-id |
-b |
Backup sequence ID | 0 |
--backup_path |
None | Path to backup files | ./ |
--character-sets-dir |
None | Specify the directory where character set information can be found | None |
--connect, --connectstring, or
--ndb-connectstring
|
-c or -C
|
Set the connectstring in
[nodeid=
format |
localhost:1186 |
--core-file |
None | Write a core file in the event of an error | TRUE |
--debug |
-# |
Output debug log | d:t:O, |
--dont_ignore_systab_0 |
-f |
Do not ignore system table during restore — EXPERIMENTAL; not for production use | FALSE |
--help or --usage
|
-? |
Display help message with available options and current values, then exit | [N/A] |
--ndb-mgmd-host |
None | Set the host and port in
format for the management server to connect to; this
is the same as --connect,
--connectstring, or
--ndb-connectstring, but without a
way to specify the nodeid
|
None |
--ndb-nodegroup-map |
-z |
Specifies a nodegroup map — Syntax: list of
(source_nodegroup,
destination_nodegroup) |
None |
--ndb-nodeid |
None | Specify a node ID for the ndb_restore process | 0 |
--ndb-optimized-node-selection |
None | Optimize selection of nodes for transactions | TRUE |
--ndb-shm |
None | Use shared memory connections when available | FALSE |
--no-restore-disk-objects |
-d |
Do not restore Disk Data objects such as tablespaces and log file groups |
FALSE (in other words, restore Disk Data objects
unless this option is used) |
--nodeid |
-n |
Use backup files from node with the specified ID | 0 |
--parallelism |
-p |
Set from 1 to 1024 parallel transactions to be used during the restoration process | 128 |
--print |
None | Print metadata and log to stdout
|
FALSE |
--print_data |
None | Print data to stdout
|
FALSE |
--print_log |
None | Print log to stdout
|
FALSE |
--print_meta |
None | Print metadata to stdout
|
FALSE |
--restore_data |
-r |
Restore data and logs | FALSE |
--restore_epoch |
-e |
Restore epoch data into the status table; the row in the
cluster.apply_status having the
id 0 is inserted or updated as
appropriate — this is convenient when starting
up replication on a MySQL Cluster replication slave |
FALSE |
--restore_meta |
-m |
Restore table metadata | FALSE |
--skip-table-check |
-s |
Do not check table schemas (Added in MySQL 5.1.17) | FALSE |
--version |
-V |
Output version information and exit | [N/A] |
Beginning with MySQL 5.1.18, several additional options are
available for use with the --print_data
option in generating data dumps, either to
stdout, or to a file. These are similar
to some of the options used with
mysqldump, and are shown in the following
table:
| Long Form | Short Form | Description | Default Value |
--tab |
-T |
Creates dumpfiles, one per table, each named
.
Takes as its argument the path to the directory
where the files should be saved (required; use
. for the current directory). |
None |
--fields-enclosed-by |
None | String used to enclose all column values | None |
--fields-optionally-enclosed-by |
None | String used to enclose column values containing character data (such as
CHAR,
VARCHAR,
BINARY,
TEXT, or
ENUM) |
None |
--fields-terminated-by |
None | String used to separate column values |
\t (tab character) |
--hex |
None | Use hex format for binary values | [N/A] |
--lines-terminated-by |
None | String used to terminate each line |
\n (linefeed character) |
--appends |
None | When used with --tab, causes the data to be appended to
existing files of the same name |
[N/A] |
If a table has no explicit primary key, then the output
generated when using the --print includes
the table's hidden primary key.
Beginning with MySQL 5.1.18, it is possible to restore selected databases, or to restore selected tables from a given database using the syntax shown here:
ndb_restoreother_optionsdb_name_1[db_name_2[,db_name_3][, ...] |tbl_name_1[,tbl_name_2][, ...]]
In other words, you can specify either of the following to be restored:
All tables from one or more databases
One or more tables from a single database
Note:
ndb_restore reports both temporary and
permanent errors. In the case of temporary errors, it may
able to recover from them. Beginning with MySQL 5.1.12, it
reports Restore successful, but encountered
temporary error, please look at configuration in
such cases.

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