Service to backup and/or restore mysql databases to/from S3 and optionally to B2
- Create an S3 bucket to hold your backups
- Turn versioning on for that bucket
- (Optional) Create a B2 bucket to hold your backups
- Supply all appropriate environment variables
- Run a backup and check your bucket(s) for that backup
MODE
Valid values: backup
, restore
. Restores are implemented only from S3.
DB_NAMES
list of the database names
MYSQL_HOST
hostname of the database server
MYSQL_USER
user that accesses the database
MYSQL_PASSWORD
password for the MYSQL_USER
MYSQL_DUMP_ARGS
(optional) additional arguments to the mysqldump command, e.g., --max_allowed_packet=50M
S3_BUCKET
e.g., s3://database-backups NOTE: no trailing slash
It's recommended that your S3 bucket have versioning turned on. Each backup creates a file of the form dbname.sql.gz. If versioning is not turned on, the previous backup file will be replaced with the new one, resulting in a single level of backups.
AWS_ACCESS_KEY
used for S3 interactions
AWS_SECRET_KEY
used for S3 interactions
B2_BUCKET
(optional) Name of the Backblaze B2 bucket, e.g., database-backups. When B2_BUCKET
is defined, the backup file is copied to the B2 bucket in addition to the S3 bucket.
It's recommended that your B2 bucket have versioning and encryption turned on. Each backup creates a file of the form dbname.sql.gz. If versioning is not turned on, the previous backup file will be replaced with the new one, resulting in a single level of backups. Encryption may offer an additional level of protection from attackers. It also has the side effect of preventing downloads of the file via the Backblaze GUI (you'll have to use the
b2
command or the Backblaze API).
B2_APPLICATION_KEY_ID
(optional; required if B2_BUCKET
is defined) Backblaze application key ID
B2_APPLICATION_KEY
(optional; required if B2_BUCKET
is defined) Backblaze application key secret
B2_HOST
(optional; required if B2_BUCKET
is defined) Backblaze B2 bucket's Endpoint
This image is built automatically on Docker Hub as silintl/mysql-backup-restore.
You'll need Docker Engine with the Docker Compose plugin and Make.
- cd .../mysql-backup-restore
- Upload test/world.sql.gz to the S3 bucket.
make db
# creates the MySQL DB servermake restore
# restores the DB dump filedocker ps -a
# get the Container ID of the exited restore containerdocker logs <containerID>
# review the restoration log messagesmake backup
# create a new DB dump filedocker ps -a
# get the Container ID of the exited backup containerdocker logs <containerID>
# review the backup log messagesmake restore
# restore the DB dump file from the new backupdocker ps -a
# get the Container ID of the exited restore containerdocker logs <containerID>
# review the restoration log messagesmake clean
# remove containers and networkdocker volume ls
# find the volume ID of the MySQL data containerdocker volume rm <volumeID>
# remove the data volumedocker images
# list existing imagesdocker image rm <imageID ...>
# remove images no longer needed