How to migrate a HUGE MySQL DB to PostgreSQL DB - mysql

I have SonarQube MySQL DB (450GB) running and I want to Migrate to PostgreSQL DB.
I tried to migrate using MySQL-migrator (https://github.com/SonarSource/mysql-migrator), it takes long time and fails, we cannot RESUME as well. What is the simple and best way to Migrate from MySQL to PostgrSQl?

500 GB is not large these days.
You should first try to get the schema definition right. Try to migrate without the data, that will be fast, and you can debug the migration of indexes, constraints, views and stored code. Once you have that, try to migrate the data (but of course you migrate the data before creating constraints and indexes).
I have no experience with the tools available, but you could investigate mysql_fdw. A foreign data wrapper has the advantage that you can migrate data in one step, without the need for intermediary storage. Also, it is easy to migrate several tables in parallel.

Related

SSMA mySQL to SQLServer. Migrate only part of the table

I need to migrate a series of tables from mySQL 5.6 -> SQLServer 2016. A couple of these tables are extremely large (6.10^9 rows, billions of records).
I've tried to migrate them using SSMA but, unfortunately, the process takes over a week and frequently crashes before it is completed.
My questions are:
1) Is there a better alternative, e.g. free software tools? Any suggestions welcome.
2) If not: is it possible to configure SSMA to migrate only parts of the table (e.g. 10%)? An option is to migrate the table to a .SQL file, then run it in SQLServer as a query. The problem then is opening a file that can easily be 50-100 GB.
3) Are there any SSMA tweaks that can speed up the migration? E.g. the options file has parameters such as the buffer size & executing from Server side/client side -but no documentation explains the advantages.

Load data into Postgres from MySQL

I have a database hosted on Amazon RDS. I am developing a Rails application with primary database as PostgreSQL.
The Postgres database needs to be updated with data from RDS. I need to pull records from MySQL and then load it into Postgres.
Also, this is not database migrations.
One option is to create a secondary database (MySQL) in my rails application. But this does not seem a good option as I need to transfer data only when needed and not very frequently.
What is the best way to achieve this? Can this be done through pgloader?
UPDATE
This solved my issue. I just needed to read from MySQL and this is working fine. Are there any drawbacks for this approach?
You can use PostgreSQL's Foreign Data Wrappers : your MySQL tables will be viewed as PostgreSQL tables.
See : https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/postgres-fdw.html

Near real time sync from mysql to Hbase

Currently I am facing a issue during sync the data from mysql to hbase, I need a near real time data sync from mysql to hbase, and I need to merge multiple mysql tables into one hbase table during the data sync.
I tried sqoop looks like it can not fit our requirements.
So are there any existing tools/libs can be used for my case, or any other solutions I can try with spark.
Consider using Apache Phoenix on HBase. It will give you low-latency SQL queries (so it is suitable for OLTP and easy to use for OLAP) on data stored in HBase so you don't have to worry about syncing. It also has NoSQL features such as the ability to dynamically add columns during query-time.
To satisfy your use case, you could run Phoenix for OLTP, and a second instance of Phoenix on a read replica to run table joins for OLAP.
http://www.cloudera.com/documentation/enterprise/5-4-x/topics/admin_hbase_read_replicas.html
Secondary replicas are refreshed at intervals controlled by a timer (hbase.regionserver.storefile.refresh.period), and so are guaranteed to be at most that interval of milliseconds behind the primary RegionServer.
This solution satisfies your requirements for OLTP, OLAP, and near real-time syncing while giving your transactional database scalability that you would not easily have with MySQL. Apache Phoenix also offers full integration with the Hadoop ecosystem so it will integrate well with your current analytics stack.

How to dump data from Oracle to MySql [duplicate]

We ran into serious performance problems with our Oracle database and we would like to try to migrate it to a MySQL-based database (either MySQL directly or, more preferably, Infobright).
The thing is, we need to let the old and the new system overlap for at least some weeks if not months, before we actually know, if all the features of the new database match our needs.
So, here is our situation:
The Oracle database consists of multiple tables with each millions of rows. During the day, there are literally thousands of statements, which we cannot stop for migration.
Every morning, new data is imported into the Oracle database, replacing some thousands of rows. Copying this process is not a problem, so we could, in theory, import in both databases in parallel.
But, and here the challenge lies, for this to work we need to have an export from the Oracle database with a consistent state from one day. (We cannot export some tables on Monday and some others on Tuesday, etc.) This means, that at least the export should be finished in less than one day.
Our first thought was to dump the schema, but I wasn't able to find a tool to import an Oracle dump file into MySQL. Exporting tables in CSV files might work, but I'm afraid it could take too long.
So my question now is:
What should I do? Is there any tool to import Oracle dump files into MySQL? Does anybody have any experience with such a large-scale migration?
PS: Please, don't suggest performance optimization techniques for Oracle, we already tried a lot :-)
Edit: We already tried some ETL tools before, only to find out, that they were not fast enough: Exporting only one table already took more than 4 hours ...
2nd Edit: Come on folks ... did nobody ever try to export a whole database as fast as possible and convert the data so that it can be imported into another database system?
Oracle does not supply an out-of-the-box unload utility.
Keep in mind without comprehensive info about your environment (oracle version? server platform? how much data? what datatypes?) everything here is YMMV and you would want to give it a go on your system for performance and timing.
My points 1-3 are just generic data movement ideas. Point 4 is a method that will reduce downtime or interruption to minutes or seconds.
1) There are 3rd party utilities available. I have used a few of these but best for you to check them out yourself for your intended purpose. A few 3rd party products are listed here: OraFaq . Unfortunately a lot of them run on Windows which would slow down the data unload process unless your DB server was on windows and you could run the load utility directly on the server.
2) If you don't have any complex datatypes like LOBs then you can roll your own with SQLPLUS. If you did a table at a time then you can easily parallelize it. Topic has been visited on this site probably more than once, here is an example: Linky
3) If you are 10g+ then External Tables might be a performant way to accomplish this task. If you create some blank external tables with the same structure as your current tables and copy the data to them, the data will be converted to the external table format (a text file). Once again, OraFAQ to the rescue.
4) If you must keep systems in parallel for days/weeks/months then use a change data capture/apply tool for near-zero downtime. Be prepared to pay $$$. I have used Golden Gate Software's tool that can mine the Oracle redo logs and supply insert/update statements to a MySQL Database. You can migrate the bulk of the data with no downtime the week before go-live. Then during your go-live period, shut down the source database, have Golden Gate catch up the last remaining transactions, then open up access to your new target database. I have used this for upgrades and the catch up period was only a few minutes. We already had a site licenses for Golden Gate so it wasn't anything out of pocket for us.
And I'll play the role of Cranky DBA here and say if you can't get Oracle performing well I would love to see a write up of how MySQL fixed your particular issues. If you have an application where you can't touch the SQL, there are still lots of possible ways to tune Oracle. /soapbox
I have built a C# application that can read an Oracle dump (.dmp) file and pump it's tables of data into a SQL Server database.
This application is used nightly on a production basis to migrate a PeopleSoft database to SQL Server. The PeopleSoft database has 1100+ database tables and the Oracle dump file is greater than 4.5GB in size.
This application creates the SQL Server database and tables and then loads all 4.5GB of data in less than 55 minutes running on a dual-core Intel server.
I don't believe it would be too difficult to modify this application to work with other databases provided they have an ADO.NET provider.
yeah, Oracle is pretty slow. :)
You can use any number of ETL tools to move data from Oracle into MySQL. My favourite is SQL Server Integration Services.
If you have Oracle9i or higher, you can implement Change Data Capture. Read more here http://download-east.oracle.com/docs/cd/B14117_01/server.101/b10736/cdc.htm
Then you can take a delta of changes from Oracle to your MySQL or Infobright using any ETL technologies.
We had the same issue. Needed to get tables and data from oracle dbms to mysql dbms.
We used this tool we found online... It worked well.
http://www.sqlines.com/download
This tool will basically help you:
Connect to your source DBMS(ORACLE)
Connect to destination DBMS(MySQL)
Specify schema and tables in the ORACLE DBMS you want to migrate
Press a "Transfer" button to Run the migration process(running inbuilt migration queries)
Get a transfer log, which will tell how many records were READ from SOURCE and WRITTEN on the destination database, what queries failed.
Hope this will help others that will land on this question.
I've used Pentaho Data Integration to migrate from Oracle to MySql (I also migrated the same data to Postresql, which was about 50% quicker, which I guess was largely due to the different JDBC drivers being used). I followed Roland Bouman's instructions here, almost to the letter, and was very pleasantly suprised at how easy it was:
Copy Table data from one DB to another
I don't know whether it will be appropriate for your data load, but it's worth a shot.
I recently released etlalchemy to accomplish this task. It is an open-sourced solution which allows migration between any 2 SQL databases with 4 lines of Python, and was initially designed to migrate from Oracle to MySQL. Support has been added for MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, SQLite and SQL Server.
This will take care of migrating schema (arguably the most challenging), data, indexes and constraints, with many more options available.
To install:
$ pip install etlalchemy
On El Capitan: pip install --ignore-installed etlalchemy
To run:
from etlalchemy import ETLAlchemySource, ETLAlchemyTarget
orcl_db_source = ETLAlchemySource("oracle+cx_oracle://username:password#hostname/ORACLE_SID")
mysql_db_target = ETLAlchemyTarget("mysql://username:password#hostname/db_name", drop_database=True)
mysql_db_target.addSource(orcl_db_source)
mysql_db_target.migrate()
Concerning performance, this tool utilizes BULK import tools across various RDBMS such as mysqlimport and COPY FROM (postgresql) to carry out migrations efficiently. I was able to migrate a 5GB SQL Server database with 33,105,951 rows into MySQL in 40 minutes, and a 3GB 7,000,000 row Oracle database to MySQL in 13 minutes.
To get more background on the origins of the project, check out this post. If you get any errors running the tool, open an issue on the github repo and I'll patch it up in less than a week!
(To install the "cx_Oracle" Python driver, follow these instructions)
You can use Python, SQL*Plus and mysql.exe (MySQL client) script to copy whole table of just query results.
It will be portable because all those tools exist on Windows and Linux.
When I had to do it I implemented following steps using Python:
Extract data into CSV file using SQL*Plus.
Load dump file into MySQL
using mysql.exe.
You can improve performance by performing parallel load using Tables/Partitions/Sub-partitions.
Disclosure: Oracle-to-MySQL-Data-Migrator is the script I wrote for data integration between Oracle and MySQL on Windows OS.

Migrate from Oracle to MySQL

We ran into serious performance problems with our Oracle database and we would like to try to migrate it to a MySQL-based database (either MySQL directly or, more preferably, Infobright).
The thing is, we need to let the old and the new system overlap for at least some weeks if not months, before we actually know, if all the features of the new database match our needs.
So, here is our situation:
The Oracle database consists of multiple tables with each millions of rows. During the day, there are literally thousands of statements, which we cannot stop for migration.
Every morning, new data is imported into the Oracle database, replacing some thousands of rows. Copying this process is not a problem, so we could, in theory, import in both databases in parallel.
But, and here the challenge lies, for this to work we need to have an export from the Oracle database with a consistent state from one day. (We cannot export some tables on Monday and some others on Tuesday, etc.) This means, that at least the export should be finished in less than one day.
Our first thought was to dump the schema, but I wasn't able to find a tool to import an Oracle dump file into MySQL. Exporting tables in CSV files might work, but I'm afraid it could take too long.
So my question now is:
What should I do? Is there any tool to import Oracle dump files into MySQL? Does anybody have any experience with such a large-scale migration?
PS: Please, don't suggest performance optimization techniques for Oracle, we already tried a lot :-)
Edit: We already tried some ETL tools before, only to find out, that they were not fast enough: Exporting only one table already took more than 4 hours ...
2nd Edit: Come on folks ... did nobody ever try to export a whole database as fast as possible and convert the data so that it can be imported into another database system?
Oracle does not supply an out-of-the-box unload utility.
Keep in mind without comprehensive info about your environment (oracle version? server platform? how much data? what datatypes?) everything here is YMMV and you would want to give it a go on your system for performance and timing.
My points 1-3 are just generic data movement ideas. Point 4 is a method that will reduce downtime or interruption to minutes or seconds.
1) There are 3rd party utilities available. I have used a few of these but best for you to check them out yourself for your intended purpose. A few 3rd party products are listed here: OraFaq . Unfortunately a lot of them run on Windows which would slow down the data unload process unless your DB server was on windows and you could run the load utility directly on the server.
2) If you don't have any complex datatypes like LOBs then you can roll your own with SQLPLUS. If you did a table at a time then you can easily parallelize it. Topic has been visited on this site probably more than once, here is an example: Linky
3) If you are 10g+ then External Tables might be a performant way to accomplish this task. If you create some blank external tables with the same structure as your current tables and copy the data to them, the data will be converted to the external table format (a text file). Once again, OraFAQ to the rescue.
4) If you must keep systems in parallel for days/weeks/months then use a change data capture/apply tool for near-zero downtime. Be prepared to pay $$$. I have used Golden Gate Software's tool that can mine the Oracle redo logs and supply insert/update statements to a MySQL Database. You can migrate the bulk of the data with no downtime the week before go-live. Then during your go-live period, shut down the source database, have Golden Gate catch up the last remaining transactions, then open up access to your new target database. I have used this for upgrades and the catch up period was only a few minutes. We already had a site licenses for Golden Gate so it wasn't anything out of pocket for us.
And I'll play the role of Cranky DBA here and say if you can't get Oracle performing well I would love to see a write up of how MySQL fixed your particular issues. If you have an application where you can't touch the SQL, there are still lots of possible ways to tune Oracle. /soapbox
I have built a C# application that can read an Oracle dump (.dmp) file and pump it's tables of data into a SQL Server database.
This application is used nightly on a production basis to migrate a PeopleSoft database to SQL Server. The PeopleSoft database has 1100+ database tables and the Oracle dump file is greater than 4.5GB in size.
This application creates the SQL Server database and tables and then loads all 4.5GB of data in less than 55 minutes running on a dual-core Intel server.
I don't believe it would be too difficult to modify this application to work with other databases provided they have an ADO.NET provider.
yeah, Oracle is pretty slow. :)
You can use any number of ETL tools to move data from Oracle into MySQL. My favourite is SQL Server Integration Services.
If you have Oracle9i or higher, you can implement Change Data Capture. Read more here http://download-east.oracle.com/docs/cd/B14117_01/server.101/b10736/cdc.htm
Then you can take a delta of changes from Oracle to your MySQL or Infobright using any ETL technologies.
We had the same issue. Needed to get tables and data from oracle dbms to mysql dbms.
We used this tool we found online... It worked well.
http://www.sqlines.com/download
This tool will basically help you:
Connect to your source DBMS(ORACLE)
Connect to destination DBMS(MySQL)
Specify schema and tables in the ORACLE DBMS you want to migrate
Press a "Transfer" button to Run the migration process(running inbuilt migration queries)
Get a transfer log, which will tell how many records were READ from SOURCE and WRITTEN on the destination database, what queries failed.
Hope this will help others that will land on this question.
I've used Pentaho Data Integration to migrate from Oracle to MySql (I also migrated the same data to Postresql, which was about 50% quicker, which I guess was largely due to the different JDBC drivers being used). I followed Roland Bouman's instructions here, almost to the letter, and was very pleasantly suprised at how easy it was:
Copy Table data from one DB to another
I don't know whether it will be appropriate for your data load, but it's worth a shot.
I recently released etlalchemy to accomplish this task. It is an open-sourced solution which allows migration between any 2 SQL databases with 4 lines of Python, and was initially designed to migrate from Oracle to MySQL. Support has been added for MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, SQLite and SQL Server.
This will take care of migrating schema (arguably the most challenging), data, indexes and constraints, with many more options available.
To install:
$ pip install etlalchemy
On El Capitan: pip install --ignore-installed etlalchemy
To run:
from etlalchemy import ETLAlchemySource, ETLAlchemyTarget
orcl_db_source = ETLAlchemySource("oracle+cx_oracle://username:password#hostname/ORACLE_SID")
mysql_db_target = ETLAlchemyTarget("mysql://username:password#hostname/db_name", drop_database=True)
mysql_db_target.addSource(orcl_db_source)
mysql_db_target.migrate()
Concerning performance, this tool utilizes BULK import tools across various RDBMS such as mysqlimport and COPY FROM (postgresql) to carry out migrations efficiently. I was able to migrate a 5GB SQL Server database with 33,105,951 rows into MySQL in 40 minutes, and a 3GB 7,000,000 row Oracle database to MySQL in 13 minutes.
To get more background on the origins of the project, check out this post. If you get any errors running the tool, open an issue on the github repo and I'll patch it up in less than a week!
(To install the "cx_Oracle" Python driver, follow these instructions)
You can use Python, SQL*Plus and mysql.exe (MySQL client) script to copy whole table of just query results.
It will be portable because all those tools exist on Windows and Linux.
When I had to do it I implemented following steps using Python:
Extract data into CSV file using SQL*Plus.
Load dump file into MySQL
using mysql.exe.
You can improve performance by performing parallel load using Tables/Partitions/Sub-partitions.
Disclosure: Oracle-to-MySQL-Data-Migrator is the script I wrote for data integration between Oracle and MySQL on Windows OS.