Load huge sql dump to mySql - mysql

I have a huge mysql dump file generated from phpmyAdmin (150 000 lines of create table, inserts....)
The mySql query tool fails to open such a big file.
As a result i can't insert all the records.
Is there a way to do this ?
Thanks
John

The solution to restore large mysql database from sql dump file is using unix/linux shell command.
To restore mysql database from a dump file, just type the command below:
mysql -u #username# -p #database# < #dump_file#
Of course you need to replace #username# to your database username and #database# to your target database. and rename #dump_file# to your dump file file name (Ex: dump.sql) Once you enter the command, the linux/unix shell will prompt you for your database user password, just key in your database password and you are done
borrowed from: http://www.techiecorner.com/31/how-to-restore-mysql-database-from-sql-dump-file/

Split the file by parts. First the CREATE instructions, then the inserts.

Related

Saved location of Imported mysql all DB Dump

I am trying to Import AllDb dump from command line using the command:
mysql -u root -p < C:\alldb.sql
alldb.sql is the dump file I want to import in my local machine.
But I am unable to get where these dump file will be stored.
Open this file in text editor
There you will (hopefully) see database and table creation statements; (CREATE DATABASE ... CREATE TABLE ... or USE DatabaseName; CREATE TABLE... )
So, your dump will be stored in a new (or existing, depends on contents of your file) database.
for mysql data (i.e. raw db files): google://mysql windows data directory
(depends on your windows & mysql versions)

Create MySQL Database with .SQL File

I don't know much about MySQL at all. But I am trying to reverse engineer a MySQL database using Visio. I know what steps I should take to do this, but I can't get my database to show in the 'Databases' section (as below):
How do I create the MySQL database using the .SQL file and get it to show up in this list? I have tried this code:
mysql -u username -p password database_name < filename.sql
using my own credentials of course. But that doesn't seem to work. In what folder should the .SQL file be placed if this statement is to work?
1) Create a file "filename.sql"
2) Create a database in your DB in which you want to import this file.
3) From command-prompt/terminal, move to the directory where you have created a "filename.sql".
4) Run the command: mysql -u username -p password database_name < filename.sql. (You can also give the proper path of your file and run this command from anywhere). It might be the case that you don't have a password set for MySQL. If so, mysql -u username database_name < filename.sql will also work.
In your case if you have created a database with name ojs and also created a file with name ojs.sql in C: drive then run the following command:
Edit: Put the path inside quotes.
mysql -u username -p password ojs < "C:\ojs.sql"
There is another way of importing tables in mysql. You can do it this way as well:
1) Connect your database
2) Type command "use ojs;"
3) Type command "source C:/ojs.sql"
Most MySQL SQL files that create databases create the database 'on-the-fly', so you typically needn't do anything except:
log-in
mysql -u [username] -p[password]
(Note: make sure you do NOT include a space (' ') character between the -p and the [password].
MySQL will think that [password] is the name of the database you want to connect to.
The 'general' log-in (above) does not assume you want to connect to any particular schema.)
source the file (do not use quotes around filename)
mysql> source [database_creation_file].sql
you can simply do it using mysql workbench
1> create a new query tab
2> CREATE DATABASE database_name;
3> USE database_name;
4> open the filename.sql file and execute it ctrl + shift + enter
5> all the tables in the filename.sql are created
To create a MySQL database using a SQL file, you can follow these steps:
Log in to your MySQL server using the mysql command-line tool and the appropriate credentials.
Use the CREATE DATABASE command to create a new database with the desired name:
CREATE DATABASE database_name;
Use the USE command to switch to the newly created database:
USE database_name;
Use the SOURCE command to import the SQL file into the database:
SOURCE path/to/sql/file;
The database will now be created and populated with the data from the SQL file. You can verify this by running some SQL queries against the database.
It's important to note that this process assumes that the SQL file contains valid SQL statements compatible with the version of MySQL you are using. If the SQL file contains any errors or unsupported statements, they will be displayed in the mysql command-line tool, and the import process will be interrupted.

Backing up a MySQL database and restoring it under another name

I am trying to do some maintenance on MySQL database data and I created a dump file with the backed up current database.
I want to restore all that data into another database called something like original_db_name_test
Is there a command for that?
This depends on how you invoked mysqldump
If you used mysqldump dbname, then your dump contains neither CREATE DATABASE nor USE DATABASE.
Just create the database with the new name and feed the dump to mysql -D new_dbname.
If you used mysqldump --database dbname, then the dump contains CREATE DATABASE and USE DATABASE statements.
You need to comment them out or replace with new_dbname.
mysql -u usernamehere -p original_db_name_test < yourdumpfilehere.sql
If you used mysqldump to create the dump file, simply:
Create a new database (use the mysqladmin command line tool - "mysqladmin create [new database name]").
Edit the dump file to add a "USE [new database name];" at the top. (There might be an existing use statement that's commented out, so you can change this and un-comment it.)
Import the dump into the new table via "mysql -u <user name> -p < [dump file name]".
Incidentally, when creating a dump via mysqldump, I'd be tempted to use the "--add-drop-table" option, as this will cull any existing table with the same name prior to issuing the table creation statement.
you can use the 'MySQL Workbench' Application and do this with a nice gui

Restoring selective tables from an entire database dump?

I have a mysql dump created with mysqldump that holds all the tables in my database and all their data. However I only want to restore two tables. (lets call them kittens and kittens_votes)
How would I restore those two tables without restoring the entire database?
Well, you have three main options.
You can manually find the SQL statements in the file relating to the backed up tables and copy them manually. This has the advantage of being simple, but for large backups it's impractical.
Restore the database to a temporary database. Basically, create a new db, restore it to that db, and then copy the data from there to the old one. This will work well only if you're doing single database backups (If there's no CREATE DATABASE command(s) in the backup file).
Restore the database to a new database server, and copy from there. This works well if you take full server backups as opposed to single database backups.
Which one you choose will depend upon the exact situation (including how much data you have)...
You can parse out CREATE TABLE kittens|kitten_votes AND INSERT INTO ... using regexp, for example, and only execute these statements. As far as I know, there's no other way to "partially restore" from dump.
Open the .sql file and copy the insert statements for the tables you want.
create a new user with access to only those 2 tables. Now restore the DB with -f (force) option that will ignore the failed statements and execute only those statements it has permission to.
What you want is a "Single Table Restore"
http://hashmysql.org/wiki/Single_table_restore
A few options are outlined above ... However the one which worked for me was:
Create a new DB
$ mysql -u root -p CREATE DATABASE temp_db
Insert the .sql file ( the one with the desired table ) into the new DB
$ mysql -u root -p temp_db < ~/full/path/to/your_database_file.sql
dump the desired table
$ mysqldump -u root -p temp_db awesome_single_table > ~/awesome_single_table.sql
import desired table
$ mysql -u root -p original_database < ~/awesome_single_table.sql
Then delete the temp_db and you're all golden!

Mysql restore to restore structure and no data from a given backup (schema.sql)

Hi I use mysql administrator and have restored backup files (backup.sql). I would like to use restore the structure without data and it is not giving me an option to do so. I understand phpadmin provides this. I can not use this however. Any one can tell me an easy way?
Dump database structure only:
cat backup.sql | grep -v ^INSERT | mysql -u $USER -p
This will execute everything in the backup.sql file except the INSERT lines that would have populated the tables. After running this you should have your full table structure along with any stored procedures / views / etc. that were in the original databse, but your tables will all be empty.
You can change the ENGINE to BLACKHOLE in the dump using sed
cat backup.sql | sed 's/ENGINE=(MYISAM|INNODB)/ENGINE=BLACKHOLE/g' > backup2.sql
This engine will just "swallow" the INSERT statements and the tables will remain empty. Of course you must change the ENGINE again using:
ALTER TABLE `mytable` ENGINE=MYISAM;
IIRC the backup.sql files (if created by mysqldump) are just SQL commands in a text file. Just copy-paste all the "create ..." statements from the beginning of the file, but not the "insert" statements in to another file and "mysql < newfile" you should have the empty database without any data in it.
there is no way to tell the mysql client to skip the INSERT commands. the least-hassle way to do this is run the script as-is and let it load the data, then just TRUNCATE all of the tables.
you can write a script to do the following:
1 : import the dump into a new database.
2 : truncate all the tables with a loop.
3 : export the db again.
4 : now u just have the structure
You can backup you MYSQL database structure with
mysqldump -u username –p -d database_name > backup.sql
(You should not supply password at command line as it leads to security risks.MYSQL will ask for password by default.)