### backupninja mysql config file ### databases = all backupdir = /var/backups/mysql hotcopy = no sqldump = yes compress = yes ### authentication ### # three authentication methods: # # 1. setting the user, so that /home/user/.my.cnf is used. # user = some-unix-user # # 2. specifying the mysql dbuser and dbpassword, # which generates a temporary .my.cnf in /root/.my.cnf # dbusername = # dbpassword = # # 3. specify which config file to use with configfile # (this option does not work with hotcopy) # configfile = /etc/mysql/debian.cnf # # if user and dbusername are not specified, the default is to use # /etc/mysql/debian.cnf for configfile. ### all options ### # configfile = < path/to/file > (default = /etc/mysql/debian.cnf) # The config file is passed to mysql with --defaults-file. # On debian, this default will allow backupninja to make backups # of mysql without configuring any additional options. # (this option is not compatible with "user" or "dbusername"). # # user = (default = root) # Run mysql commands as 'user'. A valid .my.cnf must exist with a # database username and password in the user's home directory. # (this option is not compatible with "configfile" or "dbusername"). # # dbusername = (no default) # The user must have access to the databases specified later. # (this option is not compatible with "configfile" or "user"). # # dbpassword = (no default) # The password used with dbusername. this password will NOT be passed # on the command line and is not readable using "ps aux". # # dbhost = (default = localhost) # only localhost works right now. # # databases = < all | db1 db2 db3 > (default = all) # which databases to backup. should either be the word 'all' or a # space separated list of database names. # # nodata = < db.table1 db.table2 db.table3 > (no default) # only dump the structure for the database tables listed here, this means # no data contained in these tables will be dumped. This is very useful # to backup databases that have tables with large amounts of cache data that # isn't necessary to backup, but you still need the structure to exist # on a restore. You *must* specify the table as part of a database, such # as "drupal.cache", where the database name is "drupal" and the table that # you do not want to dump the data for is called "cache". # # backupdir = < path/to/destination > (default = /var/backups/mysql) # where to dump the backups. hotcopy backups will be in a subdirectory # 'hotcopy' and sqldump backups will be in a subdirectory 'sqldump' # # hotcopy = < yes | no > (default = no) # make a backup of the actual database binary files using mysqlhotcopy. # # sqldump = < yes | no > (default = no) # make a backup using mysqldump. this creates text files with sql commands # sufficient to recontruct the database. # # sqldumpoptions = # (default = --lock-tables --complete-insert --add-drop-table --quick --quote-names) # arguments to pass to mysqldump # # compress = < yes | no > (default = yes) # if yes, compress the sqldump output.