Skip to content

Backup and restore overview

Backups are data snapshots that are taken at a specific time and are stored in a common location in a common format. A backup is only useful for a defined time.

The following scenarios require a backup to recover:

Reason Description
Hardware or host failure Issues with disks, such as stalls or broken disks. With cloud services, the instance can be unaccessible or broken.
Corrupted data This issue can be caused by power outages, the database failed to write correctly and close the file.
User mistake Deleting data or an update overwriting good data with bad data
Natural disaster or data center failure Power outage, flooding, or internet issues
Compliance Required to comply with regulations and standards

Strategies

Define a backup and restore strategy for each of your databases. The strategies should have the following practices:

Practice Description
Retention How long should you keep the backups. This decision should be based on the organization’s data governance policies and the expense of storing the backups. The schedule for backups should match the retention schedule.
Document Document the strategy and any related policies. The documents should include information about the process and any tools used during backup or restore.
Encrypt Encrypt the backup and secure the storage locations
Test Test the backups on a timely basis.

The backup strategy defines type and the backup frequency, the hardware required, how the backups are verified, and storing the backups, which also includes the backup security. The strategy uses the following metrics:

Metric Description
Recovery Time Objective (RTO) How long can the system be down?
Recovery Point Objective (RPO) How much data can the organization lose?

The restore strategy defines which user account has the restore responsibility and how and frequency of testing the restore process.

These strategies require planning, implementation, and rigorous testing. You must test your restore process with each type of backup used to validate the backup and measure the recovery time. Automate this testing as much as possible. You should also document the process. In case of disaster, you can follow the procedures in the document without wasting time.

If you are using replication, consider using a dedicated replica for backups because the operation can cause a high CPU load.

Physical backup or logical backup

A backup can be either a physical backup or a logical backup.

Physical backups

A physical backup copies the files needed to store and recover the database. They can be data files, configuration files, logs, and other types of files. The physical database can be stored in the cloud, in offline storage, on disc, or tape.

Percona XtraBackup takes a physical backup. You can also use RDS/LVM Snapshots or the MySQL Enterprise Backup.

If the server is stopped or down, you can copy the datadir with the cp command or the rsync command.

Logical backups

A logical backup contains the structural details. This type of backup contains tables, views, procedures, and functions.

Tools like [mysqldump], [mydumper], [mysqlpump], and [mysql shell] take a logical backup.

Comparison

Comparison Physical backup Logical backup
Content The physical database files The tables, users, procedures, and functions
Restore speed Restore can be quick Restore can be slower and does not include file information.
Storage Can take more space Based on what is selected, the backup can be smaller

Get expert help

If you need assistance, visit the community forum for comprehensive and free database knowledge, or contact our Percona Database Experts for professional support and services.


Last update: 2024-12-18