Book Image

The MySQL Workshop

By : Thomas Pettit, Scott Cosentino
5 (1)
Book Image

The MySQL Workshop

5 (1)
By: Thomas Pettit, Scott Cosentino

Overview of this book

Do you want to learn how to create and maintain databases effectively? Are you looking for simple answers to basic MySQL questions as well as straightforward examples that you can use at work? If so, this workshop is the right choice for you. Designed to build your confidence through hands-on practice, this book uses a simple approach that focuses on the practical, so you can get straight down to business without having to wade through pages and pages of dull, dry theory. As you work through bite-sized exercises and activities, you'll learn how to use different MySQL tools to create a database and manage the data within it. You'll see how to transfer data between a MySQL database and other sources, and use real-world datasets to gain valuable experience of manipulating and gaining insights from data. As you progress, you'll discover how to protect your database by managing user permissions and performing logical backups and restores. If you've already tried to teach yourself SQL, but haven't been able to make the leap from understanding simple queries to working on live projects with a real database management system, The MySQL Workshop will get you on the right track. By the end of this MySQL book, you'll have the knowledge, skills, and confidence to advance your career and tackle your own ambitious projects with MySQL.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
1
Section 1: Creating Your Database
6
Section 2: Managing Your Database
11
Section 3: Querying Your Database
16
Section 4: Protecting Your Database

Activity 15.02 – performing a point-in-time restore

In this activity, you will use the world schema to perform a point-in-time restore. The server you will use for this does not have GTIDs enabled. Follow the steps here to implement this activity:

  1. Reset MASTER LOGS.
  2. Create a backup with mysqldump.
  3. Change the population of Toulouse in the city table.
  4. Simulate the disaster by wiping out the complete city table.
  5. Restore the backup.
  6. Reapply the changes that occurred between backup creation and the time of the disaster.
  7. Validate that the data has been restored.

After implementing these steps, the expected output is as follows:

Figure 15.8 – Inspecting the change that we made before

Note

The solution for this activity can be found in the Appendix.

Here, you can see that the special value we used has been restored correctly. Thus, in this activity, you created a backup, then made some additional changes, and...