Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

br: add restore to systables (#6004) #6269

Merged
Merged
Changes from all commits
Commits
File filter

Filter by extension

Filter by extension

Conversations
Failed to load comments.
Loading
Jump to
Jump to file
Failed to load files.
Loading
Diff view
Diff view
33 changes: 33 additions & 0 deletions br/use-br-command-line-tool.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -442,6 +442,39 @@ In the above command, `--table` specifies the name of the table to be restored.

Restoring incremental data is similar to [restoring full data using BR](#restore-all-the-backup-data). Note that when restoring incremental data, make sure that all the data backed up before `last backup ts` has been restored to the target cluster.

### Restore tables created in the `mysql` schema (experimental feature)

BR backs up tables created in the `mysql` schema by default.

When you restore data using BR, the tables created in the `mysql` schema are not restored by default. If you need to restore these tables, you can explicitly include them using the [table filter](/table-filter.md#syntax). The following example restores `mysql.usertable` created in `mysql` schema. The command restores `mysql.usertable` along with other data.

{{< copyable "shell-regular" >}}

```shell
br restore full -f '*.*' -f '!mysql.*' -f 'mysql.usertable' -s $external_storage_url
```

In the above command, `-f '*.*'` is used to override the default rules and `-f '!mysql.*'` instructs BR not to restore tables in `mysql` unless otherwise stated. `-f 'mysql.usertable'` indicates that `mysql.usertable` is required for restore. For detailed implementation, refer to the [table filter document](/table-filter.md#syntax).

If you only need to restore `mysql.usertable`, use the following command:

{{< copyable "shell-regular" >}}

```shell
br restore full -f 'mysql.usertable' -s $external_storage_url
```

> **Warning:**
>
> Although you can back up and restore system tables (such as `mysql.tidb`) using the BR tool, some unexpected situations might occur after the restore, including:
>
> - the statistical information tables (`mysql.stat_*`) cannot be restored.
> - the system variable tables (`mysql.tidb`,`mysql.global_variables`) cannot be restored.
> - the user information tables (such as `mysql.user` and `mysql.columns_priv`) cannot be restored.
> - GC data cannot be restored.
>
> Restoring system tables might cause more compatibility issues. To avoid unexpected issues, **DO NOT** restore system tables in the production environment.

### Restore Raw KV (experimental feature)

> **Warning:**
Expand Down