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NetVault Plug-in for MySQL 13.2 - User Guide

Introducing NetVault Plug-in for MySQL Installing and removing the plug-in Configuring the plug-in Backing up data Restoring data
Restoring data: an overview Restoring data Using advanced restore procedures for MySQL Standard/Community
Working with native MySQL replication Using the plug-in in a Failover Cluster environment Troubleshooting

Full and Incremental Backup restore scenarios of MariaDB

1

Additional step for Linux and UNIX environments in MariaDB

If you are using Mariadb-backup in a Linux or UNIX environment, verify that the file-ownership and permissions information for the restored data matches what it was before the data was backed up. Because the Mariadb-backup utility does not record this information during the backup process, the file-ownership might be different after the restore is completed. For more information, see :

https://mariadb.com/kb/en/full-backup-and-restore-with-mariabackup/

When MariaDB datafiles are restored, file and directory privileges are preserved. However, files might be written to disk as root user. After restoring a backup you may have to change the ownership of the restored files with the user and group of the MariaDB Server, usually mysql. For example, to recursively change ownership in a typical installation of MariaDB Server, where the data directory is located in /var/lib/mysql, the following command could be applied:

After changing permissions, the MariaDB Server can be restarted:

Check MariaDB documentation for more details.

Start services in Windows environments

Use the Windows Services Console to start the MariaDB service, typically named MariaDB. Check MariaDBdocumentation for more details.

Using advanced restore procedures for MySQL Standard/Community

This topic describes other restore operations that you can perform with the plug-in for the MySQL Standard/Community option.

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