Flashback
DML-only flashback was introduced in MariaDB 10.2.4
Flashback is a feature that will allow instances, databases or tables to be rolled back to an old snapshot.
Flashback is currently supported only over DML statements (INSERT, DELETE, UPDATE). An upcoming version of MariaDB will add support for flashback over DDL statements (DROP, TRUNCATE, ALTER, etc.) by copying or moving the current table to a reserved and hidden database, and then copying or moving back when using flashback. See MDEV-10571.
Flashback is achieved in MariaDB Server using existing support for full image format binary logs (binlog_row_image=FULL), so it supports all engines.
The real work of Flashback is done by mariadb-binlog / mysqlbinlog with --flashback
. This causes events to be translated: INSERT to DELETE, DELETE to INSERT, and for UPDATEs, the before and after images are swapped.
When executing mariadb-binlog / mysqlbinlog
with --flashback
, the Flashback events will be stored in memory. You should make sure your server has enough memory for this feature.
Arguments
-
mariadb-binlog / mysqlbinlog has the option
--flashback
or-B
that will let it work in flashback mode. -
mariadbd / mysqld has the option --flashback that enables the binary log and sets
binlog_format=ROW
. It is not mandatory to use this option if you have already enabled those options directly.
Do not use -v
-vv
options, as this adds verbose information to the binary log which can cause problems when importing. See MDEV-12066 and MDEV-12067.
Example
With a table "mytable" in database "test", you can compare the output with --flashback
and without.
mysqlbinlog /var/lib/mysql/mysql-bin.000001 -vv -d test -T mytable \ --start-datetime="2013-03-27 14:54:00" > review.sql
mysqlbinlog /var/lib/mysql/mysql-bin.000001 -vv -d test -T mytable \ --start-datetime="2013-03-27 14:54:00" --flashback > flashback.sql
If you know the exact position, --start-position
can be used instead of --start-datetime
.
Then, by importing the output file (mysql < flashback.sql
), you can flash your database/table back to the specified time or position.
Common Use Case
A common use case for Flashback is the following scenario:
- You have one primary and two replicas, one started with
--flashback
(i.e. with binary logging enabled, using binlog_format=ROW, and binlog_row_image=FULL). - Something goes wrong on the primary (like a wrong update or delete) and you would like to revert to a state of the database (or just a table) at a certain point in time.
- Remove the flashback-enabled replica from replication.
- Invoke mariadb-binlog / mysqlbinlog to find the exact log position of the first offending operation after the state you want to revert to.
- Run
mysqlbinlog --flashback --start-position=xyz | mysql
to pipe the output ofmariadb-binlog / mysqlbinlog
directly to themariadb / mysql
client, or save the output to a file and then direct the file to the command-line client.
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License and the GNU Free Documentation License.
https://mariadb.com/kb/en/flashback/