When setting up replication with existing data, transfer the snapshot from the source to the replica before starting replication. The process for importing data to the replica depends on how you created the snapshot of data on the source.
To deploy multiple instances of MySQL, you can use InnoDB Cluster which enables you to easily administer a group of MySQL server instances in MySQL Shell. InnoDB Cluster wraps MySQL Group Replication in a programmatic environment that enables you easily deploy a cluster of MySQL instances to achieve high availability. In addition, InnoDB Cluster interfaces seamlessly with MySQL Router, which enables your applications to connect to the cluster without writing your own failover process. For similar use cases that do not require high availability, however, you can use InnoDB ReplicaSet. Installation instructions for MySQL Shell can be found here.
If the replication source server or existing replica that you are copying to create the new replica has any scheduled events, ensure that these are disabled on the new replica before you start it. If an event runs on the new replica that has already run on the source, the duplicated operation causes an error. The Event Scheduler is controlled by the event_scheduler
system variable, which defaults to ON
from MySQL 8.0, so events that are active on the original server run by default when the new replica starts up. To stop all events from running on the new replica, set the event_scheduler
system variable to OFF
or DISABLED
on the new replica. Alternatively, you can use the ALTER EVENT
statement to set individual events to DISABLE
or DISABLE ON SLAVE
to prevent them from running on the new replica. You can list the events on a server using the SHOW
statement or the Information Schema EVENTS
table. For more information, see Section 17.5.1.16, “Replication of Invoked Features”.
As an alternative to creating a new replica in this way, MySQL Server's clone plugin can be used to transfer all the data and replication settings from an existing replica to a clone. For instructions to use this method, see Section 5.6.7.6, “Cloning for Replication”.
Follow this procedure to set up replication with existing data:
If you used MySQL Server's clone plugin to create a clone from an existing replica (see Section 5.6.7.6, “Cloning for Replication”), the data is already transferred. Otherwise, import the data to the replica using one of the following methods.
If you used mysqldump, start the replica server, ensuring that replication does not start by using the --skip-slave-start
option, or from MySQL 8.0.24, the skip_slave_start
system variable. Then import the dump file:
shell> mysql < fulldb.dump
If you created a snapshot using the raw data files, extract the data files into your replica's data directory. For example:
shell> tar xvf dbdump.tar
You may need to set permissions and ownership on the files so that the replica server can access and modify them. Then start the replica server, ensuring that replication does not start by using the --skip-slave-start
option, or from MySQL 8.0.24, the skip_slave_start
system variable.
Configure the replica with the replication coordinates from the source. This tells the replica the binary log file and position within the file where replication needs to start. Also, configure the replica with the login credentials and host name of the source. For more information on the CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
| CHANGE MASTER TO
statement required, see Section 17.1.2.7, “Setting the Source Configuration on the Replica”.
Start the replication threads by issuing a START REPLICA | SLAVE
statement.
After you have performed this procedure, the replica connects to the source and replicates any updates that have occurred on the source since the snapshot was taken. Error messages are issued to the replica's error log if it is not able to replicate for any reason.
The replica uses information logged in its connection metadata repository and applier metadata repository to keep track of how much of the source's binary log it has processed. From MySQL 8.0, by default, these repositories are tables named slave_master_info
and slave_relay_log_info
in the mysql
database. Do not remove or edit these tables unless you know exactly what you are doing and fully understand the implications. Even in that case, it is preferred that you use the CHANGE REPLICATION SOURCE TO
| CHANGE MASTER TO
statement to change replication parameters. The replica uses the values specified in the statement to update the replication metadata repositories automatically. See Section 17.2.4, “Relay Log and Replication Metadata Repositories”, for more information.
The contents of the replica's connection metadata repository override some of the server options specified on the command line or in my.cnf
. See Section 17.1.6, “Replication and Binary Logging Options and Variables”, for more details.
A single snapshot of the source suffices for multiple replicas. To set up additional replicas, use the same source snapshot and follow the replica portion of the procedure just described.