Try adding the --quick
option to your mysqldump
command; it works better with large tables. It streams the rows from the resultset to the output rather than slurping the whole table, then writing it out.
mysqldump -uroot -h my.host -p'mypassword' --quick --max_allowed_packet=512M db_name table_name |
gzip > dump_test.sql.gz
You can also try adding the --compress
option to your mysqldump command. That makes it use the more network-friendly compressed connection protocol to your MySQL server. Notice that you still need the gzip
pipe; MySQL's compressed protocol doesn't cause the dump to come out of mysqldump
compressed.
It's also possible the server is timing out its connection to the mysqldump
client. You can try resetting the timeout durations. Connect to your server via some other means and issue these queries, then run your mysqldump
job.
These set the timeouts to one calendar day.
SET GLOBAL wait_timeout=86400;
SET GLOBAL interactive_timeout=86400;
Finally, if your server is far away from your machine (through routers and firewalls) something may be disrupting mysqldump
's connection. Some inferior routers and firewalls have time limits on NAT (network address translation) sessions. They're supposed to keep those sessions alive while they are in use, but some don't. Or maybe you're hitting a time or size limit configured by your company for external connections.
Try logging into a machine closer to the server and running mysqldump
on it.
Then use some other means (sftp?) to copy your gz file to your own machine.
Or, you may have to segment the dump of this file. You can do something like this (not debugged).
mysqldump -uroot -h my.host -p'mypassword'
db_name table_name --skip-create-options --skip-add-drop-table
--where="id>=0 AND id < 1000000" |
gzip....
Then repeat that with these lines.
--where="id>=1000000 AND id < 2000000" |
--where="id>=2000000 AND id < 3000000" |
...
until you get all the rows. Pain in the neck, but it will work.
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