You can make a backup in MySQL in several ways:

1) Using mysqldump;
2) Lock tables and copy their files one-by-one (MyISAM-only);
3) Shutdown server and copy all files (can be a slave in a replicated
setup);
4) Using InnoDB hot backup (commercial tool);

On 3/12/08, Reece Hart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Tue, 2008-03-11 at 06:47 -0700, rrahul wrote:
>
> Any major clients of the two.
> You can add you own points too.
>
>
> Perhaps someone can comment on current MySQL backups procedures.  I
> believe that MySQL used to (still does?) require shutdown to be backed up. I
> don't know whether this was true for all engines or whether it might have
> been fixed. Having to shutdown a database to make a backup is a non-starter
> for anything that other than a toy (or read-only) databases.
>
> -Reece
>
> --  Reece Hart, http://harts.net/reece/, GPG:0x25EC91A0
>
>


-- 
Sincerely yours,
Olexandr Melnyk
http://omelnyk.net/

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