QUICKLY dumping a quiesced database:
Using the "-T " option with mysqldump results in lots of .sql and .txt files in the specified directory. This is ~50% faster for dumping large tables than a single .sql file with INSERT statements (takes 1/3 less wall-clock time).
Additionally, there is a huge benefit when restoring if you can load multiple tables in parallel, and saturate multiple cores. On an 8-core box, this could be as much as an 8X difference in wall-clock time to restore the dump, on top of the efficiency improvements provided by "-T". Because "-T" causes each table to be stored in a separate file, loading them in parallel is easier than splitting apart a massive .sql file.
Taking the strategies above to their logical extreme, one could create a script to dump a database widely in parallel. Well, that's exactly what the Maakit mk-parallel-dump (see http://www.maatkit.org/doc/mk-parallel-dump.html) and mk-parallel-restore tools are; perl scripts that make multiple calls to the underlying mysqldump program. However, when I tried to use these, I had trouble getting the restore to complete without duplicate key errors that didn't occur with vanilla dumps, so keep in mind that your milage may vary.
Dumping data from a LIVE database (w/o service interruption):
The --single-transaction switch is very useful for taking a dump of a live database without having to quiesce it or taking a dump of a slave database without having to stop slaving.
Sadly, -T is not compatible with --single-transaction, so you only get one.
Usually, taking the dump is much faster than restoring it. There is still room for a tool that take the incoming monolithic dump file and breaks it into multiple pieces to be loaded in parallel. To my knowledge, such a tool does not yet exist.
Transferring the dump over the Network is usually a win
To listen for an incoming dump on one host run:
nc -l 7878 > mysql-dump.sql
Then on your DB host, run
mysqldump $OPTS | nc myhost.mydomain.com 7878
This reduces contention for the disk spindles on the master from writing the dump to disk slightly speeding up your dump (assuming the network is fast enough to keep up, a fairly safe assumption for two hosts in the same datacenter). Plus, if you are building out a new slave, this saves the step of having to transfer the dump file after it is finished.
Caveats - obviously, you need to have enough network bandwidth not to slow things down unbearably, and if the TCP session breaks, you have to start all over, but for most dumps this is not a major concern.
Lastly, I want to clear up one point of common confusion.
Despite how often you see these flags in mysqldump examples and tutorials, they are superfluous because they are turned ON by default:
--opt
--add-drop-table
--add-locks
--create-options
--disable-keys
--extended-insert
--lock-tables
--quick
--set-charset
.
From http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.1/en/mysqldump.html:
Use of --opt is the same as specifying --add-drop-table, --add-locks, --create-options, --disable-keys, --extended-insert, --lock-tables, --quick, and --set-charset. All of the options that --opt stands for also are on by default because --opt is on by default.
Of those behaviors, "--quick" is one of the most important (skips caching the entire result set in mysqld before transmitting the first row), and can be with "mysql" (which does NOT turn --quick on by default) to dramatically speed up queries that return a large result set (eg dumping all the rows of a big table).