Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I am working on a Rails project, and sometimes I program at home and sometimes at work. In my development process, I add data to the database, and I really need a way to synchronize the databases at home and work.

I am thinking about a Rake task to backup/restore the whole database in a Rails app.
Is there anyway to do that?

share|improve this question

2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

write a rake task:

 namespace :db do
     task :backup do
     system "mysqldump --opt --user=root --password rose userdetails> xyz.sql"
  end


  task :restore do
     system "mysqldump --user=root --password  < xyz.sql"
   end

  end

By the rake db:backup you will get the sql that you can commit to your git/svn and once you work from home to restore pull it and run rake db:restore

share|improve this answer
2  
This is a good solution, and as an extra bonus, it could read the username/password from the database.yml file. – Ako Jul 25 '12 at 18:44

I use a script that dumps the the database to a particular location, and a second that fetches the dump and uses it to restore a specified database. I use the Whenever gem to schedule daily backups (by calling the first script), by putting this in the schedule.rb file:

  every :day, :at => "05:00" do
    command "/var/www/current/script/db_backup.sh -n #{@db_name}"
  end

The exact contents of the script depends on what database you're using. As I'm using postgreSQL, the backup script, after figuring the proper location for the dump, runs pg_dump:

pg_dump -F t -U username -f file_location<timestamp>.dat database_name

And the 'restore' script, which I use to copy the production backup to a local database for testing, uses pg_restore:

pg_restore -U username -O -x -d database_name_new path/to/file

If you're using some other database, these tools would obviously be different, but most databases support backup and restoration in some form.

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.