I'm trying to write a PHP script to backup a MySQL database:

   if ( $db_resource = mysql_connect($db_server, $db_username, $db_password, $db_newlink) )
   {
      if ( mysql_select_db( $db_name, $db_resource ) )
      {
         $backupFile = $db_name."_".date( "Y-m-d-H-i-s" ).".gz";
         $command = "mysqldump --opt -h ".$db_server." -u ".$db_username." -p ".$db_password." ".$db_name." | gzip > ".$db_save_dir."/".$backupFile;
         system( $command );
      }
   }

   mysql_close( $db_resource );

When I run it from the shell terminal, I get this:

[stingray]$ php /[ABSOLUTE PATH]/db_backup.php

Enter password: [I INPUT PASSWORD]

mysqldump: Got error: 1044: Access denied for user '[USERNAME]'@'208.113.128.0/255.255.128.0' to database '[PASSWORD]' when selecting the database

Okay, now what I really don't understand is why it is calling the database as my password. If I point my web browser at the file, it runs just fine. Does anyone know what I should be doing? Personally, I really don't care if it's PHP, Python, CGI, etc., just so long as it can run on an Apache server.

Thanks.

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5 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

The syntax for the password flag is different. Remove the space after the -p flag and give it another shot.

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Thanks, that did the trick! – Jim Fell Dec 8 '09 at 15:51
1  
I've beaten my head against the wall so many times with that :) – Chris Thompson Dec 8 '09 at 15:56
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try use the full option names; i had a similar issue but no time to tackle the real root of the failure; however this worked and works for me:

/usr/bin/mysqldump \
--user=username \
--password=password \
dbname > mysqldump.sql
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you can use this if you want this class phpclasses.org/browse/package/1748.html or this full script http://www.jooria.com/scripts/File-Backup-134/Idut-Backup-845/index.html

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If you're just backing things up I would strongly recommend using this very easy, very configurable, open source cron backup script. It's superb and I think you'll like it if that's all you're after.

If it's really needed to be run through apache you could use backticks to remotely trigger the script and then you get backup rotations and weekly/monthly backups, compression and logging for free.

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I suggest you to use SqlBuddy, it solved my problem like your.

Proceed with a custom script only if you want to use cron or an automated script.

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