441

Without local access to the server, is there any way to duplicate/clone a MySQL db (with content and without content) into another without using mysqldump?

I am currently using MySQL 4.0.

8
  • 1
    Is there a reason for the 'no mysqldump' requirement? It can be used to connect to remote servers if I remember. Aug 25, 2008 at 9:18
  • 13
    What's wrong with mysqldump? Jun 29, 2011 at 21:06
  • 50
    Make sure you don't do this: CREATE TABLE t2 SELECT * FROM t1; as you'll lose your index information, any special stuff like auto_increment etc.. many google's for this copy table sort of thing will lead you to doing this and it'll have un-desired results.
    – John Hunt
    Sep 25, 2011 at 23:01
  • 2
    I'm using MySQL Workbench. In the MySQL Utilities there is a mysqldbcopy command that worked for me. Sep 26, 2011 at 15:47
  • 6
    @MichaelMior mysqldump is fine for small databases but a recent dump of a highly indexed database will take me over 40 hours to recover from a dump. That is why MySQL enterprise has an enterprise backup, with a price tag of $5k. PS: I will supply an answer that keeps the referential integrity by letting us use InnoDB and perform fast backups and recovery.
    – Quaternion
    Nov 15, 2011 at 22:46

11 Answers 11

687

I can see you said you didn't want to use mysqldump, but I reached this page while looking for a similar solution and others might find it as well. With that in mind, here is a simple way to duplicate a database from the command line of a windows server:

  1. Create the target database using MySQLAdmin or your preferred method. In this example, db2 is the target database, where the source database db1 will be copied.
  2. Execute the following statement on a command line:

mysqldump -h [server] -u [user] -p[password] db1 | mysql -h [server] -u [user] -p[password] db2

Note: There is NO space between -p and [password]

20
  • 126
    The case against mysqldump is that there has to be a faster way then serializing the data into queries, transmitting the queries outside of the process and through the tty back into the exact same process, reparsing the queries, and executing them as statements. That sounds horribly inefficient and unnecessary. We're not talking about crossing between MySQL masters or changing storage engines. It's shocking there is no efficient intraprocess binary transfer. Aug 23, 2012 at 20:16
  • 43
    If you don't want to save the password plaintext in your terminals history, you need to split the command: mysqldump -h [server] -u [user] -p db1 > db1, mysql -h [server] -u [user] -p db2 < db1 Otherwise the password prompt messes it up, at least for me when using putty.
    – kapex
    Oct 22, 2012 at 9:56
  • 5
    using mysqldump and mysql from bash becomes much simpler if you set up you .my.cnf file to store your user/host/password files Nov 11, 2012 at 4:33
  • 4
    mysqldump -u root -p -v db1 | mysql -u root -p db2 and two times enter pass
    – Artem P
    May 3, 2014 at 12:23
  • 17
    god, could please someone explain my why a question stating "without mysqldump" has as first response one that uses mysqldump? with like, 6x more votes than the correct one? c'mon, SO... Dec 23, 2016 at 22:45
137

You can duplicate a table without data by running:

CREATE TABLE x LIKE y;

(See the MySQL CREATE TABLE Docs)

You could write a script that takes the output from SHOW TABLES from one database and copies the schema to another. You should be able to reference schema+table names like:

CREATE TABLE x LIKE other_db.y;

As far as the data goes, you can also do it in MySQL, but it's not necessarily fast. After you've created the references, you can run the following to copy the data:

INSERT INTO x SELECT * FROM other_db.y;

If you're using MyISAM, you're better off to copy the table files; it'll be much faster. You should be able to do the same if you're using INNODB with per table table spaces.

If you do end up doing an INSERT INTO SELECT, be sure to temporarily turn off indexes with ALTER TABLE x DISABLE KEYS!

EDIT Maatkit also has some scripts that may be helpful for syncing data. It may not be faster, but you could probably run their syncing scripts on live data without much locking.

4
  • 1
    is this work for duplicate table? since i see the command is CREATE TABLE
    – GusDeCooL
    Jun 27, 2011 at 12:13
  • 5
    You can do CREATE TABLE ... SELECT.
    – eggyal
    Sep 6, 2012 at 6:10
  • 3
    I tried copying the table files of a MyISAM database once, but that just corrupted the new database. Probably my bad, but it's definitely not as trivial an operation as some say it is. Aug 16, 2013 at 7:56
  • 2
    This is a nice trick and I'm a fan, but an important note: this doesn't carry over any foreign key constraints (even ones that are external to the schema being copied) per the MySQL Docs
    – abigperson
    Feb 1, 2017 at 18:29
60

If you are using Linux, you can use this bash script: (it perhaps needs some additional code cleaning but it works ... and it's much faster then mysqldump|mysql)

#!/bin/bash

DBUSER=user
DBPASSWORD=pwd
DBSNAME=sourceDb
DBNAME=destinationDb
DBSERVER=db.example.com

fCreateTable=""
fInsertData=""
echo "Copying database ... (may take a while ...)"
DBCONN="-h ${DBSERVER} -u ${DBUSER} --password=${DBPASSWORD}"
echo "DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS ${DBNAME}" | mysql ${DBCONN}
echo "CREATE DATABASE ${DBNAME}" | mysql ${DBCONN}
for TABLE in `echo "SHOW TABLES" | mysql $DBCONN $DBSNAME | tail -n +2`; do
        createTable=`echo "SHOW CREATE TABLE ${TABLE}"|mysql -B -r $DBCONN $DBSNAME|tail -n +2|cut -f 2-`
        fCreateTable="${fCreateTable} ; ${createTable}"
        insertData="INSERT INTO ${DBNAME}.${TABLE} SELECT * FROM ${DBSNAME}.${TABLE}"
        fInsertData="${fInsertData} ; ${insertData}"
done;
echo "$fCreateTable ; $fInsertData" | mysql $DBCONN $DBNAME
10
  • 7
    If you're using the script above with InnoDB tables and have foreign keys, change the last line to the following: echo "set foreign_key_checks = 0; $fCreateTable ; $fInsertData ; set foreign_key_checks = 1;" | mysql $DBCONN $DBNAME
    – pegli
    Jun 14, 2010 at 18:43
  • Does this also copy constraint data and other properties of tables? Apr 8, 2011 at 10:54
  • 1
    It seems so, because he uses a "SHOW CREATE TABLE" statement which generates a CREATE TABLE with all properties of the original.
    – Danita
    May 6, 2011 at 15:34
  • 1
    If you get the problem @zirael described it is probably because the script is failing to copy views. You can ignore views from the copy by changing the SHOW TABLES line to SHOW FULL TABLES WHERE Table_Type = 'BASE TABLE' and adding | cut -f 1. The complete line should look something like this but replace the double backticks with single backticks: for TABLE in ``echo "SHOW FULL TABLES WHERE Table_Type = 'BASE TABLE'" | mysql $DBCONN $DBSNAME | tail -n +2 | cut -f 1``; do May 30, 2012 at 3:48
  • 1
    I've cleaned-up this script by @jozjan and applied some of the comments regarding foreign and other keys to create this version on GIST gist.github.com/christopher-hopper/8431737 Jan 15, 2014 at 7:08
13

In PHP:

function cloneDatabase($dbName, $newDbName){
    global $admin;
    $db_check = @mysql_select_db ( $dbName );
    $getTables  =   $admin->query("SHOW TABLES");   
    $tables =   array();
    while($row = mysql_fetch_row($getTables)){
        $tables[]   =   $row[0];
    }
    $createTable    =   mysql_query("CREATE DATABASE `$newDbName` DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_general_ci;") or die(mysql_error());
    foreach($tables as $cTable){
        $db_check   =   @mysql_select_db ( $newDbName );
        $create     =   $admin->query("CREATE TABLE $cTable LIKE ".$dbName.".".$cTable);
        if(!$create) {
            $error  =   true;
        }
        $insert     =   $admin->query("INSERT INTO $cTable SELECT * FROM ".$dbName.".".$cTable);
    }
    return !isset($error);
}


// usage
$clone  = cloneDatabase('dbname','newdbname');  // first: toCopy, second: new database
2
  • If you are working on windows machine. Then kindly use this instead of finding lengthy ways to execute command.
    – Parixit
    Apr 11, 2017 at 10:58
  • this script don't take views in count
    – sd1sd1
    Aug 28, 2017 at 18:08
4

Note there is a mysqldbcopy command as part of the add on mysql utilities.... https://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql-utilities/1.5/en/utils-task-clone-db.html

3
  • But it requires installation of an additional package: apt install mysql-utilities Jul 25, 2017 at 9:47
  • 3
    But there was no restriction saying that wasn't possible.... and it's a commonly installed thing (but optional as you say) If it's not installed, many would find installing that package easier than setting up and running a 60 line Bash script, etc....
    – furicle
    Sep 18, 2018 at 13:53
  • Your post was probably voted down because you didnt include any other information than a link. Answers are supposed to be more comprehensive. Sep 18, 2018 at 14:02
3

The best way to clone database tables without mysqldump:

  1. Create a new database.
  2. Create clone-queries with query:

    SET @NewSchema = 'your_new_db';
    SET @OldSchema = 'your_exists_db';
    SELECT CONCAT('CREATE TABLE ',@NewSchema,'.',table_name, ' LIKE ', TABLE_SCHEMA ,'.',table_name,';INSERT INTO ',@NewSchema,'.',table_name,' SELECT * FROM ', TABLE_SCHEMA ,'.',table_name,';') 
    FROM information_schema.TABLES where TABLE_SCHEMA = @OldSchema AND TABLE_TYPE != 'VIEW';
    
  3. Run that output!

But note, script above just fast clone tables - not views, triggers and user-functions: you can fast get structure by mysqldump --no-data --triggers -uroot -ppassword , and then use to clone only insert statement .

Why it is actual question? Because uploading of mysqldumps is ugly slow if DB is over 2Gb. And you can't clone InnoDB tables just by copying DB files (like snapshot backuping).

1
  • this is very easy and cool method
    – Cheng
    Mar 31, 2023 at 8:31
2

All of the prior solutions get at the point a little, however, they just don't copy everything over. I created a PHP function (albeit somewhat lengthy) that copies everything including tables, foreign keys, data, views, procedures, functions, triggers, and events. Here is the code:

/* This function takes the database connection, an existing database, and the new database and duplicates everything in the new database. */
function copyDatabase($c, $oldDB, $newDB) {

    // creates the schema if it does not exist
    $schema = "CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS {$newDB};";
    mysqli_query($c, $schema);

    // selects the new schema
    mysqli_select_db($c, $newDB);

    // gets all tables in the old schema
    $tables = "SELECT table_name
               FROM information_schema.tables
               WHERE table_schema = '{$oldDB}'
               AND table_type = 'BASE TABLE'";
    $results = mysqli_query($c, $tables);

    // checks if any tables were returned and recreates them in the new schema, adds the foreign keys, and inserts the associated data
    if (mysqli_num_rows($results) > 0) {

        // recreates all tables first
        while ($row = mysqli_fetch_array($results)) {
            $table = "CREATE TABLE {$newDB}.{$row[0]} LIKE {$oldDB}.{$row[0]}";
            mysqli_query($c, $table);
        }

        // resets the results to loop through again
        mysqli_data_seek($results, 0);

        // loops through each table to add foreign key and insert data
        while ($row = mysqli_fetch_array($results)) {

            // inserts the data into each table
            $data = "INSERT IGNORE INTO {$newDB}.{$row[0]} SELECT * FROM {$oldDB}.{$row[0]}";
            mysqli_query($c, $data);

            // gets all foreign keys for a particular table in the old schema
            $fks = "SELECT constraint_name, column_name, table_name, referenced_table_name, referenced_column_name
                    FROM information_schema.key_column_usage
                    WHERE referenced_table_name IS NOT NULL
                    AND table_schema = '{$oldDB}'
                    AND table_name = '{$row[0]}'";
            $fkResults = mysqli_query($c, $fks);

            // checks if any foreign keys were returned and recreates them in the new schema
            // Note: ON UPDATE and ON DELETE are not pulled from the original so you would have to change this to your liking
            if (mysqli_num_rows($fkResults) > 0) {
                while ($fkRow = mysqli_fetch_array($fkResults)) {
                    $fkQuery = "ALTER TABLE {$newDB}.{$row[0]}                              
                                ADD CONSTRAINT {$fkRow[0]}
                                FOREIGN KEY ({$fkRow[1]}) REFERENCES {$newDB}.{$fkRow[3]}({$fkRow[1]})
                                ON UPDATE CASCADE
                                ON DELETE CASCADE;";
                    mysqli_query($c, $fkQuery);
                }
            }
        }   
    }

    // gets all views in the old schema
    $views = "SHOW FULL TABLES IN {$oldDB} WHERE table_type LIKE 'VIEW'";                
    $results = mysqli_query($c, $views);

    // checks if any views were returned and recreates them in the new schema
    if (mysqli_num_rows($results) > 0) {
        while ($row = mysqli_fetch_array($results)) {
            $view = "SHOW CREATE VIEW {$oldDB}.{$row[0]}";
            $viewResults = mysqli_query($c, $view);
            $viewRow = mysqli_fetch_array($viewResults);
            mysqli_query($c, preg_replace("/CREATE(.*?)VIEW/", "CREATE VIEW", str_replace($oldDB, $newDB, $viewRow[1])));
        }
    }

    // gets all triggers in the old schema
    $triggers = "SELECT trigger_name, action_timing, event_manipulation, event_object_table, created
                 FROM information_schema.triggers
                 WHERE trigger_schema = '{$oldDB}'";                 
    $results = mysqli_query($c, $triggers);

    // checks if any triggers were returned and recreates them in the new schema
    if (mysqli_num_rows($results) > 0) {
        while ($row = mysqli_fetch_array($results)) {
            $trigger = "SHOW CREATE TRIGGER {$oldDB}.{$row[0]}";
            $triggerResults = mysqli_query($c, $trigger);
            $triggerRow = mysqli_fetch_array($triggerResults);
            mysqli_query($c, str_replace($oldDB, $newDB, $triggerRow[2]));
        }
    }

    // gets all procedures in the old schema
    $procedures = "SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS WHERE db = '{$oldDB}'";
    $results = mysqli_query($c, $procedures);

    // checks if any procedures were returned and recreates them in the new schema
    if (mysqli_num_rows($results) > 0) {
        while ($row = mysqli_fetch_array($results)) {
            $procedure = "SHOW CREATE PROCEDURE {$oldDB}.{$row[1]}";
            $procedureResults = mysqli_query($c, $procedure);
            $procedureRow = mysqli_fetch_array($procedureResults);
            mysqli_query($c, str_replace($oldDB, $newDB, $procedureRow[2]));
        }
    }

    // gets all functions in the old schema
    $functions = "SHOW FUNCTION STATUS WHERE db = '{$oldDB}'";
    $results = mysqli_query($c, $functions);

    // checks if any functions were returned and recreates them in the new schema
    if (mysqli_num_rows($results) > 0) {
        while ($row = mysqli_fetch_array($results)) {
            $function = "SHOW CREATE FUNCTION {$oldDB}.{$row[1]}";
            $functionResults = mysqli_query($c, $function);
            $functionRow = mysqli_fetch_array($functionResults);
            mysqli_query($c, str_replace($oldDB, $newDB, $functionRow[2]));
        }
    }

    // selects the old schema (a must for copying events)
    mysqli_select_db($c, $oldDB);

    // gets all events in the old schema
    $query = "SHOW EVENTS
              WHERE db = '{$oldDB}';";
    $results = mysqli_query($c, $query);

    // selects the new schema again
    mysqli_select_db($c, $newDB);

    // checks if any events were returned and recreates them in the new schema
    if (mysqli_num_rows($results) > 0) {
        while ($row = mysqli_fetch_array($results)) {
            $event = "SHOW CREATE EVENT {$oldDB}.{$row[1]}";
            $eventResults = mysqli_query($c, $event);
            $eventRow = mysqli_fetch_array($eventResults);
            mysqli_query($c, str_replace($oldDB, $newDB, $eventRow[3]));
        }
    }
}
1
  • 1
    Downvoted because the question is not "do not use mysqldump" but "use a better approach than mysqldump". This is even worse of mysqldump in terms of efficiency. Sep 12, 2018 at 10:46
2

Actually i wanted to achieve exactly that in PHP but none of the answers here were very helpful so here's my – pretty straightforward – solution using MySQLi:

// Database variables

$DB_HOST = 'localhost';
$DB_USER = 'root';
$DB_PASS = '1234';

$DB_SRC = 'existing_db';
$DB_DST = 'newly_created_db';



// MYSQL Connect

$mysqli = new mysqli( $DB_HOST, $DB_USER, $DB_PASS ) or die( $mysqli->error );



// Create destination database

$mysqli->query( "CREATE DATABASE $DB_DST" ) or die( $mysqli->error );



// Iterate through tables of source database

$tables = $mysqli->query( "SHOW TABLES FROM $DB_SRC" ) or die( $mysqli->error );

while( $table = $tables->fetch_array() ): $TABLE = $table[0];


    // Copy table and contents in destination database

    $mysqli->query( "CREATE TABLE $DB_DST.$TABLE LIKE $DB_SRC.$TABLE" ) or die( $mysqli->error );
    $mysqli->query( "INSERT INTO $DB_DST.$TABLE SELECT * FROM $DB_SRC.$TABLE" ) or die( $mysqli->error );


endwhile;
2
  • I'm not sure tihis makes a 1:1 clone but looks like for simple databases might be sufficient.
    – beppe9000
    Mar 18, 2020 at 1:13
  • I am using that for creating quick WordPress installations on my development server. This part paired with some other routines duplicate and adjust an source installation into a new project. For that it works just fine … but a blank wordpress database is not very complex so i can't make a statement for more extended use cases
    – GDY
    Mar 19, 2020 at 14:30
1

I don't really know what you mean by "local access". But for that solution you need to be able to access over ssh the server to copy the files where is database is stored.

I cannot use mysqldump, because my database is big (7Go, mysqldump fail) If the version of the 2 mysql database is too different it might not work, you can check your mysql version using mysql -V.

1) Copy the data from your remote server to your local computer (vps is the alias to your remote server, can be replaced by [email protected])

ssh vps:/etc/init.d/mysql stop
scp -rC vps:/var/lib/mysql/ /tmp/var_lib_mysql
ssh vps:/etc/init.d/apache2 start

2) Import the data copied on your local computer

/etc/init.d/mysql stop
sudo chown -R mysql:mysql /tmp/var_lib_mysql
sudo nano /etc/mysql/my.cnf
-> [mysqld]
-> datadir=/tmp/var_lib_mysql
/etc/init.d/mysql start

If you have a different version, you may need to run

/etc/init.d/mysql stop
mysql_upgrade -u root -pPASSWORD --force #that step took almost 1hrs
/etc/init.d/mysql start
1
  • This is the most efficient way to do it but I think that "without local access to the server" means that we can't access to the system. Probably a shared hosting? So this is not the answer. Sep 12, 2018 at 10:50
0

an SQL that shows SQL commands, need to run to duplicate a database from one database to another. for each table there is create a table statement and an insert statement. it assumes both databases are on the same server:

select @fromdb:="crm";
select @todb:="crmen";

SET group_concat_max_len=100000000;


SELECT  GROUP_CONCAT( concat("CREATE TABLE `",@todb,"`.`",table_name,"` LIKE `",@fromdb,"`.`",table_name,"`;\n",
"INSERT INTO `",@todb,"`.`",table_name,"` SELECT * FROM `",@fromdb,"`.`",table_name,"`;") 

SEPARATOR '\n\n')

as sqlstatement
 FROM information_schema.tables where table_schema=@fromdb and TABLE_TYPE='BASE TABLE';
-2

Mysqldump isn't bad solution. Simplest way to duplicate database:

mysqldump -uusername -ppass dbname1 | mysql -uusername -ppass dbname2

Also, you can change storage engine by this way:

mysqldump -uusername -ppass dbname1 | sed 's/InnoDB/RocksDB/' | mysql -uusername -ppass dbname2

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