Restoring MySQL dumps can take a long time. This is because it does really rebuild the entire tables.
Exactly what you need to do to fix it depends on the engine, but in general
I would say, do the following:
Zeroth rule: Only use a 64-bit OS.
- Make sure that you have enough physical ram to fit the biggest single table into memory; include any overhead for the OS in this calculation (NB: On operating systems that use 4k pages i.e. all of them, the page tables take up a lot of memory themselves on large-memory systems - don't forget this)
- Tune the innodb_buffer_pool such that it is bigger than the largest single table; or if using MyISAM, tune the key_buffer so that it is big enough to hold the indexes of the largest table.
- Be patient.
Now, if you are still finding that it is slow having done the above, it may be that your particular database has a very tricky structure to restore.
Personally I've managed to rebuild a server with ~ 2Tb in < 48 hours, but that was a particular case.
Be sure that your development system has production-grade hardware if you intend to load production data into it.
In particular, if you think that you can bulk-load data into tables which don't fit into memory (or at least, mostly into memory), forget it.
If this all seems like too much, remember that you can just use a filesystem or LVM snapshot online with InnoDB, and then just copy the files. With MyISAM it's a bit trickier but can still be done.