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Is it possible to do mysqldump by single SQL query?

I mean to dump the whole database, like phpmyadmin does when you do export to SQL

12 Answers 12

343

not mysqldump, but mysql cli...

mysql -e "select * from myTable" -u myuser -pxxxxxxxxx mydatabase

you can redirect it out to a file if you want :

mysql -e "select * from myTable" -u myuser -pxxxxxxxx mydatabase > mydumpfile.txt

Update: Original post asked if he could dump from the database by query. What he asked and what he meant were different. He really wanted to just mysqldump all tables.

mysqldump --tables myTable --where="id < 1000"
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  • 32
    how to restore this dumped txt file?
    – Vivek S
    Jun 3, 2011 at 3:51
  • 3
    for those trying the mysql -e approach. I had to customize the script a bit to work for me. This one requires you to enter the sql password when run. mysql -e "select * from table WHERE query = 'asdasd'" -u root -p --database=DBNAME > text.txt Mar 7, 2012 at 15:04
  • 17
    you could just create a new table for the query (CREATE TABLE SELECT), and then dump that table with mysqldump. That way you can easily restore it later.
    – quano
    Apr 5, 2012 at 23:08
  • 1
    for who wants to use mysqldump and restore the file have a look here: stackoverflow.com/a/2431936/411786
    – Syco
    May 21, 2013 at 13:05
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    To import data that is exported with mysql -e with the -B option to output as tab-delimited, run mysqlimport --ignore-lines=1 --fields-terminated-by='\t'. See: stackoverflow.com/a/17071108/1676044 Mar 25, 2014 at 15:05
280

This should work

mysqldump --databases X --tables Y --where="1 limit 1000000"
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  • 8
    A better example might be something that actually looks like a where clause, such as --where="myColumn < 1000" - the first million rows of every table seems like a strange thing to request ;)
    – ijw
    Jan 4, 2011 at 19:59
  • @ijw If what you want to do is to take an easily reinsert-able backup of your table, you probably don't need a where clause for anything else than limits. Feb 18, 2011 at 14:53
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    @Sagotharan: Well, it's not a query. That's probably why. Aug 16, 2011 at 10:33
  • 92
    !!WARNING!! mysqldump adds a 'DROP TABLE' command at the top of the exported file. That means if you do a partial export then reimport it, you'll lose everything else. Well, I did.
    – Tamlyn
    Sep 27, 2012 at 18:34
  • 42
    Yes, in order to not delete all the data in your table when restoring from the saved data file, make sure you add in the --no-create-info option. See my answer for an example.
    – Gary
    Dec 5, 2013 at 18:28
99

Dump a table using a where query:

mysqldump mydatabase mytable --where="mycolumn = myvalue" --no-create-info > data.sql

Dump an entire table:

mysqldump mydatabase mytable > data.sql

Notes:

  • Replace mydatabase, mytable, and the where statement with your desired values.
  • By default, mysqldump will include DROP TABLE and CREATE TABLE statements in its output. Therefore, if you wish to not delete all the data in your table when restoring from the saved data file, make sure you use the --no-create-info option.
  • You may need to add the appropriate -h, -u, and -p options to the example commands above in order to specify your desired database host, user, and password, respectively.
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  • 2
    This is exactly what I was looking for. This answer should be higher up.
    – musicin3d
    Mar 8, 2021 at 21:59
  • This is what I always use for such use case when I need to dump only certain data - so it's very handy.
    – stamster
    Oct 15, 2021 at 8:54
79

You can dump a query as csv like this:

SELECT * from myTable
INTO OUTFILE '/tmp/querydump.csv'
FIELDS TERMINATED BY ','
ENCLOSED BY '"'
LINES TERMINATED BY '\n'
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  • 10
    What if I want to dump multiple tables.
    – SIFE
    May 6, 2011 at 15:01
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    This creates a file on the machine on which MySQL database is running. So, if you are querying from a remote console this method fails. If there is a way of doing it from a remote console as well, please let me know about it.
    – dknight
    Aug 13, 2012 at 16:34
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    where do it save the file?
    – Techlord
    Aug 16, 2013 at 6:47
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    @dknight I'm assuming you mean a remote console via a terminal console, in which case you can retrieve the dumped file viascp after the connection is terminated. here's an example. scp u[email protected]:/tmp/querydump.csv ~/local.csv
    – Luke
    Aug 2, 2017 at 9:53
  • 1
    It seems to be insecure: #1290 - The MySQL server is running with the --secure-file-priv option so it cannot execute this statement
    – mikep
    Nov 30, 2018 at 15:41
42

You could use --where option on mysqldump to produce an output that you are waiting for:

mysqldump -u root -p test t1 --where="1=1 limit 100" > arquivo.sql

At most 100 rows from test.t1 will be dumped from database table.

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15

If you want to export your last n amount of records into a file, you can run the following:

mysqldump -u user -p -h localhost --where "1=1 ORDER BY id DESC LIMIT 100" database table > export_file.sql

The above will save the last 100 records into export_file.sql, assuming the table you're exporting from has an auto-incremented id column.

You will need to alter the user, localhost, database and table values. You may optionally alter the id column and export file name.

10

MySQL Workbench also has this feature neatly in the GUI. Simply run a query, click the save icon next to Export/Import:

enter image description here

Then choose "SQL INSERT statements (*.sql)" in the list.

enter image description here

Enter a name, click save, confirm the table name and you will have your dump file.

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  • and you have 5gb in query select, does not work May 27 at 1:07
3

Combining much of above here is my real practical example, selecting records based on both meterid & timestamp. I have needed this command for years. Executes really quickly.

mysqldump -uuser -ppassword main_dbo trHourly --where="MeterID =5406 AND TIMESTAMP<'2014-10-13 05:00:00'" --no-create-info --skip-extended-insert | grep  '^INSERT' > 5406.sql
0

mysql Export the query results command line:

mysql -h120.26.133.63 -umiyadb -proot123 miya -e "select * from user where id=1" > mydumpfile.txt
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  • it is working for me in ubuntu , command: mysql -h localhost -u root -p dbname -e "select * from users where id=1;select * from staffs where id=1" --xml > /var/www/html/project/backups/db.xml
    – Ramesh
    Mar 5, 2019 at 6:06
0

If you want to dump specific fields from a table this can be handy

1/ create temporary table with your query.

create table tmptable select field1, field2, field3 from mytable where filter1 and fileter2 ;

2/ dump the whole temporary table. then you have your dump file with your specific fields.

mysqldump -u user -p mydatabase tmptable > my-quick-dump.sql
1
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    – Community Bot
    Oct 12, 2021 at 13:17
0

To dump a specific table,

mysqldump -u root -p dbname -t tablename --where="id<30" > post.sql
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here is my mysqldump to select the same relation from different tables:

 mysqldump --defaults-file=~/.mysql/datenbank.rc -Q -t -c --hex-blob \
 --default-character-set=utf8 --where="`cat where-relation-ids-in.sql`" \
 datenbank table01 table02 table03 table04 > recovered-data.sql

where-relation-ids-in.sql:

relation_id IN (6384291, 6384068, 6383414)

~/.mysql/datenbank.rc

[client]
user=db_user
password=db_password
host=127.0.0.1

Remark: If your relation_id file is huge, the comment of the where clause will be cut in the dump file, but all data is selected correct ;-)

I hope it helps someone ;-)

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