Difference between revisions of "Automate MySQL Database Backup via Cronjob"
Docs admin (Talk | contribs) |
Docs admin (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
date=`date -I`; /usr/bin/mysqldump -uDBUSERNAME -pPASSWORD dbname > /home/CPANELUSERNAME/FILE_NAME_HOME_DIRECTORY$date.sql | date=`date -I`; /usr/bin/mysqldump -uDBUSERNAME -pPASSWORD dbname > /home/CPANELUSERNAME/FILE_NAME_HOME_DIRECTORY$date.sql | ||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
− | <br> | + | <br><br><br> |
− | <br><br> | + | |
As an example, the cPanel user is example, Database username is myusername, database name is mydatabase, password is mypassword. The command to enter into the cron entry is | As an example, the cPanel user is example, Database username is myusername, database name is mydatabase, password is mypassword. The command to enter into the cron entry is | ||
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> |
Revision as of 16:07, 6 June 2018
Automating a MySQL Database backup in cPanel is a two step process.
Create the cron entry in cPanel
1) Log into your cPanel
2) Go to Advanced -> Cron Jobs
3) Enter the email you wish to email the results of the cron job to.
4) Scroll down a bit, and either select a common setting (Once a day, once a week, etc) from the drop down. or enter a custom entry for days, weeks, months, etc.
5) For the command to run, enter the following command. Replace CPANELUSERNAME with your cpanel username. Replace DBUSERNAME with your database username. Replace PASSWORD with the database password, and CPANELUSERNAME with your cPanel username.
date=`date -I`; /usr/bin/mysqldump -uDBUSERNAME -pPASSWORD dbname > /home/CPANELUSERNAME/FILE_NAME_HOME_DIRECTORY$date.sql
As an example, the cPanel user is example, Database username is myusername, database name is mydatabase, password is mypassword. The command to enter into the cron entry is
date=`date -I`; /usr/bin/mysqldump -umyusername -pmypassword mydatabase > /home/example/FILE_NAME_HOME_DIRECTORY$date.sql