The simplest way of exporting a table data into a text file is by using the SELECT...INTO OUTFILE statement that exports a query result directly into a file on the server host.
The syntax for this statement combines a regular SELECT command with INTO OUTFILE filename at the end. The default output format is the same as it is for the LOAD DATA command. So, the following statement exports the tutorials_tbl table into /tmp/tutorials.txt as a tab-delimited, linefeed-terminated file.
mysql> SELECT * FROM tutorials_tbl -> INTO OUTFILE '/tmp/tutorials.txt';
You can change the output format using various options to indicate how to quote and delimit columns and records. To export the tutorial_tbl table in a CSV format with CRLF-terminated lines, use the following code.
mysql> SELECT * FROM passwd INTO OUTFILE '/tmp/tutorials.txt' -> FIELDS TERMINATED BY ',' ENCLOSED BY '"' -> LINES TERMINATED BY '\r\n';
The SELECT ... INTO OUTFILE has the following properties −
The output file is created directly by the MySQL server, so the filename should indicate where you want the file to be written on the server host. There is no LOCAL version of the statement analogous to the LOCAL version of LOAD DATA.
You must have the MySQL FILE privilege to execute the SELECT ... INTO statement.
The output file must not already exist. This prevents MySQL from clobbering files that may be important.
You should have a login account on the server host or some way to retrieve the file from that host. Otherwise, the SELECT ... INTO OUTFILE command will most likely be of no value to you.
Under UNIX, the file is created world readable and is owned by the MySQL server. This means that although you will be able to read the file, you may not be able to delete it.
The mysqldump program is used to copy or back up tables and databases. It can write the table output either as a Raw Datafile or as a set of INSERT statements that recreate the records in the table.
To dump a table as a datafile, you must specify a --tab option that indicates the directory, where you want the MySQL server to write the file.
For example, to dump the tutorials_tbl table from the TUTORIALS database to a file in the /tmp directory, use a command as shown below.
$ mysqldump -u root -p --no-create-info \ --tab=/tmp tutorials tutorials_tbl password ******
To export a table in SQL format to a file, use the command shown below.
$ mysqldump -u root -p TUTORIALS tutorials_tbl > dump.txt password ******
This will a create file having content as shown below.
-- MySQL dump 8.23 -- -- Host: localhost Database: TUTORIALS --------------------------------------------------------- -- Server version 3.23.58 -- -- Table structure for table `tutorials_tbl` -- CREATE TABLE tutorials_tbl ( tutorial_id int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment, tutorial_title varchar(100) NOT NULL default '', tutorial_author varchar(40) NOT NULL default '', submission_date date default NULL, PRIMARY KEY (tutorial_id), UNIQUE KEY AUTHOR_INDEX (tutorial_author) ) TYPE = MyISAM; -- -- Dumping data for table `tutorials_tbl` -- INSERT INTO tutorials_tbl VALUES (1,'Learn PHP','John Poul','2007-05-24'); INSERT INTO tutorials_tbl VALUES (2,'Learn MySQL','Abdul S','2007-05-24'); INSERT INTO tutorials_tbl VALUES (3,'JAVA Tutorial','Sanjay','2007-05-06');
To dump multiple tables, name them all followed by the database name argument. To dump an entire database, don't name any tables after the database as shown in the following code block.
$ mysqldump -u root -p TUTORIALS > database_dump.txt password ******
To back up all the databases available on your host, use the following code.
$ mysqldump -u root -p --all-databases > database_dump.txt password ******
The --all-databases option is available in the MySQL 3.23.12 version. This method can be used to implement a database backup strategy.
If you want to copy tables or databases from one MySQL server to another, then use the mysqldump with database name and table name.
Run the following command at the source host. This will dump the complete database into dump.txt file.
$ mysqldump -u root -p database_name table_name > dump.txt password *****
You can copy complete database without using a particular table name as explained above.
Now, ftp dump.txt file on another host and use the following command. Before running this command, make sure you have created database_name on destination server.
$ mysql -u root -p database_name < dump.txt password *****
Another way to accomplish this without using an intermediary file is to send the output of the mysqldump directly over the network to the remote MySQL server. If you can connect to both the servers from the host where the source database resides, use the following command (Make sure you have access on both the servers).
$ mysqldump -u root -p database_name \ | mysql -h other-host.com database_name
In mysqldump, half of the command connects to the local server and writes the dump output to the pipe. The remaining half of the command connects to the remote MySQL server on the other-host.com. It reads the pipe for input and sends each statement to the other-host.com server.