Before starting a backup, make sure that the cluster is properly configured for performing one. (See Section 17.5.3.3, “Configuration for MySQL Cluster Backups”.)
        The START BACKUP command is used to create a
        backup:
      
START BACKUP [backup_id] [wait_option] [snapshot_option]wait_option: WAIT {STARTED | COMPLETED} | NOWAITsnapshot_option: SNAPSHOTSTART | SNAPSHOTEND
        Successive backups are automatically identified sequentially, so
        the backup_id, an integer greater
        than or equal to 1, is optional; if it is omitted, the next
        available value is used. If an existing
        backup_id value is used, the backup
        fails with the error Backup failed: file already
        exists. If used, the
        backup_id must follow START
        BACKUP immediately, before any other options are used.
      
Prior to MySQL Cluster NDB 6.2.17, 6.3.23, and 6.4.3, backup IDs greater than 2147483648 (231) were not supported correctly. (Bug#43042) Beginning with these versions, the maximum possible backup ID is 4294967296 (232).
          Prior to MySQL Cluster NDB 7.0.5, when starting a backup using
          ndb_mgm -e "START BACKUP", the
          backup_id was required. (Bug#31754)
        
        The wait_option can be used to
        determine when control is returned to the management client
        after a START BACKUP command is issued, as
        shown in the following list:
      
            If NOWAIT is specified, the management
            client displays a prompt immediately, as seen here:
ndb_mgm> START BACKUP NOWAIT
ndb_mgm>
In this case, the management client can be used even while it prints progress information from the backup process.
            With WAIT STARTED the management client
            waits until the backup has started before returning control
            to the user, as shown here:
ndb_mgm> START BACKUP WAIT STARTED
Waiting for started, this may take several minutes
Node 2: Backup 3 started from node 1
ndb_mgm>
            WAIT COMPLETED causes the management
            client to wait until the backup process is complete before
            returning control to the user.
          
        WAIT COMPLETED is the default.
      
        
        
        
        
        Beginning with MySQL Cluster NDB 6.4.0, a
        snapshot_option can be used to
        determine whether the backup matches the state of the cluster
        when START BACKUP was issued, or when it was
        completed. SNAPSHOTSTART causes the backup to
        match the state of the cluster when the backup began;
        SNAPSHOTEND causes the backup to reflect the
        state of the cluster when the backup was finished.
        SNAPSHOTEND is the default, and matches the
        behavior found in previous MySQL Cluster releases.
      
          If you use the SNAPSHOTSTART option with
          START BACKUP, and the
          CompressedBackup parameter is enabled, only
          the data and control files are compressed — the log file
          is not compressed.
        
        If both a wait_option and a
        snapshot_option are used, they may be
        specified in either order. For example, all of the following
        commands are valid, assuming that there is no existing backup
        having 4 as its ID:
      
START BACKUP WAIT STARTED SNAPSHOTSTART START BACKUP SNAPSHOTSTART WAIT STARTED START BACKUP 4 WAIT COMPLETED SNAPSHOTSTART START BACKUP SNAPSHOTEND WAIT COMPLETED START BACKUP 4 NOWAIT SNAPSHOTSTART
The procedure for creating a backup consists of the following steps:
Start the management client (ndb_mgm), if it not running already.
              Execute the START BACKUP command.
              This produces several lines of output indicating the
              progress of the backup, as shown here:
ndb_mgm> START BACKUP
Waiting for completed, this may take several minutes
Node 2: Backup 1 started from node 1
Node 2: Backup 1 started from node 1 completed
 StartGCP: 177 StopGCP: 180
 #Records: 7362 #LogRecords: 0
 Data: 453648 bytes Log: 0 bytes
ndb_mgm>
When the backup has started the management client displays this message:
Backupbackup_idstarted from nodenode_id
              backup_id is the unique
              identifier for this particular backup. This identifier is
              saved in the cluster log, if it has not been configured
              otherwise. node_id is the
              identifier of the management server that is coordinating
              the backup with the data nodes. At this point in the
              backup process the cluster has received and processed the
              backup request. It does not mean that the backup has
              finished. An example of this statement is shown here:
Node 2: Backup 1 started from node 1
The management client indicates with a message like this one that the backup has started:
Backupbackup_idstarted from nodenode_idcompleted
              As is the case for the notification that the backup has
              started, backup_id is the
              unique identifier for this particular backup, and
              node_id is the node ID of the
              management server that is coordinating the backup with the
              data nodes. This output is accompanied by additional
              information including relevant global checkpoints, the
              number of records backed up, and the size of the data, as
              shown here:
Node 2: Backup 1 started from node 1 completed StartGCP: 177 StopGCP: 180 #Records: 7362 #LogRecords: 0 Data: 453648 bytes Log: 0 bytes
        It is also possible to perform a backup from the system shell by
        invoking ndb_mgm with the -e
        or --execute option, as shown in this example:
      
shell> ndb_mgm -e "START BACKUP 6 WAIT COMPLETED SNAPSHOTSTART"
        When using START BACKUP in this way, you must
        specify the backup ID.
      
        Cluster backups are created by default in the
        BACKUP subdirectory of the
        DataDir on each data node. This can be
        overridden for one or more data nodes individually, or for all
        cluster data nodes in the config.ini file
        using the BackupDataDir configuration
        parameter as discussed in
        Identifying
        Data Nodes. The backup files created for a backup with a
        given backup_id are stored in a
        subdirectory named
        BACKUP-
        in the backup directory.
      backup_id
To abort a backup that is already in progress:
Start the management client.
Execute this command:
ndb_mgm> ABORT BACKUP backup_id
            The number backup_id is the
            identifier of the backup that was included in the response
            of the management client when the backup was started (in the
            message Backup ).
          backup_id
            started from node
            management_node_id
            The management client will acknowledge the abort request
            with Abort of backup
            .
          backup_id ordered
At this point, the management client has not yet received a response from the cluster data nodes to this request, and the backup has not yet actually been aborted.
After the backup has been aborted, the management client will report this fact in a manner similar to what is shown here:
Node 1: Backup 3 started from 5 has been aborted. Error: 1321 - Backup aborted by user request: Permanent error: User defined error Node 3: Backup 3 started from 5 has been aborted. Error: 1323 - 1323: Permanent error: Internal error Node 2: Backup 3 started from 5 has been aborted. Error: 1323 - 1323: Permanent error: Internal error Node 4: Backup 3 started from 5 has been aborted. Error: 1323 - 1323: Permanent error: Internal error
            In this example, we have shown sample output for a cluster
            with 4 data nodes, where the sequence number of the backup
            to be aborted is 3, and the management
            node to which the cluster management client is connected has
            the node ID 5. The first node to complete
            its part in aborting the backup reports that the reason for
            the abort was due to a request by the user. (The remaining
            nodes report that the backup was aborted due to an
            unspecified internal error.)
          
              There is no guarantee that the cluster nodes respond to an
              ABORT BACKUP command in any particular
              order.
            
            The Backup  messages mean that the backup has been
            terminated and that all files relating to this backup have
            been removed from the cluster file system.
          backup_id
            started from node
            management_node_id has been
            aborted
It is also possible to abort a backup in progress from a system shell using this command:
shell> ndb_mgm -e "ABORT BACKUP backup_id"
          If there is no backup having the ID
          backup_id running when an
          ABORT BACKUP is issued, the management
          client makes no response, nor is it indicated in the cluster
          log that an invalid abort command was sent.
        


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