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Python utility to clone a row in mysql, from a target to source database, field by field

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clone-row

Clone a row from one database to another, supporting mysql and postgres

Features

  • Ignore schema differences, common columns will be cloned regardless of definitions that are missing from target or source databases
  • Fail-safe operation, with automated and manual rollback procedures provided
  • Checkpointing, so you can check the target system before 'committing' the changes
  • Check that the encoding of source and target databases matches
  • Hint at schema (and encoding) updates required, providing SQL to bring source table in line with target, or vice versa
  • Copy "transaction logs" (backups and update statements) to a remote log server as part of deployment. Handy if you have multiple developers releasing data updates from thier own machines and you need to keep an audit
  • Ignore columns you never want to update (typically serials)
  • Setup database aliases for ease of use (e.g. local, dev, test, integration, prod)

There are existing tools for this!

There are many industry standard tools that could (and should) be used instead of clone-row, if applicable. Examples include mysqldump, replication and simply select into outfile. However, I have found that there are several use-cases for this application:

  • Many databases containing rich data which is modified little and often
  • Wide tables with multiple changes that are hard to keep track of during the release cycle
  • No version control for data (or data insertion scripts), making changes hard to audit
  • No replication solution or budget for installing one
  • No CMS for making simple changes to data rows across multiple databases

Configuration

  • An example configration file CloneRow.example.cfg is provided
  • This needs to be copied to CloneRow.cfg in the same directory and configured for your system
  • The main sections of the config file are host aliases. These allow you to configre multiple databases hosts and refer to them easily from the command line.
[host.example_one]
username: example_one_user
password: example_one_pass
hostname: one.example.com
port: 3306
database: example_one_db
# valid options for driver are mysql and psql
driver: mysql
  • CloneRow.cfg needs to have 0600 permissions as it is likely to contain database passwords. If you do not set the correct permissions the script will not run.
  • Use 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost. If you speciy localhost, the driver will use unix sockets and ignore the port argument you have configured
  • If you don't need to use a password to access your database, leave the value as empty, e.g. password: (see example linked above)

Usage

usage: CloneRow.py [-h] [--schema_only] [--unload_dir UNLOAD_DIR]
                   [--feeling_lucky]
                   {example_one,example_two,example_nopass,example_one_tunnelled}
                   {example_one,example_two,example_nopass,example_one_tunnelled}
                   table [column] [filter]

positional arguments:
  {example_one,example_two}  source host alias (for host.* config section)
  {example_one,example_two}  target host alias (for host.* section)
  table                      table to consider: select from <table>
  column                     column to consider (default: None)
  filter                     value to filter column: where column = <filter> (default: None)

optional arguments:
  -h, --help                 show this help message and exit
  --schema_only, -s          diff schema only, do not consider data (column and
                             filter not required) (default: False)
  --unload_dir UNLOAD_DIR, -u UNLOAD_DIR
                             directory to unload backups and update sql dumps to (default: /tmp)
  --feeling_lucky, -f        do not prompt the user to restore, backup SQL will still be logged (default: False)

Usage example

Taking the following two host aliases (defined in your CloneRow.cfg):

[host.example_one]
username: example_one_user
password: example_one_pass
hostname: one.example.com
port: 3306
database: example_one_db
driver: psql

[host.example_two]
username: example_two_user
password: example_two_pass
hostname: two.example.com
port: 3306
database: example_two_db
driver: psql

[table.my_table]
ignore_columns: id,lastUpdated

If the script is run as follows, example_one is the source and example_two is the target:

CloneRow.py example_one example_two my_table my_column my_filter

The equivalent in 'sql':

select
    * -- (everything apart from id and lastUpdated, which are ignored by the ignore_columns config for my_table)
into
    example_two.my_table
from
    example_one.my_table
where
    example_one.my_table.my_column = my_filter

If you want to just show schema differences between the two databases on a single table, you can do:

CloneRow.py --schema_only example_one example_two my_table

This saves you having to find a column filter if you just want to work out the schema updates

Exit Codes

  • 0: successfully executed
  • 1: CloneRow.py encountered an error during operation, there should be an error message and stack trace printed
  • 2: Invalid arguments supplied (check the error message)
  • 3: CloneRow.cfg is not configured correctly
  • 4: CloneRow.cfg is not secure (chmod 0600)
  • 5: No rows were updated (e.g. all target and source data was identical)
  • 6: There were changes but CloneRow.cfg has been configured such that they were ignored (e.g. table.my_table ignore_columns)

Installation

Prerequisites

  • Python 2.7: Unfortunately we're dependent on python 2.7 due to our dependency on MySQL-python
  • python-dev
  • python-pip
  • python-psycopg2
  • libmysqlclient-dev

ubuntu

sudo apt-get install python-pip python-dev python-psycopg2 libmysqlclient-dev

arch

TODO

mac

TODO

Setup clone-row

git clone https://github.com/lathonez/clone-row.git
sudo pip install -r clone-row/requirements.txt
# add the following to .bashrc
export PATH=$PATH:/path/to/clone-row

Acknowledgements

This project relies heavily on these libs:

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