This is a hands-on way to pull down a set of MySQL dumps from Amazon S3 and restore your database with it
Sister Document - Backup MySQL to Amazon S3 - read that first
# Set our variables
export mysqlpass="ROOTPASSWORD"
function slugify(string) { | |
const a = 'àáäâãåăæçèéëêǵḧìíïîḿńǹñòóöôœṕŕßśșțùúüûǘẃẍÿź·/_,:;' | |
const b = 'aaaaaaaaceeeeghiiiimnnnoooooprssstuuuuuwxyz------' | |
const p = new RegExp(a.split('').join('|'), 'g') | |
return string.toString().toLowerCase() | |
.replace(/\s+/g, '-') // Replace spaces with - | |
.replace(p, c => b.charAt(a.indexOf(c))) // Replace special characters | |
.replace(/&/g, '-and-') // Replace & with 'and' | |
.replace(/[^\w\-]+/g, '') // Remove all non-word characters |
This is a hands-on way to pull down a set of MySQL dumps from Amazon S3 and restore your database with it
Sister Document - Backup MySQL to Amazon S3 - read that first
# Set our variables
export mysqlpass="ROOTPASSWORD"
This is a simple way to backup your MySQL tables to Amazon S3 for a nightly backup - this is all to be done on your server :-)
Sister Document - Restore MySQL from Amazon S3 - read that next
this is for Centos 5.6, see http://s3tools.org/repositories for other systems like ubuntu etc
<?php | |
namespace App; | |
use Illuminate\Auth\Passwords\PasswordBroker as IlluminatePasswordBroker; | |
class PasswordBroker extends IlluminatePasswordBroker | |
{ | |
/** | |
* Send the password reset link via e-mail in a queue |