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#!/bin/sh | |
# Make sure to: | |
# 1) Name this file `backup.sh` and place it in /home/ubuntu | |
# 2) Run sudo apt-get install awscli to install the AWSCLI | |
# 3) Run aws configure (enter s3-authorized IAM user and specify region) | |
# 4) Fill in DB host + name | |
# 5) Create S3 bucket for the backups and fill it in below (set a lifecycle rule to expire files older than X days in the bucket) | |
# 6) Run chmod +x backup.sh | |
# 7) Test it out via ./backup.sh |
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#!/bin/sh | |
# Converts a mysqldump file into a Sqlite 3 compatible file. It also extracts the MySQL `KEY xxxxx` from the | |
# CREATE block and create them in separate commands _after_ all the INSERTs. | |
# Awk is choosen because it's fast and portable. You can use gawk, original awk or even the lightning fast mawk. | |
# The mysqldump file is traversed only once. | |
# Usage: $ ./mysql2sqlite mysqldump-opts db-name | sqlite3 database.sqlite | |
# Example: $ ./mysql2sqlite --no-data -u root -pMySecretPassWord myDbase | sqlite3 database.sqlite |