mysqlpump

MYSQLPUMP(1)                 MySQL Database System                MYSQLPUMP(1)

NAME
       mysqlpump - a database backup program

SYNOPSIS
       mysqlpump [options] [db_name [tbl_name ...]]

DESCRIPTION
       o   mysqlpump Invocation Syntax

       o   mysqlpump Option Summary

       o   mysqlpump Option Descriptions

       o   mysqlpump Object Selection

       o   mysqlpump Parallel Processing

       o   mysqlpump Restrictions

       The mysqlpump client utility performs logical backups, producing a set
       of SQL statements that can be executed to reproduce the original
       database object definitions and table data. It dumps one or more MySQL
       databases for backup or transfer to another SQL server.

           Note
           mysqlpump is deprecated as of MySQL 8.0.34; expect it to be removed
           in a future version of MySQL. You can use such MySQL programs as
           mysqldump and MySQL Shell to perform logical backups, dump
           databases, and similar tasks instead.

           Tip
           Consider using the MySQL Shell dump utilities[1], which provide
           parallel dumping with multiple threads, file compression, and
           progress information display, as well as cloud features such as
           Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Object Storage streaming, and MySQL
           HeatWave Service compatibility checks and modifications. Dumps can
           be easily imported into a MySQL Server instance or a MySQL HeatWave
           Service DB System using the MySQL Shell load dump utilities[2].
           Installation instructions for MySQL Shell can be found here[3].

       mysqlpump features include:

       o   Parallel processing of databases, and of objects within databases,
           to speed up the dump process

       o   Better control over which databases and database objects (tables,
           stored programs, user accounts) to dump

       o   Dumping of user accounts as account-management statements (CREATE
           USER, GRANT) rather than as inserts into the mysql system database

       o   Capability of creating compressed output

       o   Progress indicator (the values are estimates)

       o   For dump file reloading, faster secondary index creation for InnoDB
           tables by adding indexes after rows are inserted

           Note
           mysqlpump uses MySQL features introduced in MySQL 5.7, and thus
           assumes use with MySQL 5.7 or higher.

       mysqlpump requires at least the SELECT privilege for dumped tables,
       SHOW VIEW for dumped views, TRIGGER for dumped triggers, and LOCK
       TABLES if the --single-transaction option is not used. The SELECT
       privilege on the mysql system database is required to dump user
       definitions. Certain options might require other privileges as noted in
       the option descriptions.

       To reload a dump file, you must have the privileges required to execute
       the statements that it contains, such as the appropriate CREATE
       privileges for objects created by those statements.

           Note
           A dump made using PowerShell on Windows with output redirection
           creates a file that has UTF-16 encoding:

               mysqlpump [options] > dump.sql

           However, UTF-16 is not permitted as a connection character set (see
           Section 12.4, "Connection Character Sets and Collations"), so the
           dump file cannot be loaded correctly. To work around this issue,
           use the --result-file option, which creates the output in ASCII
           format:

               mysqlpump [options] --result-file=dump.sql
       mysqlpump Invocation Syntax

       By default, mysqlpump dumps all databases (with certain exceptions
       noted in mysqlpump Restrictions). To specify this behavior explicitly,
       use the --all-databases option:

           mysqlpump --all-databases

       To dump a single database, or certain tables within that database, name
       the database on the command line, optionally followed by table names:

           mysqlpump db_name
           mysqlpump db_name tbl_name1 tbl_name2 ...

       To treat all name arguments as database names, use the --databases
       option:

           mysqlpump --databases db_name1 db_name2 ...

       By default, mysqlpump does not dump user account definitions, even if
       you dump the mysql system database that contains the grant tables. To
       dump grant table contents as logical definitions in the form of CREATE
       USER and GRANT statements, use the --users option and suppress all
       database dumping:

           mysqlpump --exclude-databases=% --users

       In the preceding command, % is a wildcard that matches all database
       names for the --exclude-databases option.

       mysqlpump supports several options for including or excluding
       databases, tables, stored programs, and user definitions. See mysqlpump
       Object Selection.

       To reload a dump file, execute the statements that it contains. For
       example, use the mysql client:

           mysqlpump [options] > dump.sql
           mysql < dump.sql

       The following discussion provides additional mysqlpump usage examples.

       To see a list of the options mysqlpump supports, issue the command
       mysqlpump --help.  mysqlpump Option Summary

       mysqlpump supports the following options, which can be specified on the
       command line or in the [mysqlpump] and [client] groups of an option
       file. (Prior to MySQL 8.0.20, mysqlpump read the [mysql_dump] group
       rather than [mysqlpump]. As of 8.0.20, [mysql_dump] is still accepted
       but is deprecated.) For information about option files used by MySQL
       programs, see Section 6.2.2.2, "Using Option Files".  mysqlpump Option
       Descriptions

       o   --help, -?

           +--------------------+--------+
           |Command-Line Format | --help |
           +--------------------+--------+
           Display a help message and exit.

       o   --add-drop-database

           +--------------------+---------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --add-drop-database |
           +--------------------+---------------------+
           Write a DROP DATABASE statement before each CREATE DATABASE
           statement.

               Note
               In MySQL 8.0, the mysql schema is considered a system schema
               that cannot be dropped by end users. If --add-drop-database is
               used with --all-databases or with --databases where the list of
               schemas to be dumped includes mysql, the dump file contains a
               DROP DATABASE `mysql` statement that causes an error when the
               dump file is reloaded.

               Instead, to use --add-drop-database, use --databases with a
               list of schemas to be dumped, where the list does not include
               mysql.

       o   --add-drop-table

           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --add-drop-table |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           Write a DROP TABLE statement before each CREATE TABLE statement.

       o   --add-drop-user

           +--------------------+-----------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --add-drop-user |
           +--------------------+-----------------+
           Write a DROP USER statement before each CREATE USER statement.

       o   --add-locks

           +--------------------+-------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --add-locks |
           +--------------------+-------------+
           Surround each table dump with LOCK TABLES and UNLOCK TABLES
           statements. This results in faster inserts when the dump file is
           reloaded. See Section 10.2.5.1, "Optimizing INSERT Statements".

           This option does not work with parallelism because INSERT
           statements from different tables can be interleaved and UNLOCK
           TABLES following the end of the inserts for one table could release
           locks on tables for which inserts remain.

           --add-locks and --single-transaction are mutually exclusive.

       o   --all-databases, -A

           +--------------------+-----------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --all-databases |
           +--------------------+-----------------+
           Dump all databases (with certain exceptions noted in mysqlpump
           Restrictions). This is the default behavior if no other is
           specified explicitly.

           --all-databases and --databases are mutually exclusive.

               Note
               See the --add-drop-database description for information about
               an incompatibility of that option with --all-databases.
           Prior to MySQL 8.0, the --routines and --events options for
           mysqldump and mysqlpump were not required to include stored
           routines and events when using the --all-databases option: The dump
           included the mysql system database, and therefore also the
           mysql.proc and mysql.event tables containing stored routine and
           event definitions. As of MySQL 8.0, the mysql.event and mysql.proc
           tables are not used. Definitions for the corresponding objects are
           stored in data dictionary tables, but those tables are not dumped.
           To include stored routines and events in a dump made using
           --all-databases, use the --routines and --events options
           explicitly.

       o   --bind-address=ip_address

           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --bind-address=ip_address |
           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           On a computer having multiple network interfaces, use this option
           to select which interface to use for connecting to the MySQL
           server.

       o   --character-sets-dir=path

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --character-sets- |
           |                    | dir=dir_name      |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | Directory name    |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           The directory where character sets are installed. See
           Section 12.15, "Character Set Configuration".

       o   --column-statistics

           +--------------------+---------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --column-statistics |
           +--------------------+---------------------+
           |Type                | Boolean             |
           +--------------------+---------------------+
           |Default Value       | OFF                 |
           +--------------------+---------------------+
           Add ANALYZE TABLE statements to the output to generate histogram
           statistics for dumped tables when the dump file is reloaded. This
           option is disabled by default because histogram generation for
           large tables can take a long time.

       o   --complete-insert

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --complete-insert |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Write complete INSERT statements that include column names.

       o   --compress, -C

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --compress[={OFF|ON}] |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Deprecated          | 8.0.18                |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | Boolean               |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Default Value       | OFF                   |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           Compress all information sent between the client and the server if
           possible. See Section 6.2.8, "Connection Compression Control".

           As of MySQL 8.0.18, this option is deprecated. Expect it to be
           removed in a future version of MySQL. See the section called
           "Configuring Legacy Connection Compression".

       o   --compress-output=algorithm

           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --compress-      |
           |                    | output=algorithm |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Type                | Enumeration      |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Valid Values        |                  |
           |                    |            LZ4   |
           |                    |                  |
           |                    |            ZLIB  |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           By default, mysqlpump does not compress output. This option
           specifies output compression using the specified algorithm.
           Permitted algorithms are LZ4 and ZLIB.

           To uncompress compressed output, you must have an appropriate
           utility. If the system commands lz4 and openssl zlib are not
           available, MySQL distributions include lz4_decompress and
           zlib_decompress utilities that can be used to decompress mysqlpump
           output that was compressed using the --compress-output=LZ4 and
           --compress-output=ZLIB options. For more information, see
           lz4_decompress(1), and zlib_decompress(1).

       o   --compression-algorithms=value

           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --compression-          |
           |                    | algorithms=value        |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Introduced          | 8.0.18                  |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Type                | Set                     |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Default Value       | uncompressed            |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Valid Values        |                         |
           |                    |            zlib         |
           |                    |                         |
           |                    |            zstd         |
           |                    |                         |
           |                    |            uncompressed |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           The permitted compression algorithms for connections to the server.
           The available algorithms are the same as for the
           protocol_compression_algorithms system variable. The default value
           is uncompressed.

           For more information, see Section 6.2.8, "Connection Compression
           Control".

           This option was added in MySQL 8.0.18.

       o   --databases, -B

           +--------------------+-------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --databases |
           +--------------------+-------------+
           Normally, mysqlpump treats the first name argument on the command
           line as a database name and any following names as table names.
           With this option, it treats all name arguments as database names.
           CREATE DATABASE statements are included in the output before each
           new database.

           --all-databases and --databases are mutually exclusive.

               Note
               See the --add-drop-database description for information about
               an incompatibility of that option with --databases.

       o   --debug[=debug_options], -# [debug_options]

           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --debug[=debug_options]    |
           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           |Type                | String                     |
           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           |Default Value       | d:t:O,/tmp/mysqlpump.trace |
           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           Write a debugging log. A typical debug_options string is
           d:t:o,file_name. The default is d:t:O,/tmp/mysqlpump.trace.

           This option is available only if MySQL was built using WITH_DEBUG.
           MySQL release binaries provided by Oracle are not built using this
           option.

       o   --debug-check

           +--------------------+---------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --debug-check |
           +--------------------+---------------+
           |Type                | Boolean       |
           +--------------------+---------------+
           |Default Value       | FALSE         |
           +--------------------+---------------+
           Print some debugging information when the program exits.

           This option is available only if MySQL was built using WITH_DEBUG.
           MySQL release binaries provided by Oracle are not built using this
           option.

       o   --debug-info, -T

           +--------------------+--------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --debug-info |
           +--------------------+--------------+
           |Type                | Boolean      |
           +--------------------+--------------+
           |Default Value       | FALSE        |
           +--------------------+--------------+
           Print debugging information and memory and CPU usage statistics
           when the program exits.

           This option is available only if MySQL was built using WITH_DEBUG.
           MySQL release binaries provided by Oracle are not built using this
           option.

       o   --default-auth=plugin

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --default-auth=plugin |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | String                |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           A hint about which client-side authentication plugin to use. See
           Section 8.2.17, "Pluggable Authentication".

       o   --default-character-set=charset_name

           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --default-character- |
           |                    | set=charset_name     |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Type                | String               |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Default Value       | utf8                 |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           Use charset_name as the default character set. See Section 12.15,
           "Character Set Configuration". If no character set is specified,
           mysqlpump uses utf8mb4.

       o   --default-parallelism=N

           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --default-parallelism=N |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Type                | Integer                 |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Default Value       | 2                       |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           The default number of threads for each parallel processing queue.
           The default is 2.

           The --parallel-schemas option also affects parallelism and can be
           used to override the default number of threads. For more
           information, see mysqlpump Parallel Processing.

           With --default-parallelism=0 and no --parallel-schemas options,
           mysqlpump runs as a single-threaded process and creates no queues.

           With parallelism enabled, it is possible for output from different
           databases to be interleaved.

       o   --defaults-extra-file=file_name

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --defaults-extra- |
           |                    | file=file_name    |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | File name         |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Read this option file after the global option file but (on Unix)
           before the user option file. If the file does not exist or is
           otherwise inaccessible, an error occurs. If file_name is not an
           absolute path name, it is interpreted relative to the current
           directory.

           For additional information about this and other option-file
           options, see Section 6.2.2.3, "Command-Line Options that Affect
           Option-File Handling".

       o   --defaults-file=file_name

           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --defaults-file=file_name |
           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           |Type                | File name                 |
           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           Use only the given option file. If the file does not exist or is
           otherwise inaccessible, an error occurs. If file_name is not an
           absolute path name, it is interpreted relative to the current
           directory.

           Exception: Even with --defaults-file, client programs read
           .mylogin.cnf.

           For additional information about this and other option-file
           options, see Section 6.2.2.3, "Command-Line Options that Affect
           Option-File Handling".

       o   --defaults-group-suffix=str

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --defaults-group- |
           |                    | suffix=str        |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Read not only the usual option groups, but also groups with the
           usual names and a suffix of str. For example, mysqlpump normally
           reads the [client] and [mysqlpump] groups. If this option is given
           as --defaults-group-suffix=_other, mysqlpump also reads the
           [client_other] and [mysqlpump_other] groups.

           For additional information about this and other option-file
           options, see Section 6.2.2.3, "Command-Line Options that Affect
           Option-File Handling".

       o   --defer-table-indexes

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --defer-table-indexes |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | Boolean               |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Default Value       | TRUE                  |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           In the dump output, defer index creation for each table until after
           its rows have been loaded. This works for all storage engines, but
           for InnoDB applies only for secondary indexes.

           This option is enabled by default; use --skip-defer-table-indexes
           to disable it.

       o   --events

           +--------------------+----------+
           |Command-Line Format | --events |
           +--------------------+----------+
           |Type                | Boolean  |
           +--------------------+----------+
           |Default Value       | TRUE     |
           +--------------------+----------+
           Include Event Scheduler events for the dumped databases in the
           output. Event dumping requires the EVENT privileges for those
           databases.

           The output generated by using --events contains CREATE EVENT
           statements to create the events.

           This option is enabled by default; use --skip-events to disable it.

       o   --exclude-databases=db_list

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --exclude-        |
           |                    | databases=db_list |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Do not dump the databases in db_list, which is a list of one or
           more comma-separated database names. Multiple instances of this
           option are additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object
           Selection.

       o   --exclude-events=event_list

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --exclude-        |
           |                    | events=event_list |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Do not dump the databases in event_list, which is a list of one or
           more comma-separated event names. Multiple instances of this option
           are additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --exclude-routines=routine_list

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --exclude-            |
           |                    | routines=routine_list |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | String                |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           Do not dump the events in routine_list, which is a list of one or
           more comma-separated routine (stored procedure or function) names.
           Multiple instances of this option are additive. For more
           information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --exclude-tables=table_list

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --exclude-        |
           |                    | tables=table_list |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Do not dump the tables in table_list, which is a list of one or
           more comma-separated table names. Multiple instances of this option
           are additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --exclude-triggers=trigger_list

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --exclude-            |
           |                    | triggers=trigger_list |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | String                |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           Do not dump the triggers in trigger_list, which is a list of one or
           more comma-separated trigger names. Multiple instances of this
           option are additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object
           Selection.

       o   --exclude-users=user_list

           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --exclude-users=user_list |
           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           |Type                | String                    |
           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           Do not dump the user accounts in user_list, which is a list of one
           or more comma-separated account names. Multiple instances of this
           option are additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object
           Selection.

       o   --extended-insert=N

           +--------------------+---------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --extended-insert=N |
           +--------------------+---------------------+
           Write INSERT statements using multiple-row syntax that includes
           several VALUES lists. This results in a smaller dump file and
           speeds up inserts when the file is reloaded.

           The option value indicates the number of rows to include in each
           INSERT statement. The default is 250. A value of 1 produces one
           INSERT statement per table row.

       o   --get-server-public-key

           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --get-server-public-key |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Type                | Boolean                 |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           Request from the server the public key required for RSA key
           pair-based password exchange. This option applies to clients that
           authenticate with the caching_sha2_password authentication plugin.
           For that plugin, the server does not send the public key unless
           requested. This option is ignored for accounts that do not
           authenticate with that plugin. It is also ignored if RSA-based
           password exchange is not used, as is the case when the client
           connects to the server using a secure connection.

           If --server-public-key-path=file_name is given and specifies a
           valid public key file, it takes precedence over
           --get-server-public-key.

           For information about the caching_sha2_password plugin, see
           Section 8.4.1.2, "Caching SHA-2 Pluggable Authentication".

       o   --hex-blob

           +--------------------+------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --hex-blob |
           +--------------------+------------+
           Dump binary columns using hexadecimal notation (for example, 'abc'
           becomes 0x616263). The affected data types are BINARY, VARBINARY,
           BLOB types, BIT, all spatial data types, and other non-binary data
           types when used with the binary character set.

       o   --host=host_name, -h host_name

           +--------------------+--------+
           |Command-Line Format | --host |
           +--------------------+--------+
           Dump data from the MySQL server on the given host.

       o   --include-databases=db_list

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --include-        |
           |                    | databases=db_list |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Dump the databases in db_list, which is a list of one or more
           comma-separated database names. The dump includes all objects in
           the named databases. Multiple instances of this option are
           additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --include-events=event_list

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --include-        |
           |                    | events=event_list |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Dump the events in event_list, which is a list of one or more
           comma-separated event names. Multiple instances of this option are
           additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --include-routines=routine_list

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --include-            |
           |                    | routines=routine_list |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | String                |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           Dump the routines in routine_list, which is a list of one or more
           comma-separated routine (stored procedure or function) names.
           Multiple instances of this option are additive. For more
           information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --include-tables=table_list

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --include-        |
           |                    | tables=table_list |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Dump the tables in table_list, which is a list of one or more
           comma-separated table names. Multiple instances of this option are
           additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --include-triggers=trigger_list

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --include-            |
           |                    | triggers=trigger_list |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | String                |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           Dump the triggers in trigger_list, which is a list of one or more
           comma-separated trigger names. Multiple instances of this option
           are additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --include-users=user_list

           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --include-users=user_list |
           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           |Type                | String                    |
           +--------------------+---------------------------+
           Dump the user accounts in user_list, which is a list of one or more
           comma-separated user names. Multiple instances of this option are
           additive. For more information, see mysqlpump Object Selection.

       o   --insert-ignore

           +--------------------+-----------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --insert-ignore |
           +--------------------+-----------------+
           Write INSERT IGNORE statements rather than INSERT statements.

       o   --log-error-file=file_name

           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --log-error-file=file_name |
           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           |Type                | File name                  |
           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           Log warnings and errors by appending them to the named file. If
           this option is not given, mysqlpump writes warnings and errors to
           the standard error output.

       o   --login-path=name

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --login-path=name |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           Read options from the named login path in the .mylogin.cnf login
           path file. A "login path" is an option group containing options
           that specify which MySQL server to connect to and which account to
           authenticate as. To create or modify a login path file, use the
           mysql_config_editor utility. See mysql_config_editor(1).

           For additional information about this and other option-file
           options, see Section 6.2.2.3, "Command-Line Options that Affect
           Option-File Handling".

       o   --max-allowed-packet=N

           +--------------------+------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --max-allowed-packet=N |
           +--------------------+------------------------+
           |Type                | Numeric                |
           +--------------------+------------------------+
           |Default Value       | 25165824               |
           +--------------------+------------------------+
           The maximum size of the buffer for client/server communication. The
           default is 24MB, the maximum is 1GB.

       o   --net-buffer-length=N

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --net-buffer-length=N |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | Numeric               |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Default Value       | 1047552               |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           The initial size of the buffer for client/server communication.
           When creating multiple-row INSERT statements (as with the
           --extended-insert option), mysqlpump creates rows up to N bytes
           long. If you use this option to increase the value, ensure that the
           MySQL server net_buffer_length system variable has a value at least
           this large.

       o   --no-create-db

           +--------------------+----------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --no-create-db |
           +--------------------+----------------+
           Suppress any CREATE DATABASE statements that might otherwise be
           included in the output.

       o   --no-create-info, -t

           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --no-create-info |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           Do not write CREATE TABLE statements that create each dumped table.

       o   --no-defaults

           +--------------------+---------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --no-defaults |
           +--------------------+---------------+
           Do not read any option files. If program startup fails due to
           reading unknown options from an option file, --no-defaults can be
           used to prevent them from being read.

           The exception is that the .mylogin.cnf file is read in all cases,
           if it exists. This permits passwords to be specified in a safer way
           than on the command line even when --no-defaults is used. To create
           .mylogin.cnf, use the mysql_config_editor utility. See
           mysql_config_editor(1).

           For additional information about this and other option-file
           options, see Section 6.2.2.3, "Command-Line Options that Affect
           Option-File Handling".

       o   --parallel-schemas=[N:]db_list

           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --parallel-             |
           |                    | schemas=[N:]schema_list |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Type                | String                  |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           Create a queue for processing the databases in db_list, which is a
           list of one or more comma-separated database names. If N is given,
           the queue uses N threads. If N is not given, the
           --default-parallelism option determines the number of queue
           threads.

           Multiple instances of this option create multiple queues.
           mysqlpump also creates a default queue to use for databases not
           named in any --parallel-schemas option, and for dumping user
           definitions if command options select them. For more information,
           see mysqlpump Parallel Processing.

       o   --password[=password], -p[password]

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --password[=password] |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | String                |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           The password of the MySQL account used for connecting to the
           server. The password value is optional. If not given, mysqlpump
           prompts for one. If given, there must be no space between
           --password= or -p and the password following it. If no password
           option is specified, the default is to send no password.

           Specifying a password on the command line should be considered
           insecure. To avoid giving the password on the command line, use an
           option file. See Section 8.1.2.1, "End-User Guidelines for Password
           Security".

           To explicitly specify that there is no password and that mysqlpump
           should not prompt for one, use the --skip-password option.

       o   --password1[=pass_val] The password for multifactor authentication
           factor 1 of the MySQL account used for connecting to the server.
           The password value is optional. If not given, mysqlpump prompts for
           one. If given, there must be no space between --password1= and the
           password following it. If no password option is specified, the
           default is to send no password.

           Specifying a password on the command line should be considered
           insecure. To avoid giving the password on the command line, use an
           option file. See Section 8.1.2.1, "End-User Guidelines for Password
           Security".

           To explicitly specify that there is no password and that mysqlpump
           should not prompt for one, use the --skip-password1 option.

           --password1 and --password are synonymous, as are --skip-password1
           and --skip-password.

       o   --password2[=pass_val] The password for multifactor authentication
           factor 2 of the MySQL account used for connecting to the server.
           The semantics of this option are similar to the semantics for
           --password1; see the description of that option for details.

       o   --password3[=pass_val] The password for multifactor authentication
           factor 3 of the MySQL account used for connecting to the server.
           The semantics of this option are similar to the semantics for
           --password1; see the description of that option for details.

       o   --plugin-dir=dir_name

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --plugin-dir=dir_name |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | Directory name        |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           The directory in which to look for plugins. Specify this option if
           the --default-auth option is used to specify an authentication
           plugin but mysqlpump does not find it. See Section 8.2.17,
           "Pluggable Authentication".

       o   --port=port_num, -P port_num

           +--------------------+-----------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --port=port_num |
           +--------------------+-----------------+
           |Type                | Numeric         |
           +--------------------+-----------------+
           |Default Value       | 3306            |
           +--------------------+-----------------+
           For TCP/IP connections, the port number to use.

       o   --print-defaults

           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --print-defaults |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           Print the program name and all options that it gets from option
           files.

           For additional information about this and other option-file
           options, see Section 6.2.2.3, "Command-Line Options that Affect
           Option-File Handling".

       o   --protocol={TCP|SOCKET|PIPE|MEMORY}

           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --protocol=type   |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Type                | String            |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Default Value       | [see text]        |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           |Valid Values        |                   |
           |                    |            TCP    |
           |                    |                   |
           |                    |            SOCKET |
           |                    |                   |
           |                    |            PIPE   |
           |                    |                   |
           |                    |            MEMORY |
           +--------------------+-------------------+
           The transport protocol to use for connecting to the server. It is
           useful when the other connection parameters normally result in use
           of a protocol other than the one you want. For details on the
           permissible values, see Section 6.2.7, "Connection Transport
           Protocols".

       o   --replace

           +--------------------+-----------+
           |Command-Line Format | --replace |
           +--------------------+-----------+
           Write REPLACE statements rather than INSERT statements.

       o   --result-file=file_name

           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --result-file=file_name |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Type                | File name               |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           Direct output to the named file. The result file is created and its
           previous contents overwritten, even if an error occurs while
           generating the dump.

           This option should be used on Windows to prevent newline \n
           characters from being converted to \r\n carriage return/newline
           sequences.

       o   --routines

           +--------------------+------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --routines |
           +--------------------+------------+
           |Type                | Boolean    |
           +--------------------+------------+
           |Default Value       | TRUE       |
           +--------------------+------------+
           Include stored routines (procedures and functions) for the dumped
           databases in the output. This option requires the global SELECT
           privilege.

           The output generated by using --routines contains CREATE PROCEDURE
           and CREATE FUNCTION statements to create the routines.

           This option is enabled by default; use --skip-routines to disable
           it.

       o   --server-public-key-path=file_name

           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --server-public-key- |
           |                    | path=file_name       |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Type                | File name            |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           The path name to a file in PEM format containing a client-side copy
           of the public key required by the server for RSA key pair-based
           password exchange. This option applies to clients that authenticate
           with the sha256_password or caching_sha2_password authentication
           plugin. This option is ignored for accounts that do not
           authenticate with one of those plugins. It is also ignored if
           RSA-based password exchange is not used, as is the case when the
           client connects to the server using a secure connection.

           If --server-public-key-path=file_name is given and specifies a
           valid public key file, it takes precedence over
           --get-server-public-key.

           For sha256_password, this option applies only if MySQL was built
           using OpenSSL.

           For information about the sha256_password and caching_sha2_password
           plugins, see Section 8.4.1.3, "SHA-256 Pluggable Authentication",
           and Section 8.4.1.2, "Caching SHA-2 Pluggable Authentication".

       o   --set-charset

           +--------------------+---------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --set-charset |
           +--------------------+---------------+
           Write SET NAMES default_character_set to the output.

           This option is enabled by default. To disable it and suppress the
           SET NAMES statement, use --skip-set-charset.

       o   --set-gtid-purged=value

           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --set-gtid-purged=value |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Type                | Enumeration             |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Default Value       | AUTO                    |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           |Valid Values        |                         |
           |                    |            OFF          |
           |                    |                         |
           |                    |            ON           |
           |                    |                         |
           |                    |            AUTO         |
           +--------------------+-------------------------+
           This option enables control over global transaction ID (GTID)
           information written to the dump file, by indicating whether to add
           a SET @@GLOBAL.gtid_purged statement to the output. This option may
           also cause a statement to be written to the output that disables
           binary logging while the dump file is being reloaded.

           The following table shows the permitted option values. The default
           value is AUTO.

           +------+----------------------------+
           |Value | Meaning                    |
           +------+----------------------------+
           |OFF   | Add no SET statement to    |
           |      | the output.                |
           +------+----------------------------+
           |ON    | Add a SET statement to the |
           |      | output. An error occurs if |
           |      |                   GTIDs    |
           |      | are not enabled on the     |
           |      | server.                    |
           +------+----------------------------+
           |AUTO  | Add a SET statement to the |
           |      | output if GTIDs are        |
           |      |                   enabled  |
           |      | on the server.             |
           +------+----------------------------+
           The --set-gtid-purged option has the following effect on binary
           logging when the dump file is reloaded:

           o   --set-gtid-purged=OFF: SET @@SESSION.SQL_LOG_BIN=0; is not
               added to the output.

           o   --set-gtid-purged=ON: SET @@SESSION.SQL_LOG_BIN=0; is added to
               the output.

           o   --set-gtid-purged=AUTO: SET @@SESSION.SQL_LOG_BIN=0; is added
               to the output if GTIDs are enabled on the server you are
               backing up (that is, if AUTO evaluates to ON).

       o   --single-transaction

           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --single-transaction |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           This option sets the transaction isolation mode to REPEATABLE READ
           and sends a START TRANSACTION SQL statement to the server before
           dumping data. It is useful only with transactional tables such as
           InnoDB, because then it dumps the consistent state of the database
           at the time when START TRANSACTION was issued without blocking any
           applications.

           When using this option, you should keep in mind that only InnoDB
           tables are dumped in a consistent state. For example, any MyISAM or
           MEMORY tables dumped while using this option may still change
           state.

           While a --single-transaction dump is in process, to ensure a valid
           dump file (correct table contents and binary log coordinates), no
           other connection should use the following statements: ALTER TABLE,
           CREATE TABLE, DROP TABLE, RENAME TABLE, TRUNCATE TABLE. A
           consistent read is not isolated from those statements, so use of
           them on a table to be dumped can cause the SELECT that is performed
           by mysqlpump to retrieve the table contents to obtain incorrect
           contents or fail.

           --add-locks and --single-transaction are mutually exclusive.

       o   --skip-definer

           +--------------------+----------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --skip-definer |
           +--------------------+----------------+
           |Type                | Boolean        |
           +--------------------+----------------+
           |Default Value       | FALSE          |
           +--------------------+----------------+
           Omit DEFINER and SQL SECURITY clauses from the CREATE statements
           for views and stored programs. The dump file, when reloaded,
           creates objects that use the default DEFINER and SQL SECURITY
           values. See Section 27.6, "Stored Object Access Control".

       o   --skip-dump-rows, -d

           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --skip-dump-rows |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Type                | Boolean          |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Default Value       | FALSE            |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           Do not dump table rows.

       o   --skip-generated-invisible-primary-key

           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --skip-generated-     |
           |                    | invisible-primary-key |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Introduced          | 8.0.30                |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Type                | Boolean               |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           |Default Value       | FALSE                 |
           +--------------------+-----------------------+
           This option is available beginning with MySQL 8.0.30, and causes
           generated invisible primary keys (GIPKs) to be excluded from the
           dump. See Section 15.1.20.11, "Generated Invisible Primary Keys",
           for more information about GIPKs and GIPK mode.

       o   --socket=path, -S path

           +--------------------+--------------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --socket={file_name|pipe_name} |
           +--------------------+--------------------------------+
           |Type                | String                         |
           +--------------------+--------------------------------+
           For connections to localhost, the Unix socket file to use, or, on
           Windows, the name of the named pipe to use.

           On Windows, this option applies only if the server was started with
           the named_pipe system variable enabled to support named-pipe
           connections. In addition, the user making the connection must be a
           member of the Windows group specified by the
           named_pipe_full_access_group system variable.

       o   --ssl* Options that begin with --ssl specify whether to connect to
           the server using encryption and indicate where to find SSL keys and
           certificates. See the section called "Command Options for Encrypted
           Connections".

       o   --ssl-fips-mode={OFF|ON|STRICT}

           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --ssl-fips-          |
           |                    | mode={OFF|ON|STRICT} |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Deprecated          | 8.0.34               |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Type                | Enumeration          |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Default Value       | OFF                  |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           |Valid Values        |                      |
           |                    |            OFF       |
           |                    |                      |
           |                    |            ON        |
           |                    |                      |
           |                    |            STRICT    |
           +--------------------+----------------------+
           Controls whether to enable FIPS mode on the client side. The
           --ssl-fips-mode option differs from other --ssl-xxx options in that
           it is not used to establish encrypted connections, but rather to
           affect which cryptographic operations to permit. See Section 8.8,
           "FIPS Support".

           These --ssl-fips-mode values are permitted:

           o   OFF: Disable FIPS mode.

           o   ON: Enable FIPS mode.

           o   STRICT: Enable "strict" FIPS mode.

               Note
               If the OpenSSL FIPS Object Module is not available, the only
               permitted value for --ssl-fips-mode is OFF. In this case,
               setting --ssl-fips-mode to ON or STRICT causes the client to
               produce a warning at startup and to operate in non-FIPS mode.
           As of MySQL 8.0.34, this option is deprecated. Expect it to be
           removed in a future version of MySQL.

       o   --tls-ciphersuites=ciphersuite_list

           +--------------------+-------------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --tls-                        |
           |                    | ciphersuites=ciphersuite_list |
           +--------------------+-------------------------------+
           |Introduced          | 8.0.16                        |
           +--------------------+-------------------------------+
           |Type                | String                        |
           +--------------------+-------------------------------+
           The permissible ciphersuites for encrypted connections that use
           TLSv1.3. The value is a list of one or more colon-separated
           ciphersuite names. The ciphersuites that can be named for this
           option depend on the SSL library used to compile MySQL. For
           details, see Section 8.3.2, "Encrypted Connection TLS Protocols and
           Ciphers".

           This option was added in MySQL 8.0.16.

       o   --tls-version=protocol_list

           +--------------------------+------------------------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format       | --tls-                                   |
           |                          | version=protocol_list                    |
           +--------------------------+------------------------------------------+
           |Type                      | String                                   |
           +--------------------------+------------------------------------------+
           |Default Value (>= 8.0.16) |                                          |
           |                          |            TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2,TLSv1.3 |
           |                          |            (OpenSSL 1.1.1                |
           |                          |            or higher)                    |
           |                          |                                          |
           |                          |            TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2         |
           |                          |            (otherwise)                   |
           +--------------------------+------------------------------------------+
           |Default Value (<= 8.0.15) | TLSv1,TLSv1.1,TLSv1.2                    |
           +--------------------------+------------------------------------------+
           The permissible TLS protocols for encrypted connections. The value
           is a list of one or more comma-separated protocol names. The
           protocols that can be named for this option depend on the SSL
           library used to compile MySQL. For details, see Section 8.3.2,
           "Encrypted Connection TLS Protocols and Ciphers".

       o   --triggers

           +--------------------+------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --triggers |
           +--------------------+------------+
           |Type                | Boolean    |
           +--------------------+------------+
           |Default Value       | TRUE       |
           +--------------------+------------+
           Include triggers for each dumped table in the output.

           This option is enabled by default; use --skip-triggers to disable
           it.

       o   --tz-utc

           +--------------------+----------+
           |Command-Line Format | --tz-utc |
           +--------------------+----------+
           This option enables TIMESTAMP columns to be dumped and reloaded
           between servers in different time zones.  mysqlpump sets its
           connection time zone to UTC and adds SET TIME_ZONE='+00:00' to the
           dump file. Without this option, TIMESTAMP columns are dumped and
           reloaded in the time zones local to the source and destination
           servers, which can cause the values to change if the servers are in
           different time zones.  --tz-utc also protects against changes due
           to daylight saving time.

           This option is enabled by default; use --skip-tz-utc to disable it.

       o   --user=user_name, -u user_name

           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --user=user_name |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Type                | String           |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           The user name of the MySQL account to use for connecting to the
           server.

           If you are using the Rewriter plugin with MySQL 8.0.31 or later,
           you should grant this user the SKIP_QUERY_REWRITE privilege.

       o   --users

           +--------------------+---------+
           |Command-Line Format | --users |
           +--------------------+---------+
           |Type                | Boolean |
           +--------------------+---------+
           |Default Value       | FALSE   |
           +--------------------+---------+
           Dump user accounts as logical definitions in the form of CREATE
           USER and GRANT statements.

           User definitions are stored in the grant tables in the mysql system
           database. By default, mysqlpump does not include the grant tables
           in mysql database dumps. To dump the contents of the grant tables
           as logical definitions, use the --users option and suppress all
           database dumping:

               mysqlpump --exclude-databases=% --users

       o   --version, -V

           +--------------------+-----------+
           |Command-Line Format | --version |
           +--------------------+-----------+
           Display version information and exit.

       o   --watch-progress

           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --watch-progress |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Type                | Boolean          |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           |Default Value       | TRUE             |
           +--------------------+------------------+
           Periodically display a progress indicator that provides information
           about the completed and total number of tables, rows, and other
           objects.

           This option is enabled by default; use --skip-watch-progress to
           disable it.

       o   --zstd-compression-level=level

           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           |Command-Line Format | --zstd-compression-level=# |
           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           |Introduced          | 8.0.18                     |
           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           |Type                | Integer                    |
           +--------------------+----------------------------+
           The compression level to use for connections to the server that use
           the zstd compression algorithm. The permitted levels are from 1 to
           22, with larger values indicating increasing levels of compression.
           The default zstd compression level is 3. The compression level
           setting has no effect on connections that do not use zstd
           compression.

           For more information, see Section 6.2.8, "Connection Compression
           Control".

           This option was added in MySQL 8.0.18.
       mysqlpump Object Selection

       mysqlpump has a set of inclusion and exclusion options that enable
       filtering of several object types and provide flexible control over
       which objects to dump:

       o   --include-databases and --exclude-databases apply to databases and
           all objects within them.

       o   --include-tables and --exclude-tables apply to tables. These
           options also affect triggers associated with tables unless the
           trigger-specific options are given.

       o   --include-triggers and --exclude-triggers apply to triggers.

       o   --include-routines and --exclude-routines apply to stored
           procedures and functions. If a routine option matches a stored
           procedure name, it also matches a stored function of the same name.

       o   --include-events and --exclude-events apply to Event Scheduler
           events.

       o   --include-users and --exclude-users apply to user accounts.

       Any inclusion or exclusion option may be given multiple times. The
       effect is additive. Order of these options does not matter.

       The value of each inclusion and exclusion option is a list of
       comma-separated names of the appropriate object type. For example:

           --exclude-databases=test,world
           --include-tables=customer,invoice

       Wildcard characters are permitted in the object names:

       o   % matches any sequence of zero or more characters.

       o   _ matches any single character.

       For example, --include-tables=t%,__tmp matches all table names that
       begin with t and all five-character table names that end with tmp.

       For users, a name specified without a host part is interpreted with an
       implied host of %. For example, u1 and u1@% are equivalent. This is the
       same equivalence that applies in MySQL generally (see Section 8.2.4,
       "Specifying Account Names").

       Inclusion and exclusion options interact as follows:

       o   By default, with no inclusion or exclusion options, mysqlpump dumps
           all databases (with certain exceptions noted in mysqlpump
           Restrictions).

       o   If inclusion options are given in the absence of exclusion options,
           only the objects named as included are dumped.

       o   If exclusion options are given in the absence of inclusion options,
           all objects are dumped except those named as excluded.

       o   If inclusion and exclusion options are given, all objects named as
           excluded and not named as included are not dumped. All other
           objects are dumped.

       If multiple databases are being dumped, it is possible to name tables,
       triggers, and routines in a specific database by qualifying the object
       names with the database name. The following command dumps databases db1
       and db2, but excludes tables db1.t1 and db2.t2:

           mysqlpump --include-databases=db1,db2 --exclude-tables=db1.t1,db2.t2

       The following options provide alternative ways to specify which
       databases to dump:

       o   The --all-databases option dumps all databases (with certain
           exceptions noted in mysqlpump Restrictions). It is equivalent to
           specifying no object options at all (the default mysqlpump action
           is to dump everything).

           --include-databases=% is similar to --all-databases, but selects
           all databases for dumping, even those that are exceptions for
           --all-databases.

       o   The --databases option causes mysqlpump to treat all name arguments
           as names of databases to dump. It is equivalent to an
           --include-databases option that names the same databases.
       mysqlpump Parallel Processing

       mysqlpump can use parallelism to achieve concurrent processing. You can
       select concurrency between databases (to dump multiple databases
       simultaneously) and within databases (to dump multiple objects from a
       given database simultaneously).

       By default, mysqlpump sets up one queue with two threads. You can
       create additional queues and control the number of threads assigned to
       each one, including the default queue:

       o   --default-parallelism=N specifies the default number of threads
           used for each queue. In the absence of this option, N is 2.

           The default queue always uses the default number of threads.
           Additional queues use the default number of threads unless you
           specify otherwise.

       o   --parallel-schemas=[N:]db_list sets up a processing queue for
           dumping the databases named in db_list and optionally specifies how
           many threads the queue uses.  db_list is a list of comma-separated
           database names. If the option argument begins with N:, the queue
           uses N threads. Otherwise, the --default-parallelism option
           determines the number of queue threads.

           Multiple instances of the --parallel-schemas option create multiple
           queues.

           Names in the database list are permitted to contain the same % and
           _ wildcard characters supported for filtering options (see
           mysqlpump Object Selection).

       mysqlpump uses the default queue for processing any databases not named
       explicitly with a --parallel-schemas option, and for dumping user
       definitions if command options select them.

       In general, with multiple queues, mysqlpump uses parallelism between
       the sets of databases processed by the queues, to dump multiple
       databases simultaneously. For a queue that uses multiple threads,
       mysqlpump uses parallelism within databases, to dump multiple objects
       from a given database simultaneously. Exceptions can occur; for
       example, mysqlpump may block queues while it obtains from the server
       lists of objects in databases.

       With parallelism enabled, it is possible for output from different
       databases to be interleaved. For example, INSERT statements from
       multiple tables dumped in parallel can be interleaved; the statements
       are not written in any particular order. This does not affect reloading
       because output statements qualify object names with database names or
       are preceded by USE statements as required.

       The granularity for parallelism is a single database object. For
       example, a single table cannot be dumped in parallel using multiple
       threads.

       Examples:

           mysqlpump --parallel-schemas=db1,db2 --parallel-schemas=db3

       mysqlpump sets up a queue to process db1 and db2, another queue to
       process db3, and a default queue to process all other databases. All
       queues use two threads.

           mysqlpump --parallel-schemas=db1,db2 --parallel-schemas=db3
                     --default-parallelism=4

       This is the same as the previous example except that all queues use
       four threads.

           mysqlpump --parallel-schemas=5:db1,db2 --parallel-schemas=3:db3

       The queue for db1 and db2 uses five threads, the queue for db3 uses
       three threads, and the default queue uses the default of two threads.

       As a special case, with --default-parallelism=0 and no
       --parallel-schemas options, mysqlpump runs as a single-threaded process
       and creates no queues.  mysqlpump Restrictions

       mysqlpump does not dump the performance_schema, ndbinfo, or sys schema
       by default. To dump any of these, name them explicitly on the command
       line. You can also name them with the --databases or
       --include-databases option.

       mysqlpump does not dump the INFORMATION_SCHEMA schema.

       mysqlpump does not dump InnoDB CREATE TABLESPACE statements.

       mysqlpump dumps user accounts in logical form using CREATE USER and
       GRANT statements (for example, when you use the --include-users or
       --users option). For this reason, dumps of the mysql system database do
       not by default include the grant tables that contain user definitions:
       user, db, tables_priv, columns_priv, procs_priv, or proxies_priv. To
       dump any of the grant tables, name the mysql database followed by the
       table names:

           mysqlpump mysql user db ...

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 1997, 2024, Oracle and/or its affiliates.

       This documentation is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
       modify it only under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
       published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License.

       This documentation is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
       but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
       MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
       General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
       with the program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
       51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA or see
       http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.

NOTES
        1. MySQL Shell dump utilities
           https://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql-shell/8.0/en/mysql-shell-utilities-dump-instance-schema.html

        2. MySQL Shell load dump utilities
           https://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql-shell/8.0/en/mysql-shell-utilities-load-dump.html

        3. here
           https://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql-shell/8.0/en/mysql-shell-install.html

SEE ALSO
       For more information, please refer to the MySQL Reference Manual, which
       may already be installed locally and which is also available online at
       http://dev.mysql.com/doc/.

AUTHOR
       Oracle Corporation (http://dev.mysql.com/).

MySQL 8.0                         12/13/2024                      MYSQLPUMP(1)
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