ContextRestore Bundle
Context Restore Documentation
Introduction
This document contains descriptions about the context restore bundle. This bundle is a solution for restoring one single context out of a mysql dump from a complete Open-Xchange database. In a distributed setup, it is possible to use several files containing the dumps of different databases. The tool described within this document does fetch the needed information out of these files.
Limitations
You must not delete the last context from within a database schema. If you just have ONE context left in your system, do NOT delete it. That is because the deletion of the last contexts leads into deletion of the entire schema. In that case, you have to restore a complete database dump. restorecontext will not work in that case.
Requirements
For correct operation, it is required that the mysql dumps for this tool represent a consistent state of all databases the Open-Xchange server has under control. Furthermore this consistent state needs also to include the backup of the filestore.
Install on OX 7.x
Debian GNU/Linux 11.0
Add the following entry to /etc/apt/sources.list.d/open-xchange.list if not already present:
deb https://software.open-xchange.com/products/stable/DebianBullseye/ /
# if you have a valid maintenance subscription, please uncomment the
# following and add the ldb account data to the url so that the most recent
# packages get installed
# deb https://[CUSTOMERID:PASSWORD]@software.open-xchange.com/products/stable/updates/DebianBullseye/ /
and run
$ apt-get update $ apt-get install open-xchange-admin-plugin-contextrestore
Debian GNU/Linux 12.0
Add the following entry to /etc/apt/sources.list.d/open-xchange.list if not already present:
deb https://software.open-xchange.com/products/stable/DebianBookworm/ /
# if you have a valid maintenance subscription, please uncomment the
# following and add the ldb account data to the url so that the most recent
# packages get installed
# deb https://[CUSTOMERID:PASSWORD]@software.open-xchange.com/products/stable/updates/DebianBookworm/ /
and run
$ apt-get update $ apt-get install open-xchange-admin-plugin-contextrestore
After the package has been installed, a new shell script named /opt/open-xchange/sbin/restorecontext The server needs to be restarted to make the new functionality available. The functionality is accessible via RMI, CLT and SOAP.
Usage
A complete database backup has to be done before the new function can be used. The Tool described within this document requires a full SQL dump of the databases involved. This can be done by executing the command
$ mysqldump --all-databases --single-transaction --hex-blob
on all database machines registered in Open-Xchange as well as the configuration Database. These three parameters are very important. The first one lets the dump contain every database on the specified database host, the second is used for a consistent backup and the third one is used to let all binary data appear as hex in the dump. Instead of –-all-databases you can also use –-database with the right database(s), if none of the switches are given as direct argument then mysql will left out essential data in the dump. For a full backup the switch --all-databases is recommended.
The usage of the command line tool is self-explanatory as it confirms to the standard unix behavior. --help will show a short help with the available parameters.
The main arguments of the tool are different database dumps (from the configdb and the distributed user data databases). On success the tool returns the path to the filestore of the given context. The files below this path have to be restored afterwards in a separate process which is not part of the Open-Xchange system. An example of a restore would look like this:
$ restorecontext -A oxadminmaster -P secret -c 1 \ -f /path/to/configdb.sql,/path/to/userdb.sql,/path/to/userdb1.sql,... file:/path/to/filestore/1_ctx_store
Old dump without --hex-blob
If you have done a dump according to a former version of this document the dump contains the direct binary data which can't be understood by the restore tool. You will get errors like "Data truncation: Data too long for column 'uuid' at row 1".
ATTENTION: The steps below need to be done on a NEW MySQL instance NOT the productive one.
To get the correct version of the dump you need to apply the dump to a clean MySQL database.
If the dump was created with --all-databases you can just pipe the contents into mysql:
mysql < mydump.txt. If you have different dump for each database you have to create
the corresponding database in MySQL first. The name of the database to be created can be found at
the beginning of the dump file
-- Host: localhost Database: configdb
So for the example simply issue create database configdb and apply the dump directly to
this database: mysql configdb < mydump.txt (pay attention to give the name of the database
to mysql in this case).
Afterwards just create the mysqldump from this database with the correct --hex-blob parameter.