Backup and restore FAQ: Difference between revisions
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When dumping the entire Moodle database, Administrators should be careful to watch for possible character encoding issues. In some instances, backups created with mysqldump or phpmyadmin may not properly encode all of the data resulting in spurious A characters. One solution is to use mySQL Administrator 1.1 or another tool that will force a UTF-8 dump of the data. | When dumping the entire Moodle database, Administrators should be careful to watch for possible character encoding issues. In some instances, backups created with mysqldump or phpmyadmin may not properly encode all of the data resulting in spurious A characters. One solution is to use mySQL Administrator 1.1 or another tool that will force a UTF-8 dump of the data. | ||
==How do I restore a backup of my whole Moodle site?== | |||
1. Rename the original moodledata directory to something different (so you still have it) and copy the backed up moodledata directory in its place. | |||
2. Rename the original moodle directory to something different (so you still have it) and copy the backed up moodle directory in its place. | |||
3. If you are running mysql, a backup of the database should be an sql or tar.gz file. If it is tar.gz you need to extract it until it is an sql file. | |||
4. If you are running mysql, import the sql file back into a newly created database on the mysql server. Be careful here, some backups try to import right back into the same working database that moodle is connected to. This causes database problems that damage a moodle installation. The best thing to do is make a new database, restore the backed up database into it, and change the moodle config.php file to connect to this new database (this way you still have the original database). | |||
==What data is not contained in course backups?== | ==What data is not contained in course backups?== |
Revision as of 21:47, 24 October 2006
- Site backups
- Site backups, as explained in upgrading Moodle, are recommended in order to have all data saved with the best confidence and the shortest recovery time.
- Course backups
- Course backups, configured on the backup page, are more expensive in terms of time and CPU usage. The recovery time to have your site running again is longer. Course backups are useful for obtaining "fresh" copies of courses to be re-used or distributed individually, however they should never be used as a primary backup system (unless your hosting doesn't allow the preferred site backups). In order to make scheduled backups, you have to setup CRON to run periodically. Please refer to the cron instructions.
How do I backup my whole Moodle site?
There are two main things you need to make a copy of - the database and the uploaded files. The Moodle scripts themselves are less important, since you can always download a fresh copy if you have to.
There are many ways to do such backups. Here is an outline of a little script you can run on Unix to backup the database (it works well to have such a script run daily via a cron task):
cd /my/backup/directory mv moodle-database.sql.gz moodle-database-old.sql.gz mysqldump -h example.com -u myusername --password=mypassword -C -Q -e -a mydatabasename > moodle-database.sql gzip moodle-database.sql
For the files, you can use rsync regularly to copy only the changed files to another host:
rsync -auvtz --delete -e ssh mysshusername@example.com:/my/server/directory /my/backup/directory/
Character Encoding
When dumping the entire Moodle database, Administrators should be careful to watch for possible character encoding issues. In some instances, backups created with mysqldump or phpmyadmin may not properly encode all of the data resulting in spurious A characters. One solution is to use mySQL Administrator 1.1 or another tool that will force a UTF-8 dump of the data.
How do I restore a backup of my whole Moodle site?
1. Rename the original moodledata directory to something different (so you still have it) and copy the backed up moodledata directory in its place.
2. Rename the original moodle directory to something different (so you still have it) and copy the backed up moodle directory in its place.
3. If you are running mysql, a backup of the database should be an sql or tar.gz file. If it is tar.gz you need to extract it until it is an sql file.
4. If you are running mysql, import the sql file back into a newly created database on the mysql server. Be careful here, some backups try to import right back into the same working database that moodle is connected to. This causes database problems that damage a moodle installation. The best thing to do is make a new database, restore the backed up database into it, and change the moodle config.php file to connect to this new database (this way you still have the original database).
What data is not contained in course backups?
By selecting all the options when setting up the backup you can include almost all the data in the course. However you should be aware of the fact that some things are not backed up:
- Quiz questions are only backed up if at least one question from their category has been added to a quiz.
- Scales are only backed up if they are used by at least one activity.
Error: An error occurred deleting old backup data
This part of the backup (or restore) procedure tries to delete old info, used in previous executions, performing the following tasks:
- Delete old records from "backup_ids" table: Check the table exists, repair it and try again.
- Delete old records from "backup_files" table: Check the table exists, repair it and try again.
- Delete old files from "moodledata/temp/backup": Delete the dir completely and try again.
There are various ways of repairing tables, including using MySQL Admin.
XML error: not well-formed (invalid token) at line YYYY
This problem can appear at any point in the restore process. It's caused when the XML parser detects something incorrect in the backup file that prevent correct operation. Usually, it's caused by some "illegal" characters added in the original course due to some copy/paste of text containing them (control characters, or invalid sequences...).
The best method to handle this issue is:
- Unzip the problematic backup file under one empty folder.
- Open the moodle.xml with Firefox. It will show you where (exact char) the problem is happening.
- Edit the moodle.xml file with some UTF8-compatible editor and delete such characters. Save changes.
- Test the moodle.xml file again with Firefox until no error was displayed.
- Zip everything again (all the folder contents but the folder itself!).
- Restore the course. It should work now.
Also, if possible, it's highly recommended to solve those problems in the original course too from Moodle itself. Once "repaired" there, problems will be out if you create new backup files in the future.
Some of your courses weren't saved!!
There are three possible causes of this problem:
1. Error - this happens when the backup procedure has found an error and so hasn't finished the backup of a particular course. These are "controlled" errors and the scheduled backup continues with the next course.
2. Unfinished - this happens when the backup procedure dies without knowing why. When the cron is next executed it detects that the last execution went wrong, and continues skipping the problematic course. A possible solution would be to raise the PHP/Apache limit in your installation (memory, time of execution...). By taking a look to your log tables you should be able to see if the "crash" is happening at exact time intervals (usually a problem with the max_execution_time php's variable), or if there is some exact point were all the courses are breaking (generally internal zip libraries, try to switch to external executables instead).
3. Skipped - this happens when a course is unavailable to students and has not been changed in the last month (31 days). This isn't an error situation - it's a feature, especially useful for sites with many unavailable old courses, saving process time.
Restoring pre 1.6 non-ISO-8859-1 backups to Moodle 1.6 - Unicode
Any backup files with contents which are not 100% ISO-8859-1 will be a problem to restore to Moodle 1.6 (and upwards) running under Unicode. Instead, please try the following:
- Make a clean install of Moodle 1.5.x (the latest version available)
- Restore all your courses there (they should work if they were working originally)
- Upgrade your site to Moodle 1.6 and run the UTF-8 migration script
- Backup your courses again
This will produce a new set of backup files that will be 100% UTF-8 and you will be able to use them with Moodle 1.6 without any problems.
Why are some courses being skipped?
From 1.6 onwards, course backups automatically skip courses which are unavailable to students AND have not been changed in the last month.
See also
- Using Moodle Backup and Restore forum
- Backup restore Version 1.6 description of screens for both
- Restore almost same as backup_restore
- Roll courses forward new Version 1.7 option