community.mysql.mysql_db module – Add or remove MySQL databases from a remote host

Note

This module is part of the community.mysql collection (version 3.5.1).

You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package. It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install community.mysql. You need further requirements to be able to use this module, see Requirements for details.

To use it in a playbook, specify: community.mysql.mysql_db.

Synopsis

  • Add or remove MySQL databases from a remote host.

Requirements

The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.

  • MySQLdb (Python 2.x)

  • PyMySQL (Python 2.7 and Python 3.x) or

  • mysql (command line binary)

  • mysqlclient (Python 3.5+) or

  • mysqldump (command line binary)

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

ca_cert

aliases: ssl_ca

path

The path to a Certificate Authority (CA) certificate. This option, if used, must specify the same certificate as used by the server.

chdir

path

added in community.mysql 3.4.0

Changes the current working directory.

Can be useful, for example, when state=import and a dump file contains relative paths.

check_hostname

boolean

added in community.mysql 1.1.0

Whether to validate the server host name when an SSL connection is required. Corresponds to MySQL CLIs --ssl switch.

Setting this to false disables hostname verification. Use with caution.

Requires pymysql >= 0.7.11.

This option has no effect on MySQLdb.

Choices:

  • false

  • true

check_implicit_admin

boolean

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

Check if mysql allows login as root/nopassword before trying supplied credentials.

If success, passed login_user/login_password will be ignored.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

client_cert

aliases: ssl_cert

path

The path to a client public key certificate.

client_key

aliases: ssl_key

path

The path to the client private key.

collation

string

Collation mode (sorting). This only applies to new table/databases and does not update existing ones, this is a limitation of MySQL.

Default: ""

config_file

path

Specify a config file from which user and password are to be read.

The default config file, ~/.my.cnf, if it exists, will be read, even if config_file is not specified.

The default config file, ~/.my.cnf, if it exists, must contain a [client] section as a MySQL connector requirement.

To prevent the default config file from being read, set config_file to be an empty string.

Default: "~/.my.cnf"

config_overrides_defaults

boolean

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

If yes, connection parameters from config_file will override the default values of login_host and login_port parameters.

Used when stat is present or absent, ignored otherwise.

It needs Python 3.5+ as the default interpreter on a target host.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

connect_timeout

integer

The connection timeout when connecting to the MySQL server.

Default: 30

dump_extra_args

string

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

Provide additional arguments for mysqldump. Used when state=dump only, ignored otherwise.

encoding

string

Encoding mode to use, examples include utf8 or latin1_swedish_ci, at creation of database, dump or importation of sql script.

Default: ""

force

boolean

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

Continue dump or import even if we get an SQL error.

Used only when state is dump or import.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

hex_blob

boolean

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

Dump binary columns using hexadecimal notation.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

ignore_tables

list / elements=string

A list of table names that will be ignored in the dump of the form database_name.table_name.

Default: []

login_host

string

Host running the database.

In some cases for local connections the login_unix_socket=/path/to/mysqld/socket, that is usually /var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock, needs to be used instead of login_host=localhost.

Default: "localhost"

login_password

string

The password used to authenticate with.

login_port

integer

Port of the MySQL server. Requires login_host be defined as other than localhost if login_port is used.

Default: 3306

login_unix_socket

string

The path to a Unix domain socket for local connections.

Use this parameter to avoid the Please explicitly state intended protocol error.

login_user

string

The username used to authenticate with.

master_data

integer

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

Option to dump a master replication server to produce a dump file that can be used to set up another server as a slave of the master.

0 to not include master data.

1 to generate a ‘CHANGE MASTER TO’ statement required on the slave to start the replication process.

2 to generate a commented ‘CHANGE MASTER TO’.

Can be used when state=dump.

Choices:

  • 0 ← (default)

  • 1

  • 2

name

aliases: db

list / elements=string / required

Name of the database to add or remove.

name=all may only be provided if state is dump or import.

List of databases is provided with state=dump, state=present and state=absent.

If name=all it works like –all-databases option for mysqldump (Added in 2.0).

pipefail

boolean

added in community.mysql 3.4.0

Use bash instead of sh and add -o pipefail to catch errors from the mysql_dump command when state=import and compression is used.

The default is no to prevent issues on systems without bash as a default interpreter.

The default will change to yes in community.mysql 4.0.0.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

quick

boolean

Option used for dumping large tables.

Choices:

  • false

  • true ← (default)

restrict_config_file

boolean

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

Read only passed config_file.

When state is dump or import, by default the module passes config_file parameter using --defaults-extra-file command-line argument to mysql/mysqldump utilities under the hood that read named option file in addition to usual option files.

If this behavior is undesirable, use yes to read only named option file.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

single_transaction

boolean

Execute the dump in a single transaction.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

skip_lock_tables

boolean

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

Skip locking tables for read. Used when state=dump, ignored otherwise.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

state

string

The database state.

Choices:

  • "absent"

  • "dump"

  • "import"

  • "present" ← (default)

target

path

Location, on the remote host, of the dump file to read from or write to.

Uncompressed SQL files (.sql) as well as bzip2 (.bz2), gzip (.gz) and xz (Added in 2.0) compressed files are supported.

unsafe_login_password

boolean

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

If no, the module will safely use a shell-escaped version of the login_password value.

It makes sense to use yes only if there are special symbols in the value and errors Access denied occur.

Used only when state is import or dump and login_password is passed, ignored otherwise.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

use_shell

boolean

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

Used to prevent Broken pipe errors when the imported target file is compressed.

If yes, the module will internally execute commands via a shell.

Used when state=import, ignored otherwise.

Choices:

  • false ← (default)

  • true

Notes

Note

  • Supports check_mode.

  • Requires the mysql and mysqldump binaries on the remote host.

  • This module is not idempotent when state is import, and will import the dump file each time if run more than once.

  • To avoid the Please explicitly state intended protocol error, use the login_unix_socket argument, for example, login_unix_socket: /run/mysqld/mysqld.sock.

  • Requires the PyMySQL (Python 2.7 and Python 3.X) or MySQL-python (Python 2.X) package installed on the remote host. The Python package may be installed with apt-get install python-pymysql (Ubuntu; see ansible.builtin.apt) or yum install python2-PyMySQL (RHEL/CentOS/Fedora; see ansible.builtin.yum). You can also use dnf install python2-PyMySQL for newer versions of Fedora; see ansible.builtin.dnf.

  • Be sure you have mysqlclient, PyMySQL, or MySQLdb library installed on the target machine for the Python interpreter Ansible discovers. For example if ansible discovers and uses Python 3, you need to install the Python 3 version of PyMySQL or mysqlclient. If ansible discovers and uses Python 2, you need to install the Python 2 version of either PyMySQL or MySQL-python.

  • If you have trouble, it may help to force Ansible to use the Python interpreter you need by specifying ansible_python_interpreter. For more information, see https://docs.ansible.com/ansible/latest/reference_appendices/interpreter_discovery.html.

  • Both login_password and login_user are required when you are passing credentials. If none are present, the module will attempt to read the credentials from ~/.my.cnf, and finally fall back to using the MySQL default login of ‘root’ with no password.

  • If there are problems with local connections, using login_unix_socket=/path/to/mysqld/socket instead of login_host=localhost might help. As an example, the default MariaDB installation of version 10.4 and later uses the unix_socket authentication plugin by default that without using login_unix_socket=/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock (the default path) causes the error ``Host ‘127.0.0.1’ is not allowed to connect to this MariaDB server``.

  • Alternatively, you can use the mysqlclient library instead of MySQL-python (MySQLdb) which supports both Python 2.X and Python >=3.5. See https://pypi.org/project/mysqlclient/ how to install it.

  • If credentials from the config file (for example, /root/.my.cnf) are not needed to connect to a database server, but the file exists and does not contain a [client] section, before any other valid directives, it will be read and this will cause the connection to fail, to prevent this set it to an empty string, (for example config_file: '').

See Also

See also

community.mysql.mysql_info

Gather information about MySQL servers.

community.mysql.mysql_variables

Manage MySQL global variables.

community.mysql.mysql_user

Adds or removes a user from a MySQL database.

community.mysql.mysql_replication

Manage MySQL replication.

MySQL command-line client reference

Complete reference of the MySQL command-line client documentation.

mysqldump reference

Complete reference of the ``mysqldump`` client utility documentation.

CREATE DATABASE reference

Complete reference of the CREATE DATABASE command documentation.

DROP DATABASE reference

Complete reference of the DROP DATABASE command documentation.

Examples

# If you encounter the "Please explicitly state intended protocol" error,
# use the login_unix_socket argument
- name: Create a new database with name 'bobdata'
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    name: bobdata
    state: present
    login_unix_socket: /run/mysqld/mysqld.sock

- name: Create new databases with names 'foo' and 'bar'
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    name:
      - foo
      - bar
    state: present

# Copy database dump file to remote host and restore it to database 'my_db'
- name: Copy database dump file
  copy:
    src: dump.sql.bz2
    dest: /tmp

- name: Restore database
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    name: my_db
    state: import
    target: /tmp/dump.sql.bz2

- name: Restore database ignoring errors
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    name: my_db
    state: import
    target: /tmp/dump.sql.bz2
    force: yes

- name: Dump multiple databases
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    state: dump
    name: db_1,db_2
    target: /tmp/dump.sql

- name: Dump multiple databases
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    state: dump
    name:
      - db_1
      - db_2
    target: /tmp/dump.sql

- name: Dump all databases to hostname.sql
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    state: dump
    name: all
    target: /tmp/dump.sql

- name: Dump all databases to hostname.sql including master data
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    state: dump
    name: all
    target: /tmp/dump.sql
    master_data: 1

# Import of sql script with encoding option
- name: >
    Import dump.sql with specific latin1 encoding,
    similar to mysql -u <username> --default-character-set=latin1 -p <password> < dump.sql
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    state: import
    name: all
    encoding: latin1
    target: /tmp/dump.sql

# Dump of database with encoding option
- name: >
    Dump of Databse with specific latin1 encoding,
    similar to mysqldump -u <username> --default-character-set=latin1 -p <password> <database>
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    state: dump
    name: db_1
    encoding: latin1
    target: /tmp/dump.sql

- name: Delete database with name 'bobdata'
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    name: bobdata
    state: absent

- name: Make sure there is neither a database with name 'foo', nor one with name 'bar'
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    name:
      - foo
      - bar
    state: absent

# Dump database with argument not directly supported by this module
# using dump_extra_args parameter
- name: Dump databases without including triggers
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    state: dump
    name: foo
    target: /tmp/dump.sql
    dump_extra_args: --skip-triggers

- name: Try to create database as root/nopassword first. If not allowed, pass the credentials
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    check_implicit_admin: yes
    login_user: bob
    login_password: 123456
    name: bobdata
    state: present

- name: Dump a database with compression and catch errors from mysqldump with bash pipefail
  community.mysql.mysql_db:
    state: dump
    name: foo
    target: /tmp/dump.sql.gz
    pipefail: true

Return Values

Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:

Key

Description

db

string

Database names in string format delimited by white space.

Returned: always

Sample: "foo bar"

db_list

list / elements=string

List of database names.

Returned: always

Sample: ["foo", "bar"]

executed_commands

list / elements=string

added in community.mysql 0.1.0

List of commands which tried to run.

Returned: if executed

Sample: ["CREATE DATABASE acme"]

Authors

  • Ansible Core Team