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Tool for migrating/converting from mysql to postgresql.

Project description

This tool allows you to take data from an MySQL server (only tested on 5.x) and write a PostgresSQL compatable (8.2 or higher) dump file or pipe it directly into your running PostgreSQL server (8.2 or higher).

Installation:

If you’re like me you don’t like random stuff polluting your python install. Might I suggest installing this in an virtualenv?

> virtualenv --no-site-packages ~/envs/py-mysql2pgsql
> source ~/envs/py-mysql2pgsql/bin/activate

Requirements:

On Windows

I have only done limited testing on this platform using Python 2.7. Here are the driver dependencies for windows, install these before attempting to install py-mysql2pgsql or it will fail.

From PyPI:

All dependencies should be automatically installed when installing the app the following ways

> pip install py-mysql2pgsql

From source:

> git clone git://github.com/philipsoutham/py-mysql2pgsql.git
> cd py-mysql2pgsql
> python setup.py install

Usage:

Looking for help?

> py-mysql2pgsql -h
usage: py-mysql2pgsql [-h] [-v] [-f FILE]

Tool for migrating/converting data from mysql to postgresql.

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose         Show progress of data migration.
  -f FILE, --file FILE  Location of configuration file (default:
                        mysql2pgsql.yml). If none exists at that path,
                        one will be created for you.

Don’t worry if this is your first time, it’ll be gentle.

> py-mysql2pgsql
No configuration file found.
A new file has been initialized at: mysql2pgsql.yml
Please review the configuration and retry...

As the output suggests, I file was created at mysql2pgsql.yml for you to edit. For the impatient, here is what the file contains.

# if a socket is specified we will use that
# if tcp is chosen you can use compression
mysql:
 hostname: localhost
 port: 3306
 socket: /tmp/mysql.sock
 username: mysql2psql
 password:
 database: mysql2psql_test
 compress: false
destination:
 # if file is given, output goes to file, else postgres
 file:
 postgres:
  hostname: localhost
  port: 5432
  username: mysql2psql
  password:
  database: mysql2psql_test

# if only_tables is given, only the listed tables will be converted.  leave empty to convert all tables.
#only_tables:
#- table1
#- table2
# if exclude_tables is given, exclude the listed tables from the conversion.
#exclude_tables:
#- table3
#- table4

# if supress_data is true, only the schema definition will be exported/migrated, and not the data
supress_data: false

# if supress_ddl is true, only the data will be exported/imported, and not the schema
supress_ddl: false

# if force_truncate is true, forces a table truncate before table loading
force_truncate: false

Pretty self explainitory right? A couple things to note, first if destination -> file is populated all outpute will be dumped to the specified location regardless of what is contained in destination -> postgres. So if you want to dump directly to your server make sure the file value is blank.

Say you have a MySQL db with many, many tables, but you’re only interested in exporting a subset of those table, no problem. Add only the tables you want to include in only_tables or tables that you don’t want exported to exclude_tables.

Other items of interest may be to skip moving the data and just create the schema or vice versa. To skip the data and only create the schema set supress_data to true. To migrate only data and not recreate the tables set supress_ddl to true; if there’s existing data that you want to drop before importing set force_truncate to true. force_truncate is not necessary when supress_ddl is set to false.

One last thing, the –verbose flag. Without it the tool will just go on it’s merry way without bothering you with any output until it’s done. With it you’ll get a play-by-play summary of what’s going on. Here’s an example.

> py-mysql2pgsql -v -f mysql2pgsql
START PROCESSING table_one
  START  - CREATING TABLE table_one
  FINISH - CREATING TABLE table_one
  START  - WRITING DATA TO table_one
  24812.02 rows/sec [20000]
  FINISH - WRITING DATA TO table_one
  START  - ADDING INDEXES TO table_one
  FINISH - ADDING INDEXES TO table_one
  START  - ADDING CONSTRAINTS ON table_one
  FINISH - ADDING CONSTRAINTS ON table_one
FINISHED PROCESSING table_one

START PROCESSING table_two
  START  - CREATING TABLE table_two
  FINISH - CREATING TABLE table_two
  START  - WRITING DATA TO table_two

  FINISH - WRITING DATA TO table_two
  START  - ADDING INDEXES TO table_two
  FINISH - ADDING INDEXES TO table_two
  START  - ADDING CONSTRAINTS ON table_two
  FINISH - ADDING CONSTRAINTS ON table_two
FINISHED PROCESSING table_two

Data Type Conversion Legend

Since there is not a one-to-one mapping between MySQL and PostgreSQL data types, listed below are the conversions that are applied. I’ve taken some liberties with some, others should come as no surprise.

MySQL

PostgreSQL

char

character

varchar

character varying

tinytext

text

mediumtext

text

text

text

longtext

text

tinyblob

bytea

mediumblob

bytea

blob

bytea

longblob

bytea

binary

bytea

varbinary

bytea

bit

bit varying

tinyint

smallint

tinyint unsigned

smallint

smallint

smallint

smallint unsigned

integer

mediumint

integer

mediumint unsigned

integer

int

integer

int unsigned

bigint

bigint

bigint

bigint unsigned

numeric

float

real

float unsigned

real

double

double precision

double unsigned

double precision

decimal

numeric

decimal unsigned

numeric

numeric

numeric

numeric unsigned

numeric

date

date

datetime

timestamp without time zone

time

time without time zone

timestamp

timestamp without time zone

year

smallint

enum

character varying (with check constraint)

set

ARRAY[]::text[]

About:

I ported much of this from an existing project written in Ruby by Max Lapshin over at https://github.com/maxlapshin/mysql2postgres. I found that it worked fine for most things, but for migrating large tables with millions of rows it started to break down. This motivated me to write py-mysql2pgsql which uses a server side cursor, so there is no “paging” which means there is no slow down while working it’s way through a large dataset.

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