#!/usr/bin/perl -w # # bzdbcopy.pl - Copies data from one Bugzilla database to another. # # Author: Max Kanat-Alexander # # The intended use of this script is to copy data from an installation # running on one DB platform to an installation running on another # DB platform. # # It must be run from the directory containing your Bugzilla installation. # That means if this script is in the contrib/ directory, you should # be running it as: ./contrib/bzdbcopy.pl # # Note: Both schemas must already exist and be IDENTICAL. (That is, # they must have both been created/updated by the same version of # checksetup.pl.) This script will DESTROY ALL CURRENT DATA in the # target database. # # Both Schemas must be at least from Bugzilla 2.19.3, but if you're # running a Bugzilla from before 2.20rc2, you'll need the patch at: # https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=300311 in order to # be able to run this script. # # Before you using it, you have to correctly set all the variables # in the "User-Configurable Settings" section, below. The "SOURCE" # settings are for the database you're copying from, and the "TARGET" # settings are for the database you're copying to. The DB_TYPE is # the name of a DB driver from the Bugzilla/DB/ directory. # use strict; use lib "."; use Bugzilla::DB; use Bugzilla::Util; ##################################################################### # User-Configurable Settings ##################################################################### # Settings for the 'Source' DB that you are copying from. use constant SOURCE_DB_TYPE => 'Mysql'; use constant SOURCE_DB_NAME => 'bugs'; use constant SOURCE_DB_USER => 'bugs'; use constant SOURCE_DB_PASSWORD => ''; # Settings for the 'Target' DB that you are copying to. use constant TARGET_DB_TYPE => 'Pg'; use constant TARGET_DB_NAME => 'bugs'; use constant TARGET_DB_USER => 'bugs'; use constant TARGET_DB_PASSWORD => ''; ##################################################################### # MAIN SCRIPT ##################################################################### print "Connecting to the '" . SOURCE_DB_NAME . "' source database on " . SOURCE_DB_TYPE . "...\n"; my $source_db = Bugzilla::DB::_connect(SOURCE_DB_TYPE, 'localhost', SOURCE_DB_NAME, undef, undef, SOURCE_DB_USER, SOURCE_DB_PASSWORD); print "Connecting to the '" . TARGET_DB_NAME . "' target database on " . TARGET_DB_TYPE . "...\n"; my $target_db = Bugzilla::DB::_connect(TARGET_DB_TYPE, 'localhost', TARGET_DB_NAME, undef, undef, TARGET_DB_USER, TARGET_DB_PASSWORD); # We use the table list from the target DB, because if somebody # has customized their source DB, we still want the script to work, # and it may otherwise fail in that situation (that is, the tables # may not exist in the target DB). my @table_list = $target_db->bz_table_list_real(); # We don't want to copy over the bz_schema table's contents. my $bz_schema_location = lsearch(\@table_list, 'bz_schema'); splice(@table_list, $bz_schema_location, 1) if $bz_schema_location > 0; # We turn off autocommit on the target DB, because we're doing so # much copying. $target_db->{AutoCommit} = 0; $target_db->{AutoCommit} == 0 || warn "Failed to disable autocommit on " . TARGET_DB_TYPE; foreach my $table (@table_list) { my @serial_cols; print "Reading data from the source '$table' table on " . SOURCE_DB_TYPE . "...\n"; my @table_columns = $target_db->bz_table_columns_real($table); my $select_query = "SELECT " . join(',', @table_columns) . " FROM $table"; my $data_in = $source_db->selectall_arrayref($select_query); my $insert_query = "INSERT INTO $table ( " . join(',', @table_columns) . " ) VALUES ("; $insert_query .= '?,' foreach (@table_columns); # Remove the last comma. chop($insert_query); $insert_query .= ")"; my $insert_sth = $target_db->prepare($insert_query); print "Clearing out the target '$table' table on " . TARGET_DB_TYPE . "...\n"; $target_db->do("DELETE FROM $table"); print "Writing data to the target '$table' table on " . TARGET_DB_TYPE . "..."; foreach my $row (@$data_in) { # Each column needs to be bound separately, because # many columns need to be dealt with specially. my $colnum = 0; foreach my $column (@table_columns) { # bind_param args start at 1, but arrays start at 0. my $param_num = $colnum + 1; my $already_bound; # Certain types of columns need special handling. my $col_info = $source_db->bz_column_info($table, $column); if ($col_info && $col_info->{TYPE} eq 'LONGBLOB') { $insert_sth->bind_param($param_num, $row->[$colnum], $target_db->BLOB_TYPE); $already_bound = 1; } elsif ($col_info && $col_info->{TYPE} =~ /decimal/) { # In MySQL, decimal cols can be too long. my $col_type = $col_info->{TYPE}; $col_type =~ /decimal\((\d+),(\d+)\)/; my ($precision, $decimals) = ($1, $2); # If it's longer than precision + decimal point if ( length($row->[$colnum]) > ($precision + 1) ) { # Truncate it to the highest allowed value. my $orig_value = $row->[$colnum]; $row->[$colnum] = ''; my $non_decimal = $precision - $decimals; $row->[$colnum] .= '9' while ($non_decimal--); $row->[$colnum] .= '.'; $row->[$colnum] .= '9' while ($decimals--); print "Truncated value $orig_value to " . $row->[$colnum] . " for $table.$column.\n"; } } elsif ($col_info && $col_info->{TYPE} =~ /DATETIME/i) { my $date = $row->[$colnum]; # MySQL can have strange invalid values for Datetimes. $row->[$colnum] = '1901-01-01 00:00:00' if $date && $date eq '0000-00-00 00:00:00'; } $insert_sth->bind_param($param_num, $row->[$colnum]) unless $already_bound; $colnum++; } $insert_sth->execute(); } # PostgreSQL doesn't like it when you insert values into # a serial field; it doesn't increment the counter # automatically. if ($target_db->isa('Bugzilla::DB::Pg')) { foreach my $column (@table_columns) { my $col_info = $source_db->bz_column_info($table, $column); if ($col_info && $col_info->{TYPE} =~ /SERIAL/i) { # Set the sequence to the current max value + 1. my ($max_val) = $target_db->selectrow_array( "SELECT MAX($column) FROM $table"); $max_val = 0 if !defined $max_val; $max_val++; print "\nSetting the next value for $table.$column to $max_val."; $target_db->do("SELECT pg_catalog.setval ('${table}_${column}_seq', $max_val, false)"); } } } print "\n\n"; } # And there's one entry in the fielddefs table that needs # to be manually fixed. This is a huge hack. my $delta_fdef = "(" . $target_db->sql_to_days('NOW()') . " - " . $target_db->sql_to_days('bugs.delta_ts') . ")"; $target_db->do(q{UPDATE fielddefs SET name = ? WHERE name LIKE '%bugs.delta_ts%'}, undef, $delta_fdef); print "Committing changes to the target database...\n"; $target_db->commit; print "All done! Make sure to run checksetup on the new DB.\n"; $source_db->disconnect; $target_db->disconnect; 1;