Overview
A MySQL migration job
doesn't migrate user data. Therefore,
sources which contain metadata defined by users with the DEFINER
clause will
fail when invoked on the new Cloud SQL replica, because the users don't yet
exist there.
To identify which DEFINER
values exist in your metadata, you can run the
following queries on your MySQL source database. Check the results for entries for
either root%localhost
or for users that don't exist in the destination instance:
SELECT DISTINCT DEFINER FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.EVENTS WHERE EVENT_SCHEMA NOT
IN ('mysql', 'sys');
SELECT DISTINCT DEFINER FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.ROUTINES WHERE ROUTINE_SCHEMA NOT
IN ('mysql', 'sys');
SELECT DISTINCT DEFINER FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.TRIGGERS WHERE TRIGGER_SCHEMA NOT
IN ('mysql', 'sys');
SELECT DISTINCT DEFINER FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.VIEWS WHERE TABLE_SCHEMA NOT
IN ('mysql', 'sys');
To run a migration job from a source which includes such metadata, you can do one of the following:
Create the users on the destination Cloud SQL replica instance before starting your migration job.
Create a migration job without starting it. That is, choose Create instead of Create & Start.
Create the users from your source MySQL instance on your destination Cloud SQL instance using the Cloud SQL API or UI.
Start the migration job from the migration job list or the specific job's page.
Update the
DEFINER
clause toINVOKER
on your source MySQL instance prior to setting up your migration job.