I don't know what SQL statement is sent by mysql-admin. How could I get that ? The files mysql.err and mysql.log on the server contain nothing at all. The binary logs contain no entries which have timestamps near the time when I tried this with mysql-admin.

Adam Majer schrieb:
Not sure about Ubuntu and stuff, but seems to work fine here in Debian

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ apt-cache policy mysql-admin
mysql-admin:
  Installed: 1.2.5rc-2
  Candidate: 1.2.5rc-2
  Version table:
 *** 1.2.5rc-2 0
        900 http://debian.yorku.ca unstable/main Packages
        100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ssh [EMAIL PROTECTED] apt-cache policy mysql-server
mysql-server:
  Installed: (none)
  Candidate: 5.0.24a-3
  Version table:
     5.0.24a-3 0
        500 http://debian.yorku.ca etch/main Packages

Maybe it is a MySQL server error? What SQL statement is sent by
mysql-admin that causes the SQL-Error?

- Adam


Kurt J. Bosch wrote:
Package: mysql-admin

Version: 1.2.5rc-1

On Ubuntu Feisty when I try to use mysql-admin to run a Backup-Job
(Normal Backup - all tables - mythtv database mythconverg) against
mysql-server on up to date Ubuntu Dapper, I only get these Errors:

Error during Backup
SQL-Error

The backup does not run.

I tried to move ~/.mysql* away and created a new Job but it didn't help.

Versions are:
Client: Ubuntu Feisty mysql-admin 1.2.5rc-1
Server: Ubuntu Dapper mysql-server 5.0.22-0ubuntu6.06.3

After I installed
mysql-admin_1.1.10-1_i386.deb
mysql-admin-common_1.1.10-1_all.deb
from Ubuntu Edgy it worked normal again.




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