Weird phpmyadmin export problem

I ran into this a few months ago and figured (hoped) it was a one-off thing I’d never see again.  But, I just encountered it again.

I had gotten a database dump from a largeish WordPress site, using phpMyAdmin’s export option.  (Don’t remember what version of phpMyAdmin).  The dump was about 150MB which was in the realm of what I expected.  But the file seemed corrupt:

# file dump.sql.gz
dump.sql.gz: data

When I inspected the file closer, I saw it had SQL in it, as though phpMyAdmin had ignored my compression request.  So I tried just loading that into the database.  No joy.

I tried exporting again, got the same results.  I couldn’t export non-compressed from that install because of some problem with the host (I don’t remember exactly, maybe a timeout?)

Looking at where the sql load was failing, I saw that after many kb of clear text SQL, the rest of the file was binary data.  I eventually cut out the clear text at the beginning of the file, and what I was left with was good gzip data:

# file newdump.sql.gz
newdump.sql.gz: gzip compressed data, from Unix

I used “dd” to figure out where the boundary was between the text and binary data, and then to extract just the binary data.  Like so:

# dd if=dump.sql.gz bs=74660 skip=1 of=newdump.sql.gz

I found the number 74660 through trial-and-error, running that command and looking at the output repeatedly.

I uncompressed newdump.sql.gz and saw that it started right where the clear text had left off.  The last character of the clear text was a closing paren of a multi-line insert, and the first character of the uncompressed newdump.sql.gz was the comma that would come next.  So I used dd to save off the clear text, then catted them together to load them in the database.  Here’s the whole sequence:

# dd if=dump.sql.gz bs=74660 skip=1 of=newdump.sql.gz
# gunzip newdump.sql.gz
# dd if=dump.sql.gz bs=74660 count=1 of=head.sql
# cat head.sql newdump.sql | mysql -p dbname

Like I said, I thought this was a one-off, so I was surprised to be given a new 190MB compressed SQL file which had the same symptoms.  This time I didn’t do the dump from phpMyAdmin, someone else did, so again I don’t know what version.  The symptoms and solution were the same.  I used dd to extract the binary portion, then uncompressed it and fed it into mysql.

If I run across this again (surely not?) I’ll track down the versions of things.  I’m a little curious to see the bug that results in 74,660 bytes of uncompressed data being output, followed by the rest of the input  being compressed.  ‘Til next time,

Lars