Is it safe to delete mysql-bin files?

Please do not just delete them in the OS.

You need to let mysqld do that for you. Here is how mysqld manages it:

The file mysql-bin.[index] keeps a list of all binary logs mysqld has generated and auto-rotated. The mechanisms for cleaning out the binlogs in conjunction with mysql-bin.[index] are:

PURGE BINARY LOGS TO 'binlogname';
PURGE BINARY LOGS BEFORE 'datetimestamp';

These will clear all binary logs before the binlog or timestamp you just specified.

For example, if you run

PURGE BINARY LOGS TO 'mysql-bin.000223';

this will erase all binary logs before mysql-bin.000223.

If you run

PURGE BINARY LOGS BEFORE DATE(NOW() - INTERVAL 3 DAY) + INTERVAL 0 SECOND;

this will erase all binary logs before midnight 3 days ago.

If you want to have binlog rotated away automatically and keep 3 days woth, simply set this:

mysql> SET GLOBAL expire_logs_days = 3;

then add this to /etc/my.cnf

[mysqld]
expire_logs_days=3

and mysqld will delete them logs for you

SHOW SLAVE STATUS\G

This is critical. When you run SHOW SLAVE STATUS\G, you will see two binary logs from the Master:

  • Master_Log_File
  • Relay_Master_Log_File

When replication has little or no lag these are usually the same value. When there is a lot of replication lag, these values are different. Just to make it simple, choose whatever Relay_Master_Log_File is, and go back to the Master and run

PURGE BINARY LOGS TO 'Whatever Relay_Master_Log_File Is';

That way, replication is not interrupted.


This really depends on your backup strategy. One of the main reasons to keep the binary logs around is to restore your database to a 'point-in-time'. If your database crashes and requires restoration, you would restore the latest full backup, and then play back the binary logs starting with the position of the full backup.

So, if you do a full backup every day and you have 7 days worth of binary logs, it is likely that you can delete the past 4-6 days worth of binary logs. You can control how many days worth of binary logs are kept with the expire_logs_days setting.

You can delete the binary logs you don't need by first seeing what is the oldest log you want to keep:

ls -lh /path/to/binary/logs/mysql-bin.0*

and then in mysql:

mysql> PURGE BINARY LOGS TO 'mysql-bin.XXXXX';

Try this:

RESET MASTER;

as the document said:

RESET MASTER enables you to delete any binary log files and their related binary log index file, returning the master to its state before binary logging was started.

This will delete all the related binary log files, which may not what you want.