When evaluating replication options, the slave begins by
checking to see whether there are any
--replicate-do-db or
--replicate-ignore-db options
that apply. When using
--binlog-do-db or
--binlog-ignore-db, the process
is similar, but the options are checked on the master.
The checking of the database-level options proceeds as shown in the following diagram.

The steps involved are listed here:
Are there any
--replicate-do-db options?
Yes. Do any of them match the database?
Yes. Execute the statement and exit.
No. Continue to step 2.
No. Continue to step 2.
Are there any
--replicate-ignore-db
options?
Yes. Do any of them match the database?
Yes. Ignore the statement and exit.
No. Continue to step 3.
No. Continue to step 3.
Proceed to checking the table-level replication options, if there are any. For a description of how these options are checked, see Section 14.9.2, “Evaluation of Table-Level Replication Options”.
A statement that is not yet disallowed at this stage is not yet actually executed. The statement is not executed until all table-level options (if any) have also been checked, and the outcome of that process permits execution of the statement.
For binary logging, the steps involved are listed here:
Are there any --binlog-do-db
or --binlog-ignore-db
options?
Yes. Continue to step 2.
No. Log the statement and exit.
Is there a default database (has any database been selected
by USE)?
Yes. Continue to step 3.
No. Ignore the statement and exit.
There is a default database. Are there any
--binlog-do-db options?
Yes. Do any of them match the database?
Yes. Log the statement and exit.
No. Ignore the statement and exit.
No. Continue to step 4.
Do any of the
--binlog-ignore-db options
match the database?
Yes. Ignore the statement and exit.
No. Log the statement and exit.
An exception is made in the rules just given for the
CREATE DATABASE,
ALTER DATABASE, and
DROP DATABASE statements. In
those cases, the database being created, altered, or
dropped replaces the default database when
determining whether to log or to ignore updates.
--binlog-do-db can sometimes mean
“ignore other databases”. For example, a server
running with only
--binlog-do-db=sales does not
write to the binary log statements for which the default
database differs from sales.

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