Luego de googlear demasiado y buscando solucion a este problema FINALMENTE LO ENCONTRE 
Which particular version of Ubuntu is this and is this Ubuntu Server Edition?
Recent Ubuntu Server Editions (such as 10.04) ship with AppArmor and MySQL's profile might be in enforcing mode by default. You can check this by executing
...
/usr/sbin/mysqld {
...
/var/log/mysql/ r,
/var/log/mysql/* rw,
/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid w,
/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock w,
/data/ r,
/data/* rw,
}
And then make AppArmor reload the profiles.
Fuente: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/935556/mysql-dump-by-query
Which particular version of Ubuntu is this and is this Ubuntu Server Edition?
Recent Ubuntu Server Editions (such as 10.04) ship with AppArmor and MySQL's profile might be in enforcing mode by default. You can check this by executing
sudo aa-status like so:# sudo aa-status5 profiles are loaded.
5 profiles are in enforce mode.
   /usr/lib/connman/scripts/dhclient-script
   /sbin/dhclient3
   /usr/sbin/tcpdump
   /usr/lib/NetworkManager/nm-dhcp-client.action
   /usr/sbin/mysqld0 profiles are in complain mode.
1 processes have profiles defined.
1 processes are in enforce mode :
   /usr/sbin/mysqld (1089)
0 processes are in complain mode.
/var/log/messages when AppArmor blocks the writes/accesses. What you can do is edit /etc/apparmor.d/usr.sbin.mysqld and add /data/ and /data/* near the bottom like so:...
/usr/sbin/mysqld {
...
/var/log/mysql/ r,
/var/log/mysql/* rw,
/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.pid w,
/var/run/mysqld/mysqld.sock w,
/data/ r,
/data/* rw,
}
And then make AppArmor reload the profiles.
# sudo /etc/init.d/apparmor reloadFuente: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/935556/mysql-dump-by-query
 
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