Mongodb Docs 2010 09 03
Mongodb Docs 2010 09 03
Mongodb Docs 2010 09 03
5
1.1 Development Cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Creating and Deleting Indexes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Diagnostic Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Django and MongoDB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Getting Started . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
International Documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Monitoring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Older Downloads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
PyMongo and mod_wsgi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Python Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Recommended Production Architectures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
v0.8 Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Building SpiderMonkey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Dot Notation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Dot Notation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Getting the Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Language Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Mongo Administration Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Working with Mongo Objects and Classes in Ruby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
MongoDB Language Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Community Info . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Internals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
TreeNavigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Old Pages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Storing Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Indexes in Mongo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
HowTo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Searching and Retrieving . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Locking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Mongo Developers' Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Locking in Mongo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Mongo Database Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Mongo Concepts and Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
MongoDB - A Developer's Tour . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Updates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Structuring Data for Mongo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Design Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Document-Oriented Datastore . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Why so many "Connection Accepted" messages logged? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Why are my datafiles so large? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Storing Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Introduction - How Mongo Works . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Optimizing Mongo Performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Mongo Usage Basics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Server-Side Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Home . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Quickstart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Quickstart OS X . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Quickstart Unix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Quickstart Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Downloads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
1.0 Changelist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1.2.x Release Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1.4 Release Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1.6 Release Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
CentOS and Fedora Packages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Ubuntu and Debian packages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Version Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
C Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
C Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
C Sharp Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Driver Syntax Table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Javascript Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
node.JS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
JVM Languages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Python Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
PHP Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Installing the PHP Driver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
PHP Libraries, Frameworks, and Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
PHP - Storing Files and Big Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Troubleshooting the PHP Driver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Ruby Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Ruby Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Replica Pairs in Ruby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Replica Sets in Ruby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
GridFS in Ruby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Rails - Getting Started . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Rails 3 - Getting Started . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
MongoDB Data Modeling and Rails . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Object Mappers for Ruby and MongoDB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Using Mongoid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Ruby External Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Frequently Asked Questions - Ruby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Java Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Java Driver Concurrency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Java - Saving Objects Using DBObject . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Java Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Java Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
C++ Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
C++ BSON Library . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
C++ Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Connecting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Perl Language Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Contributing to the Perl Driver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Perl Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Online API Documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Writing Drivers and Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Overview - Writing Drivers and Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
bsonspec.org . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Mongo Driver Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Spec, Notes and Suggestions for Mongo Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Feature Checklist for Mongo Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Conventions for Mongo Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Driver Testing Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Mongo Wire Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
BSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
Mongo Extended JSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
GridFS Specification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
Implementing Authentication in a Driver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
Notes on Pooling for Mongo Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Driver and Integration Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Connecting Drivers to Replica Sets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Error Handling in Mongo Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Developer Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
Manual . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
Connections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
Databases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Mongo Metadata . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
Collections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118
Capped Collections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118
Using a Large Number of Collections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
Data Types and Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
Internationalized Strings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
Object IDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
Database References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121
GridFS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
Indexes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
Using Multikeys to Simulate a Large Number of Indexes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Geospatial Indexing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Indexing as a Background Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
Multikeys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
Indexing Advice and FAQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
Inserting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
Legal Key Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
Schema Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 137
Trees in MongoDB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
Optimization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142
Optimizing Storage of Small Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
Query Optimizer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
Querying . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146
Mongo Query Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
Retrieving a Subset of Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148
Advanced Queries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148
Dot Notation (Reaching into Objects) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
Full Text Search in Mongo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
min and max Query Specifiers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
OR operations in query expressions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
Queries and Cursors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
Server-side Code Execution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
Sorting and Natural Order . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165
Aggregation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165
Removing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
Updating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 169
Atomic Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 173
findandmodify Command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
Updating Data in Mongo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176
MapReduce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178
Data Processing Manual . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
mongo - The Interactive Shell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182
Overview - The MongoDB Interactive Shell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
dbshell Reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185
Developer FAQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187
Do I Have to Worry About SQL Injection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
How does concurrency work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
SQL to Mongo Mapping Chart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
What is the Compare Order for BSON Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
Admin Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
Production Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 194
Replication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
Verifying Propagation of Writes with getLastError . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
Replica Sets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 196
About the local database . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197
Data Center Awareness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 197
Reconfiguring a replica set when members are down . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198
Replica Set Design Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198
Replica Sets Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
Replica Set Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 199
Replica Set Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203
Upgrading to Replica Sets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205
Replica Set Admin UI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207
Replica Set Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207
Replica Set FAQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209
Connecting to Replica Sets from Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209
Replica Sets Limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
Resyncing a Very Stale Replica Set Member . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
Replica Set Internals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
Master Slave . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213
One Slave Two Masters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 216
Replica Pairs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218
Master Master Replication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220
Replication Oplog Length . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221
Halted Replication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
Sharding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
Sharding Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
Configuring Sharding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
A Sample Configuration Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 230
Upgrading from a Non-Sharded System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232
Sharding Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 233
Sharding and Failover . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234
Sharding Limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Sharding Internals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 235
Moving Chunks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236
Sharding Config Schema . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 236
Sharding Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
Sharding Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
Shard Ownership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
Splitting Chunks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 240
Sharding FAQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
Hosting Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 242
Amazon EC2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 242
Joyent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 243
Monitoring and Diagnostics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 243
Checking Server Memory Usage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245
Database Profiler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245
Http Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 247
mongostat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 249
mongosniff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 250
Backups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251
How to do Snapshotted Queries in the Mongo Database . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 251
Import Export Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 252
Durability and Repair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 255
Security and Authentication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 257
Admin UIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258
Starting and Stopping Mongo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 261
Logging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263
Command Line Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263
File Based Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 264
GridFS Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 265
DBA Operations from the Shell . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 265
Architecture and Components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 267
Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 267
Excessive Disk Space . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 268
Too Many Open Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 269
Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 269
MongoDB kernel code development rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 270
Git Commit Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 270
Kernel class rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 270
Kernel code style . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 270
Kernel concurrency rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 271
Kernel exception architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272
Kernel string manipulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272
Writing Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272
Project Ideas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272
UI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 273
Source Code . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 274
Building . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 274
Building Boost . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 274
Building for FreeBSD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 275
Building for Linux . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 275
Building for OS X . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277
Building for Solaris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
Building for Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
Boost 1.41.0 Visual Studio 2010 Binary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
Boost and Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 282
Building the Mongo Shell on Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 282
Building with Visual Studio 2008 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 283
Building with Visual Studio 2010 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 284
Building Spider Monkey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 286
scons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 287
Database Internals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
Caching . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
Cursors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
Error Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
Internal Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
Replication Internals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 289
Smoke Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 290
Pairing Internals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291
Contributing to the Documentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291
Emacs tips for MongoDB work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291
Mongo Documentation Style Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 292
Community . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 294
MongoDB Commercial Services Providers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295
User Feedback . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295
Job Board . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 297
About . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 297
Philosophy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 297
Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 297
Use Case - Session Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 298
Production Deployments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 299
Mongo-Based Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310
Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310
Video & Slides from Recent Events and Presentations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 312
Slide Gallery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315
Articles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316
Benchmarks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316
FAQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316
Product Comparisons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
Interop Demo (Product Comparisons) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
MongoDB, CouchDB, MySQL Compare Grid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
Comparing Mongo DB and Couch DB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
Licensing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 319
Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
International Docs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
Doc Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
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See p/db/dbclient.h for example of how, on the client side, to support tailable cursors.
Set
Option_CursorTailable = 2
If you get back no results when you query the cursor, keep the cursor live if cursorid is still nonzero. Then, you can issue future getMore
requests for the cursor.
If a getMore request has the resultFlag ResultFlag_CursorNotFound set, the cursor is not longer valid. It should be marked as "dead"
on the client side.
ResultFlag_CursorNotFound = 1
See the Queries and Cursors section of the Mongo Developers' Guide for more information about cursors.
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The Queries and Cursors section of the Mongo Developers' Guide for more information about cursors
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$ mkdir -p /data/db
You can also tell MongoDB to use a different data directory, with the --dbpath option.
$ ./mongodb-xxxxxxx/bin/mongod
In a separate terminal, start the shell, which will connect to localhost by default:
$ ./mongodb-xxxxxxx/bin/mongo
> db.foo.save( { a : 1 } )
> db.foo.find()
Congratulations, you've just saved and retrieved your first document with MongoDB!
Learn more
Once you have MongoDB installed and running, head over to the Tutorial.
Quickstart Unix
Install MongoDB
Note: If you are running an old version of Linux and the database doesn't start, or gives a floating point exception, try the "legacy static" version
on the Downloads page instead of the versions listed below.
Package managers
Ubuntu and Debian users can now install nightly snapshots via apt. See Ubuntu and Debian packages for details.
CentOS and Fedora users should head to the CentOS and Fedora Packages page.
Other Unixes
See the Downloads page for some binaries, and also the Building page for information on building from source.
You can also tell MongoDB to use a different data directory, with the --dbpath option.
$ ./mongodb-xxxxxxx/bin/mongod
In a separate terminal, start the shell, which will connect to localhost by default:
$ ./mongodb-xxxxxxx/bin/mongo
> db.foo.save( { a : 1 } )
> db.foo.find()
Congratulations, you've just saved and retrieved your first document with MongoDB!
Learn more
Once you have MongoDB installed and running, head over to the Tutorial.
Quickstart Windows
Download
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Unzip
Create a data directory
Run and connect to the server
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Download
The easiest (and recommended) way to install MongoDB is to use the pre-built binaries.
32-bit binaries
Download and extract the 32-bit .zip. The "Production" build is recommended.
64-bit binaries
Note: 64-bit is recommended, although you must have a 64-bit version of Windows to run that version.
Unzip
Unzip the downloaded binary package to the location of your choice. You may want to rename mongo-xxxxxxx to just "mongo" for convenience.
To run the database, click mongod.exe in Explorer, or run it from a CMD window.
C:\> cd \my_mongo_dir\bin
C:\my_mongo_dir\bin > mongod
Note: It is also possible to run the server as a Windows Service. But we can do that later.
Now, start the administrative shell, either by double-clicking mongo.exe in Explorer, or from the CMD prompt. By default mongo.exe connects to
a mongod server running on localhost and uses the database named test. Run mongo --help to see other options.
C:\> cd \my_mongo_dir\bin
C:\my_mongo_dir\bin> mongo
> // the mongo shell is a javascript shell connected to the db
> 3+3
6
> db
test
> // the first write will create the db:
> db.foo.insert( { a : 1 } )
> db.foo.find()
{ _id : ..., a : 1 }
Congratulations, you've just saved and retrieved your first document with MongoDB!
Learn more
Tutorial
Windows quick links
[Mongo Shell]
Downloads
See also Packages.
Production
(Recommended)
1.4.3 os x 10.5+ download download * download * download download download download tgz zip 5/24/2010
os x 10.4 legacy-static legacy-static
nightly os x 10.5+ download download * download * download download download download tgz zip Daily
os x 10.4 legacy-static legacy-static
Previous
Release
1.2.5 os x 10.5+ download download * download * download download download download tgz zip 4/7/2010
os x 10.4 legacy-static legacy-static
nightly os x 10.5+ download download * download * download download download download tgz zip Daily
os x 10.4 legacy-static legacy-static
Dev (unstable)
1.5.3 os x 10.5+ download download * download * download download download download tgz zip 6/17/2010
os x 10.4 legacy-static legacy-static
1.5.x nightly os x 10.5+ download download * download * download download download download tgz zip Daily
os x 10.4 legacy-static legacy-static
Archived list list list list list list list list list
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Information on how to separately download or install the drivers and tools can be found on the Drivers page.
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<#comment><#comment><#comment>
1.0 Changelist
Wrote MongoDB. See documentation.
DB Upgrade Required
There are some changes that will require doing an upgrade if your previous version is <= 1.0.x. If you're already using a version >= 1.1.x then
these changes aren't required. There are 2 ways to do it:
--upgrade
stop your mongod process
run ./mongod --upgrade
start mongod again
use a slave
start a slave on a different port and data directory
when its synced, shut down the master, and start the new slave on the regular port.
Replication Changes
There have been minor changes in replication. If you are upgrading a master/slave setup from <= 1.1.2 you have to update the slave first.
mongoimport
mongoimportjson has been removed and is replaced with mongoimport that can do json/csv/tsv
We've changed the semantics of the field filter a little bit. Previously only objects with those fields would be returned. Now the field filter
only changes the output, not which objects are returned. If you need that behavior, you can use $exists
other notes
http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/1.1+Development+Cycle
concurrency improvements
indexing memory improvements
background index creation
better detection of regular expressions so the index can be used in more cases
Geo
2d geospatial search
geo $center and $box searches
Sharding
Sharding is now production-ready, making MongoDB horizontally scalable, with no single point of failure. A single instance of mongod can now be
upgraded to a distributed cluster with zero downtime when the need arises.
Sharding Tutorial
Sharding Documentation
Upgrading a Single Server to a Cluster
Replica Sets
Replica sets, which provide automated failover among a cluster of n nodes, are also now available.
Plese note that replica pairs are now deprecated; we strongly recommend that replica pair users upgrade to replica sets.
Other Improvements
The w option (and wtimeout) forces writes to be propagated to n servers before returning success (this works especially well with replica
sets)
$or queries
Improved concurrency
$slice operator for returning subsets of arrays
64 indexes per collection (formerly 40 indexes per collection)
64-bit integers can now be represented in the shell using NumberLong
The findAndModify command now supports upserts. It also allows you to specify fields to return
$showDiskLoc option to see disk location of a document
Support for IPv6 and UNIX domain sockets
Installation
1.5.8
1.5.7
1.5.6
1.5.5
1.5.4
1.5.3
1.5.2
1.5.1
1.5.0
To use these packages, add one of the following files in /etc/yum.repos.d, and then yum update and yum install your preferred complement of
packages.
[10gen]
name=10gen Repository
baseurl=http://downloads.mongodb.org/distros/centos/5.4/os/x86_64/
gpgcheck=0
[10gen]
name=10gen Repository
baseurl=http://downloads.mongodb.org/distros/centos/5.4/os/i386/
gpgcheck=0
[10gen]
name=10gen Repository
baseurl=http://downloads.mongodb.org/distros/fedora/13/os/x86_64/
gpgcheck=0
[10gen]
name=10gen Repository
baseurl=http://downloads.mongodb.org/distros/fedora/12/os/x86_64/
gpgcheck=0
For Fedora 11:
[10gen]
name=10gen Repository
baseurl=http://downloads.mongodb.org/distros/fedora/11/os/x86_64/
gpgcheck=0
For the moment, these packages aren't signed. (If anybody knows how to automate signing RPMs, please let us know!)
Please read the notes on the Downloads page. Also, note that these packages are updated daily, and so if you find you can't
download the packages, try updating your apt package lists, e.g., with 'apt-get update' or 'aptitude update'.
10gen publishes apt-gettable packages. Our packages are generally fresher than those in Debian or Ubuntu. We publish 3 distinct packages,
named "mongodb-stable", "mongodb-unstable", "mongodb-snapshot", corresponding to our latest stable release, our latest development release,
and the most recent git checkout at the time of building. Each of these packages conflicts with the others, and with the "mongodb" package in
Debian/Ubuntu.
The packaging is still a work-in-progress, so we invite Debian and Ubuntu users to try them out and let us know how the packaging might be
improved.
To use the packages, add a line to your /etc/apt/sources.list, then 'aptitude update' and one of 'aptitude install mongodb-stable', 'aptitude install
mongodb-unstable' or 'aptitude install mongodb-snapshot'.
These packages are snapshots of our git master branch, and we plan to
update them frequently, so package version numbers will be of the form
YYYYMMDD; when reporting issues with these packages, please include the
package version in your report.
The public gpg key used for signing these packages follows. It should be possible to import the key into apt's public keyring with a command like
this:
To configure these packages beyond the defaults, have a look at /etc/mongodb.conf, and/or the initialization script, (/etc/init.d/mongodb on older,
non-Upstart systems, /etc/init/mongodb.conf on Upstart systems). Most MongoDB operational settings are in /etc/mongodb.conf; a few other
settings are in the initialization script. Note that if you customize the userid in the initialization script or the dbpath or logpath settings in
/etc/mongodb.conf, you must ensure that the directories and files you use are writable by the userid you run the server as.
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=74Cu
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Version Numbers
MongoDB uses the odd-numbered versions for development releases.
A is the major version. This will rarely change and signify very large changes
B is the release number. This will include many changes including features and things that possible break backwards compatibility. Even
Bs will be stable branches, and odd Bs will be development.
C is the revision number and will be used for bugs and security issues.
For example:
Drivers
MongoDB currently has client support for the following programming languages:
mongodb.org Supported
C
C++
Java
Javascript
Perl
PHP
Python
Ruby
Community Supported
REST
C# and .NET
Clojure
ColdFusion
Blog post: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3
http://github.com/virtix/cfmongodb/tree/0.9
Delphi
pebongo - Early stage Delphi driver for MongoDB
Erlang
emongo - An Erlang MongoDB driver that emphasizes speed and stability. "The most emo of drivers."
Erlmongo - an almost complete MongoDB driver implementation in Erlang
Factor
http://github.com/slavapestov/factor/tree/master/extra/mongodb/
Fantom
http://bitbucket.org/liamstask/fantomongo/wiki/Home
F#
http://gist.github.com/218388
Go
gomongo
Groovy
See Java Language Center
Haskell
http://hackage.haskell.org/package/mongoDB
Javascript
Lua
LuaMongo
node.js
Objective C
NuMongoDB
PHP
Asynchronous PHP driver using libevent
PowerShell
Blog post
Python
Ruby
MongoMapper
rmongo - An event-machine-based Ruby driver for MongoDB
jmongo A thin ruby wrapper around the mongo-java-driver for vastly better jruby performance.
em-mongo EventMachine MongoDB Driver (based off of RMongo).
Scala
See JVM Languages
Scheme (PLT)
http://planet.plt-scheme.org/display.ss?package=mongodb.plt&owner=jaymccarthy
docs
Smalltalk
Dolphin Smalltalk
C Language Center
C Driver
Download
Build
Notable Projects
C Driver
The MongoDB C Driver is the 10gen-supported driver for MongoDB. It's written in pure C. The goal is to be super strict for ultimate portability, no
dependencies, and very embeddable anywhere.
Tutorial
C Driver README
Source Code
Download
The C driver is hosted at GitHub.com. Check out the latest version with git.
Build
Notable Projects
NuMongodb – An Objective-C wrapper around the MongoDB C driver. It is intended for use with Nu but may be useful in other Objective-C
programming applications.
If you're working on a project that you'd like to have included, let us know.
C Tutorial
Writing Client Code
Connecting
BSON
Inserting
Single
Batch
Querying
Simple Queries
Complex Queries
Sorting
Hints
Explain
Indexing
Updating
Further Reading
Next, you may wish to take a look at the Developer's Tour guide for a language independent look at how to use MongoDB. Also, we suggest
some basic familiarity with the mongo shell -- the shell is one's primary database administration tool and is useful for manually inspecting the
contents of a database after your C program runs.
A working C program complete with examples from this tutorial can be found here.
Connecting
int main() {
mongo_connection conn[1]; /* ptr */
mongo_connection_options opts[1];
mongo_conn_return status;
switch (status) {
case mongo_conn_success: printf( "connection succeeded\n" ); break;
case mongo_conn_bad_arg: printf( "bad arguments\n" ); return 1;
case mongo_conn_no_socket: printf( "no socket\n" ); return 1;
case mongo_conn_fail: printf( "connection failed\n" ); return 1;
case mongo_conn_not_master: printf( "not master\n" ); return 1;
}
mongo_destroy( conn );
printf( "\nconnection closed\n" );
return 0;
}
If you are using gcc on Linux or OS X, you would compile with something like this, depending on location of your include files:
BSON
The Mongo database stores data in BSON format. BSON is a binary object format that is JSON-like in terms of the data which can be stored
(some extensions exist, for example, a Date datatype).
To save data in the database we must create bson objects. We use bson_buffer to make bson objects, and bson_iterator to enumerate
bson objects.
Let's now create a BSON "person" object which contains name and age. We might invoke:
bson b[1];
bson_buffer buf[1];
bson_buffer_init( buf )
bson_append_string( buf, "name", "Joe" );
bson_append_int( buf, "age", 33 );
bson_from_buffer( b, buf );
Use the bson_append_new_oid() helper to add an object id to your object. The server will add an _id automatically if it is not included
explicitly.
bson b[1];
bson_buffer buf[1];
bson_buffer_init( buf );
bson_append_new_oid( buf, "_id" );
bson_append_string( buf, "name", "Joe" );
bson_append_int( buf, "age", 33 );
bson_from_buffer( b, buf );
When you are done using the object remember to use bson_destroy() to free up the memory allocated by the buffer.
bson_destroy( b )
Inserting
Single
The first parameter to mongo_insert is the pointer to the mongo_connection object. The second parameter is the namespace. tutorial is the
database and persons is the collection name. The third parameter is a pointer to the bson "person" object that we created before.
Batch
Simple Queries
Let's now fetch all objects from the persons collection, and display them.
mongo_cursor_destroy( cursor );
bson_destroy( empty );
}
empty is the empty BSON object -- we use it to represent {} which indicates an empty query pattern (an empty query is a query for all objects).
We use bson_print() above to print out information about each object retrieved. bson_print() is a diagnostic function which prints an
abbreviated JSON string representation of the object.
Let's now write a function which prints out the name (only) of all persons in the collection whose age is a given value:
bson_buffer_init( query_buf );
bson_append_int( query_buf, "age", 24 );
bson_from_buffer( query, query_buf );
bson_destroy( query );
}
{ age : <agevalue> }
use tutorial;
db.persons.find( { age : 24 } );
Complex Queries
Sometimes we want to do more then a simple query. We may want the results to be sorted in a special way, or what the query to use a certain
index.
Sorting
Let's now make the results from previous query be sorted alphabetically by name. To do this, we change the query statement from:
bson_buffer_init( query_buf );
bson_append_int( query_buf, "age", 24 );
bson_from_buffer( query, query_buf );
to:
bson_buffer_init( query_buf );
bson_append_start_object( query_buf, "$query" );
bson_append_int( query_buf, "age", 24 );
bson_append_finish_object( query_buf );
bson_append_start_object( query_buf, "$orderby" );
bson_append_int( query_buf, "name", 1);
bson_append_finish_object( query_buf );
bson_from_buffer( query, query_buf );
Hints
While the mongo query optimizer often performs very well, explicit "hints" can be used to force mongo to use a specified index, potentially
improving performance in some situations. When you have a collection indexed and are querying on multiple fields (and some of those fields are
indexed), pass the index as a hint to the query:
bson_buffer_init( query_buf );
bson_append_start_object( query_buf, "$query" );
bson_append_int( query_buf, "age", 24 );
bson_append_string( query_buf, "name", "Mathias" );
bson_append_finish_object( query_buf );
bson_append_start_object( query_buf, "$hint" );
bson_append_int( query_buf, "name", 1);
bson_append_finish_object( query_buf );
bson_from_buffer( query, query_buf );
Explain
A great way to get more information on the performance of your database queries is to use the $explain feature. This will return "explain plan"
type info about a query from the database.
bson_buffer_init( query_buf );
bson_append_start_object( query_buf, "$query" );
bson_append_int( query_buf, "age", 33 );
bson_append_finish_object( query_buf );
bson_append_bool( query_buf, "$explain", 1);
bson_from_buffer( query, query_buf );
Indexing
Let's suppose we want to have an index on age so that our queries are fast. We would use:
static void tutorial_index( mongo_connection * conn ) {
bson key[1];
bson_buffer key_buf[1];
bson_buffer_init( key_buf );
bson_append_int( key_buf, "name", 1 );
bson_from_buffer( key, key_buf );
bson_destroy( key );
bson_buffer_init( key_buf );
bson_append_int( key_buf, "age", 1 );
bson_append_int( key_buf, "name", 1 );
bson_from_buffer( key, key_buf );
bson_destroy( key );
Updating
Use the mongo_update() method to perform a database update . For example the following update in the mongo shell :
bson_buffer_init( cond_buf );
bson_append_string( cond_buf, "name", "Joe");
bson_append_int( cond_buf, "age", 33);
bson_from_buffer( cond, cond_buf );
bson_buffer_init( op_buf );
bson_append_start_object( op_buf, "$inc" );
bson_append_int( op_buf, "visits", 1 );
bson_append_finish_object( op_buf );
bson_from_buffer( op, op_buf );
bson_destroy( cond );
bson_destroy( op );
}
Further Reading
This overview just touches on the basics of using Mongo from C++. There are many more capabilities. For further exploration:
mongodb-csharp driver
simple-mongodb driver
NoRM
F#
F# Example
Community Articles
Tools
Support
http://groups.google.com/group/mongodb-csharp
http://groups.google.com/group/mongodb-user
IRC: #mongodb on freenode
See Also
[] [] array() []
{} {} new stdClass {}
cursor.hasNext() * $cursor->hasNext() *
SpiderMonkey
The MongoDB shell extends SpiderMonkey. See the MongoDB shell documentation.
Narwhal
http://github.com/sergi/narwhal-mongodb
Javascript may be executed in the MongoDB server processes for various functions such as query enhancement and map/reduce processing.
See Server-side Code Execution.
node.JS
Node.js is used to write event-driven, scalable network programs in server-side JavaScript. It is similar in purpose to Twisted, EventMachine, etc.
It runs on Google's V8.
Web Frameworks
JVM Languages
moved to Java Language Center
Redirection Notice
This page should redirect to http://api.mongodb.org/python.
The MongoDB server running - the server is the "mongod" file, not the "mongo" client (note the "d" at the end)
The MongoDB PHP driver installed
*NIX
Run:
extension=mongo.so
It is recommended to add this to the section with the other "extensions", but it will work from anywhere within the php.ini file.
Restart your web server (Apache, nginx, etc.) for the change to take effect.
See the installation docs for configuration information and OS-specific installation instructions.
Windows
extension=php_mongo.dll
Restart your web server (Apache, IIS, etc.) for the change to take effect
For more information, see the Windows section of the installation docs.
To get started, see the Tutorial. Also check out the API Documentation.
See Also
PHP Libraries, Frameworks, and Tools for working with Drupal, Cake, Symfony, and more from MongoDB.
Admin UIs
Redirection Notice
This page should redirect to http://www.php.net/manual/en/mongo.installation.php.
CakePHP
MongoDB datasource for CakePHP. There's also an introductory blog post on using it with Mongo.
Codeigniter
MongoDB-Codeigniter-Driver
Doctrine
ODM (Object Document Mapper) is an experimental Doctrine MongoDB object mapper. The Doctrine\ODM\Mongo namespace is an experimental
project for a PHP 5.3 MongoDB Object Mapper. It allows you to easily write PHP 5 classes and map them to collections in MongoDB. You just
work with your objects like normal and Doctrine will transparently persist them to Mongo.
This project implements the same "style" of the Doctrine 2 ORM project interface so it will look very familiar to you and it has lots of the same
features and implementations.
Drupal
MongoDB Integration - Views (query builder) backend, a watchdog implementation (logging), and field storage.
Fat-Free Framework
Fat-Free is a powerful yet lightweight PHP 5.3+ Web development framework designed to help you build dynamic and robust applications - fast!
Kohana Framework
Mango at github
An ActiveRecord-like library for PHP, for the Kohana PHP Framework.
See also PHP Language Center#MongoDb PHP ODM further down.
Lithium
Log4php
Memcached
MongoNode
PHP script that replicates MongoDB objects to Memcached.
Symfony 2
Symfony 2 Logger
A centralized logger for Symfony applications. See the blog post.
sfStoragePerformancePlugin - This plugin contains some extra storage engines (MongoDB and Memcached) that are currently missing
from the Symfony (>= 1.2) core.
Vork
Vork, the high-performance enterprise framework for PHP natively supports MongoDB as either a primary datasource or
used in conjunction with an RDBMS. Designed for scalability & Green-IT, Vork serves more traffic with fewer servers and
can be configured to operate without any disk-IO.
Vork provides a full MVC stack that outputs semantically-correct XHTML 1.1, complies with Section 508 Accessibility
guidelines & Zend-Framework coding-standards, has SEO-friendly URLs, employs CSS-reset for cross-browser display
consistency and is written in well-documented object-oriented E_STRICT PHP5 code.
An extensive set of tools are built into Vork for ecommerce (cc-processing, SSL, PayPal, AdSense, shipment tracking,
QR-codes), Google Maps, translation & internationalization, Wiki, Amazon Web Services, Social-Networking (Twitter,
Meetup, ShareThis, YouTube, Flickr) and much more.
Zend Framework
Shanty Mongo is a prototype mongodb adapter for the Zend Framework. It's intention is to make working with mongodb documents as
natural and as simple as possible. In particular allowing embeded documents to also have custom document classes.
ZF Cache Backend
A ZF Cache Backend for MongoDB. It support tags and auto-cleaning.
Stand-Alone Tools
ActiveMongo
MapReduce API
MongoDB-MapReduce-PHP at github
MongoDb PHP ODM is a simple object wrapper for the Mongo PHP driver classes which makes using Mongo in your PHP application more like
ORM, but without the suck. It is designed for use with Kohana 3 but will also integrate easily with any PHP application with almost no additional
effort.
Mongodloid
A nice library on top of the PHP driver that allows you to make more natural queries ($query->query('a == 13 AND b >= 8 && c % 3 ==
4');), abstracts away annoying $-syntax, and provides getters and setters.
Project Page
Downloads
Documentation
Morph
A high level PHP library for MongoDB. Morph comprises a suite of objects and object primitives that are designed to make working with MongoDB
in PHP a breeze.
Morph at code.google.com
simplemongophp
Very simple layer for using data objects see blog post
simplemongophp at github
The Uniform Server is a lightweight WAMP server solution for running a web server under Windows without having anything to install; just unpack
and run it. Uniform Server 6-Carbo includes the latest versions of Apache2, Perl5, PHP5, MySQL5 and phpMyAdmin. The Uniform Server
MongoDB plugin adds the MongoDB server, phpMoAdmin browser administration interface, the MongoDB PHP driver and a Windows interface to
start and stop both Apache and MongoDB servers. From this interface you can also start either the Mongo-client or phpMoAdmin to administer
MongoDB databases.
Redirection Notice
This page should redirect to http://www.php.net/manual/en/class.mongogridfs.php.
Ruby Driver
Installing / Upgrading
BSON
Object Mappers
Notable Projects
Ruby Driver
The MongoDB Ruby driver is the 10gen-supported driver for MongoDB. It's written in pure Ruby, with a recommended C extension for speed.
The driver is optimized for simplicity. It can be used on its own, but it also serves as the basis for various object-mapping libraries.
Tutorial
Ruby Driver README
API Documentation
Source Code
Installing / Upgrading
The ruby driver is hosted at Rubygems.org. Before installing the driver, make sure you're using the latest version of rubygems (currently 1.3.6):
To stay on the bleeding edge, check out the latest source from github:
$ rake gem:install
BSON
In versions of the Ruby driver prior to 0.20, the code for serializing to BSON existed in the mongo gem. Now, all BSON serialization is handled by
the required bson gem.
As long it's in Ruby's load path, bson_ext will be loaded automatically when you require bson.
Note that beginning with version 0.20, the mongo_ext gem is no longer used.
To learn more about the Ruby driver, see the Ruby Tutorial.
Object Mappers
If you need validations, associations, and other high-level data modeling functions, consider using one of the available object mappers. Many of
these exist in the Ruby ecosystem; here we host a list of the most popular ones.
Notable Projects
Tools for working with MongoDB in Ruby are being developed daily. A partial list can eb found in the Projects and Libraries section of our external
resources page.
If you're working on a project that you'd like to have included, let us know.
Ruby Tutorial
This tutorial gives many common examples of using MongoDB with the Ruby driver. If you're looking for information on data modeling, see
MongoDB Data Modeling and Rails. Links to the various object mappers are listed on our object mappers page.
As always, the latest source for the Ruby driver can be found on github.
Installation
A Quick Tour
Using the RubyGem
Making a Connection
Listing All Databases
Dropping a Database
Authentication (Optional)
Getting a List Of Collections
Getting a Collection
Inserting a Document
Finding the First Document In a Collection using find_one()
Adding Multiple Documents
Counting Documents in a Collection
Using a Cursor to get all of the Documents
Getting a Single Document with a Query
Getting a Set of Documents With a Query
Querying with Regular Expressions
Creating An Index
Creating and querying on a geospatial index
Getting a List of Indexes on a Collection
Database Administration
See Also
Installation
The mongo-ruby-driver gem is served through Rubygems.org. To install, make sure you have the latest version of rubygems.
After installing, you may want to look at the examples directory included in the source distribution. These examples walk through some of the
basics of using the Ruby driver.
A Quick Tour
All of the code here assumes that you have already executed the following Ruby code:
Making a Connection
An Mongo::Connection instance represents a connection to MongoDB. You use a Connection instance to obtain an Mongo:DB instance, which
represents a named database. The database doesn't have to exist - if it doesn't, MongoDB will create it for you.
You can optionally specify the MongoDB server address and port when connecting. The following example shows three ways to connect to the
database "mydb" on the local machine:
db = Mongo::Connection.new.db("mydb")
db = Mongo::Connection.new("localhost").db("mydb")
db = Mongo::Connection.new("localhost", 27017).db("mydb")
At this point, the db object will be a connection to a MongoDB server for the specified database. Each DB instance uses a separate socket
connection to the server.
Dropping a Database
connection.drop_database('database_name')
Authentication (Optional)
MongoDB can be run in a secure mode where access to databases is controlled through name and password authentication. When run in this
mode, any client application must provide a name and password before doing any operations. In the Ruby driver, you simply do the following with
the connected mongo object:
If the name and password are valid for the database, auth will be true. Otherwise, it will be false. You should look at the MongoDB log for
further information if available.
Each database has zero or more collections. You can retrieve a list of them from the db (and print out any that are there):
db.collection_names.each { |name| puts name }
and assuming that there are two collections, name and address, in the database, you would see
name
address
as the output.
Getting a Collection
coll = db.collection("testCollection")
coll = db["testCollection"]
Once you have this collection object, you can now do things like insert data, query for data, etc.
Inserting a Document
Once you have the collection object, you can insert documents into the collection. For example, lets make a little document that in JSON would be
represented as
{
"name" : "MongoDB",
"type" : "database",
"count" : 1,
"info" : {
x : 203,
y : 102
}
}
Notice that the above has an "inner" document embedded within it. To do this, we can use a Hash or the driver's OrderedHash (which preserves
key order) to create the document (including the inner document), and then just simply insert it into the collection using the insert() method.
To show that the document we inserted in the previous step is there, we can do a simple find_one() operation to get the first document in the
collection. This method returns a single document (rather than the Cursor that the find() operation returns).
my_doc = coll.find_one()
puts my_doc.inspect
Note the _id element has been added automatically by MongoDB to your document.
Adding Multiple Documents
To demonstrate some more interesting queries, let's add multiple simple documents to the collection. These documents will have the following
form:
{
"i" : value
}
Notice that we can insert documents of different "shapes" into the same collection. These records are in the same collection as the complex
record we inserted above. This aspect is what we mean when we say that MongoDB is "schema-free".
Now that we've inserted 101 documents (the 100 we did in the loop, plus the first one), we can check to see if we have them all using the
count() method.
puts coll.count()
To get all the documents from the collection, we use the find() method. find() returns a Cursor object, which allows us to iterate over the
set of documents that matches our query. The Ruby driver's Cursor implemented Enumerable, which allows us to use Enumerable#each,
{{Enumerable#map}, etc. For instance:
We can create a query hash to pass to the find() method to get a subset of the documents in our collection. For example, if we wanted to find
the document for which the value of the "i" field is 71, we would do the following ;
We can use the query to get a set of documents from our collection. For example, if we wanted to get all documents where "i" > 50, we could
write:
which should print the documents where i > 50. We could also get a range, say 20 < i <= 30:
coll.find("i" => {"$gt" => 20, "$lte" => 30}).each { |row| puts row }
You can also construct a regular expression dynamically. To match a given search string:
search_string = params['search']
# Constructor syntax
coll.find({"name" => Regexp.new(search_string)})
# Literal syntax
coll.find({"name" => /#{search_string}/})
Although MongoDB isn't vulnerable to anything like SQL-injection, it may be worth checking the search string for anything malicious.
Creating An Index
MongoDB supports indexes, and they are very easy to add on a collection. To create an index, you specify an index name and an array of field
names to be indexed, or a single field name. The following creates an ascending index on the "i" field:
To specify complex indexes or a descending index you need to use a slightly more complex syntax - the index specifier must be an Array of [field
name, direction] pairs. Directions should be specified as Mongo::ASCENDING or Mongo::DESCENDING:
# explicit "ascending"
coll.create_index([["i", Mongo::ASCENDING]])
people.create_index([["loc", Mongo::GEO2D]])
Then get a list of the twenty locations nearest to the point 50, 50:
people.find({"loc" => {"$near" => [50, 50]}}, {:limit => 20}).each do |p|
puts p.inspect
end
Database Administration
A database can have one of three profiling levels: off (:off), slow queries only (:slow_only), or all (:all). To see the database level:
Validating a collection will return an interesting hash if all is well or raise an exception if there is a problem.
p db.validate_collection('coll_name')
See Also
Replica Sets will replace replica pairs in MongoDB 1.6. If you are just now setting up an instance, you may want to wait for that
and use master/slave replication in the meantime.
Here follow a few considerations for those using the Ruby driver with MongoDB and replica pairing.
Setup
Connection Failures
Recovery
Testing
Further Reading
Setup
First, make sure that you've correctly paired two mongod instances. If you want to do this on the same machine for testing, make sure you've
created two data directories. The init commands are as follows:
When you instantiate a Ruby connection, you'll have to make sure that the driver knows about both instances:
Connection Failures
Imagine that our master node goes offline. How will the driver respond?
At first, the driver will try to send operations to what was the master node. These operations will fail, and the driver will raise a ConnectionFailure
exception. It then becomes the client's responsibility to decide how to handle this.
If the client decides to retry, it's not guaranteed that the former slave will have been promoted to master yet, so it's still possible that the driver will
raise another ConnectionFailure. However, once the former slave has become master, typically within a few seconds, subsequent operations
will succeed.
Recovery
Driver users may wish to wrap their database calls with failure recovery code. Here's one possibility:
# Ensure retry upon failure
def rescue_connection_failure(max_retries=5)
success = false
retries = 0
while !success
begin
yield
success = true
rescue Mongo::ConnectionFailure => ex
retries += 1
raise ex if retries >= max_retries
sleep(1)
end
end
end
end
Of course, the proper way to handle connection failures will always depend on the individual application. We encourage object-mapper and
application developers to publish any promising results.
Testing
The Ruby driver (>= 0.17.2) includes some unit tests for verifying proper replica pair behavior. They reside in tests/replica. You can run them
individually with the following rake tasks:
rake test:pair_count
rake test:pair_insert
rake test:pair_query
Make sure you have a replica pair running locally before trying to run these tests.
Further Reading
Replica Pairs
Pairing Internals
Setup
Connection Failures
Recovery
Testing
Further Reading
Setup
First, make sure that you've configured and initialized a replica set.
Connecting to a replica set from the Ruby driver is easy. If you only want to specify a single node, simply pass that node to Connection.new:
In both cases, the driver will attempt to connect to a master node and, when found, will merge any other known members of the replica set into
the seed list.
Connection Failures
Imagine that our master node goes offline. How will the driver respond?
At first, the driver will try to send operations to what was the master node. These operations will fail, and the driver will raise a ConnectionFailure
exception. It then becomes the client's responsibility to decide how to handle this.
If the client decides to retry, it's not guaranteed that another member of the replica set will have been promoted to master right away, so it's still
possible that the driver will raise another ConnectionFailure. However, once a member has been promoted to master, typically within a few
seconds, subsequent operations will succeed.
The driver will essentially cycle through all known seed addresses until a node identifies itself as master.
Recovery
Driver users may wish to wrap their database calls with failure recovery code. Here's one possibility:
Of course, the proper way to handle connection failures will always depend on the individual application. We encourage object-mapper and
application developers to publish any promising results.
Testing
The Ruby driver (>= 1.0.6) includes some unit tests for verifying replica set behavior. They reside in tests/replica_sets. You can run them
individually with the following rake tasks:
rake test:replica_set_count
rake test:replica_set_insert
rake test:pooled_replica_set_insert
rake test:replica_set_query
Make sure you have a replica set running on localhost before trying to run these tests.
Further Reading
Replica Sets
[Replics Set Configuration]
GridFS in Ruby
GridFS, which stands for "Grid File Store," is a specification for storing large files in MongoDB. It works by dividing a file into manageable chunks
and storing each of those chunks as a separate document. GridFS requires two collections to achieve this: one collection stores each file's
metadata (e.g., name, size, etc.) and another stores the chunks themselves. If you're interested in more details, check out the GridFS
Specification.
Prior to version 0.19, the MongoDB Ruby driver implemented GridFS using the GridFS::GridStore class. This class has been deprecated in favor
of two new classes: Grid and GridFileSystem. These classes have a much simpler interface, and the rewrite has resulted in a significant speed
improvement. Reads are over twice as fast, and write speed has been increased fourfold. 0.19 is thus a worthwhile upgrade.
The Grid class represents the core GridFS implementation. Grid gives you a simple file store, keyed on a unique ID. This means that duplicate
filenames aren't a problem. To use the Grid class, first make sure you have a database, and then instantiate a Grid:
@db = Mongo::Connection.new.db('social_site')
@grid = Grid.new(@db)
Saving files
Once you have a Grid object, you can start saving data to it. The data can be either a string or an IO-like object that responds to a #read method:
Grid#put returns an object id, which you can use to retrieve the file:
File metadata
image.content_type
# => "image/jpg"
image.file_length
# => 502357
image.upload_date
# => Mon Mar 01 16:18:30 UTC 2010
When putting a file, you can set many of these attributes and write arbitrary metadata:
# Saving IO data
file = File.open("me.jpg")
id2 = @grid.put(file,
:filename => "my-avatar.jpg"
:content_type => "application/jpg",
:_id => 'a-unique-id-to-use-in-lieu-of-a-random-one',
:chunk_size => 100 * 1024,
:metadata => {'description' => "taken after a game of ultimate"})
Safe mode
A kind of safe mode is built into the GridFS specification. When you save a file, and MD5 hash is created on the server. If you save the file in safe
mode, an MD5 will be created on the client for comparison with the server version. If the two hashes don't match, an exception will be raised.
image = File.open("me.jpg")
id2 = @grid.put(image, "my-avatar.jpg", :safe => true)
Deleting files
@grid.delete(id2)
GridFileSystem is a light emulation of a file system and therefore has a couple of unique properties. The first is that filenames are assumed to be
unique. The second, a consequence of the first, is that files are versioned. To see what this means, let's create a GridFileSystem instance:
Saving files
@db = Mongo::Connection.new.db("social_site")
@fs = GridFileSystem.new(@db)
Now suppose we want to save the file 'me.jpg.' This is easily done using a filesystem-like API:
image = File.open("me.jpg")
@fs.open("me.jpg", "w") do |f|
f.write image
end
No problems there. But what if we need to replace the file? That too is straightforward:
image = File.open("me-dancing.jpg")
@fs.open("me.jpg", "w") do |f|
f.write image
end
But a couple things need to be kept in mind. First is that the original 'me.jpg' will be available until the new 'me.jpg' saves. From then on, calls to
the #open method will always return the most recently saved version of a file. But, and this the second point, old versions of the file won't be
deleted. So if you're going to be rewriting files often, you could end up with a lot of old versions piling up. One solution to this is to use the
:delete_old options when writing a file:
image = File.open("me-dancing.jpg")
@fs.open("me.jpg", "w", :delete_old => true) do |f|
f.write image
end
This will delete all but the latest version of the file.
Deleting files
When you delete a file by name, you delete all versions of that file:
@fs.delete("me.jpg")
All of the options for storing metadata and saving in safe mode are available for the GridFileSystem class:
image = File.open("me.jpg")
@fs.open('my-avatar.jpg', w,
:content_type => "application/jpg",
:metadata => {'description' => "taken on 3/1/2010 after a game of ultimate"},
:_id => 'a-unique-id-to-use-instead-of-the-automatically-generated-one',
:safe => true) { |f| f.write image }
Advanced Users
Astute code readers will notice that the Grid and GridFileSystem classes are merely thin wrappers around an underlying GridIO class. This means
that it's easy to customize the GridFS implementation presented here; just use GridIO for all the low-level work, and build the API you need in an
external manager class similar to Grid or GridFileSystem.
This tutorial describes how to set up a simple Rails application with MongoDB, using MongoMapper as an object mapper. We assume you're
using Rails versions prior to 3.0.
Configuration
Testing
Coding
Configuration
1. We need to tell MongoMapper which database we'll be using. Save the following to config/initializers/database.rb:
MongoMapper.database = "db_name-#{Rails.env}"
Replace db_name with whatever name you want to give the database. The Rails.env variable will ensure that a different database is used for
each environment.
if defined?(PhusionPassenger)
PhusionPassenger.on_event(:starting_worker_process) do |forked|
MongoMapper.connection.connect_to_master if forked
end
end
3. Clean out config/database.yml. This file should be blank, as we're not connecting to the database in the traditional way.
config.frameworks -= [:active_record]
5. Add MongoMapper to the environment. This can be done by opening config/environment.rb and adding the line:
config.gem 'mongo_mapper'
Once you've done this, you can install the gem in the project by running:
rake gems:install
rake gems:unpack
Testing
It's important to keep in mind that with MongoDB, we cannot wrap test cases in transactions. One possible work-around is to invoke a teardown
method after each test case to clear out the database.
To automate this, I've found it effective to modify ActiveSupport::TestCase with the code below.
# Drop all columns after each test case.
def teardown
MongoMapper.database.collections.each do |coll|
coll.remove
end
end
This way, all test classes will automatically invoke the teardown method. In the example above, the teardown method clears each collection. We
might also choose to drop each collection or drop the database as a whole, but this would be considerably more expensive and is only necessary
if our tests manipulate indexes.
Usually, this code is added in test/test_helper.rb. See the aforementioned rails template for specifics.
Coding
If you've followed the foregoing steps (or if you've created your Rails with the provided template), then you're ready to start coding. For help on
that, you can read about modeling your domain in Rails.
If you haven't done so already, install the Rails 3 pre-release. This requires installing the dependencies manually and then installing the Rails 3
pre-release gem:
The important thing here is to avoid loading ActiveRecord. One way to do this is with the --skip-activerecord switch. So you'd create your
app skeleton like so:
Alternatively, if you've already created your app (or just want to know what this actually does), have a look at config/application.rb and
change the first lines from this:
require "rails/all"
to this:
require "action_controller/railtie"
require "action_mailer/railtie"
require "active_resource/railtie"
require "rails/test_unit/railtie"
It's also important to make sure that the reference to active_record in the generator block is commented out:
# Configure generators values. Many other options are available, be sure to check the documentation.
# config.generators do |g|
# g.orm :active_record
# g.template_engine :erb
# g.test_framework :test_unit, :fixture => true
# end
As of this this writing, it's commented out by default, so you probably won't have to change anything here.
The final step involves bundling any gems you'll need and then creating an initializer for connecting to the database.
Bundling
Edit Gemfile, located in the Rails root directory. By default, our Gemfile will only load Rails:
Normally, using MongoDB will simply mean adding whichever OM framework you want to work with, as these will require the "mongo" gem by
default.
source 'http://gemcutter.org'
However, there's currently an issue with loading mongo_ext, as the current gemspec isn't compatible with the way Bundler works. We'll be fixing
that soon; just pay attention to this issue.
require 'rubygems'
require 'mongo'
source 'http://gemcutter.org'
bundle install
Initializing
Last item is to create an initializer to connect to MongoDB. Create a Ruby file in config/initializers. You can give it any name you want;
here we'll call it config/initializers/mongo.rb:
if defined?(PhusionPassenger)
PhusionPassenger.on_event(:starting_worker_process) do |forked|
MongoMapper.connection.connect_to_master if forked
end
end
Running Tests
A slight modification is required to get rake test working (thanks to John P. Wood). Create a file lib/tasks/mongo.rake containing the
following:
namespace :db do
namespace :test do
task :prepare do
# Stub out for MongoDB
end
end
end
Now the various rake test tasks will run properly. See John's post for more details.
ActiveModel Compatibility
ActiveModel is a series of interfaces designed to make any object-mapping library compatible with the various helper methods across the Rails
stack. To see the status of ActiveModel integration on the various object mappers, see our object mappers page.
Briefly, Mongoid supports ActiveModel via a prerelease branch. MongoMapper will be adding support in the near future. In the meantime, use the
MongoMapper Rails 3 Branch.
Conclusion
That should be all. You can now start creating models based on whichever OM you've installed.
Note that this document is a work in progress. If you have any helpful comments, please add them below.
See also
Assuming you've configured your application to work with MongoMapper, let's start thinking about the data model.
Modeling Stories
A news application relies on stories at its core, so we'll start with a Story model:
class Story
include MongoMapper::Document
# Cached values.
key :comment_count, Integer, :default => 0
key :username, String
# Relationships.
belongs_to :user
# Validations.
validates_presence_of :title, :url, :user_id
end
Obviously, a story needs a title, url, and user_id, and should belong to a user. These are self-explanatory.
When we display our list of stories, we'll need to show the name of the user who posted the story. If we were using a relational database, we
could perform a join on users and stores, and get all our objects in a single query. But MongoDB does not support joins and so, at times, requires
bit of denormalization. Here, this means caching the 'username' attribute.
A Note on Denormalization
Relational purists may be feeling uneasy already, as if we were violating some universal law. But let's bear in mind that MongoDB collections are
not equivalent to relational tables; each serves a unique design objective. A normalized table provides an atomic, isolated chunk of data. A
document, however, more closely represents an object as a whole. In the case of a social news site, it can be argued that a username is intrinsic
to the story being posted.
What about updates to the username? It's true that such updates will be expensive; happily, in this case, they'll be rare. The read savings
achieved in denormalizing will surely outweigh the costs of the occasional update. Alas, this is not hard and fast rule: ultimately, developers must
evaluate their applications for the appropriate level of normalization.
Fields as arrays
With a relational database, even trivial relationships are blown out into multiple tables. Consider the votes a story receives. We need a way of
recording which users have voted on which stories. The standard way of handling this would involve creating a table, 'votes', with each row
referencing user_id and story_id.
With a document database, it makes more sense to store those votes as an array of user ids, as we do here with the 'voters' key.
For fast lookups, we can create an index on this field. In the MongoDB shell:
db.stories.ensureIndex('voters');
Story.ensure_index(:voters)
Atomic Updates
Storing the voters array in the Story class also allows us to take advantage of atomic updates. What this means here is that, when a user
votes on a story, we can
MongoDB's query and update features allows us to perform all three actions in a single operation. Here's what that would look like from the shell:
// Assume that story_id and user_id represent real story and user ids.
db.stories.update({_id: story_id, voters: {'$ne': user_id}},
{'$inc': {votes: 1}, '$push': {voters: user_id}});
What this says is "get me a story with the given id whose voters array does not contain the given user id and, if you find such a story, perform
two atomic updates: first, increment votes by 1 and then push the user id onto the voters array."
This operation highly efficient; it's also reliable. The one caveat is that, because update operations are "fire and forget," you won't get a response
from the server. But in most cases, this should be a non-issue.
Modeling Comments
In a relational database, comments are usually given their own table, related by foreign key to some parent table. This approach is occasionally
necessary in MongoDB; however, it's always best to try to embed first, as this will achieve greater query efficiency.
Linear, non-threaded comments should be embedded. Here are the most basic MongoMapper classes to implement such a structure:
class Story
include MongoMapper::Document
many :comments
end
class Comment
include MongoMapper::EmbeddedDocument
key :body, String
belongs_to :story
end
If we were using the Ruby driver alone, we could save our structure like so:
@stories = @db.collection('stories')
@document = {:title => "MongoDB on Rails",
:comments => [{:body => "Revelatory! Loved it!",
:username => "Matz"
}
]
}
@stories.save(@document)
Essentially, comments are represented as an array of objects within a story document. This simple structure should be used for any one-to-many
relationship where the many items are linear.
But what if we're building threaded comments? An admittedly more complicated problem, two solutions will be presented here. The first is to
represent the tree structure in the nesting of the comments themselves. This might be achieved using the Ruby driver as follows:
@stories = @db.collection('stories')
@document = {:title => "MongoDB on Rails",
:comments => [{:body => "Revelatory! Loved it!",
:username => "Matz",
:comments => [{:body => "Agreed.",
:username => "rubydev29"
}
]
}
]
}
@stories.save(@document)
Representing this structure using MongoMapper would be tricky, requiring a number of custom mods.
But this structure has a number of benefits. The nesting is captured in the document itself (this is, in fact, how Business Insider represents
comments). And this schema is highly performant, since we can get the story, and all of its comments, in a single query, with no application-side
processing for constructing the tree.
One drawback is that alternative views of the comment tree require some significant reorganizing.
Comment collections
We can also represent comments as their own collection. Relative to the other options, this incurs a small performance penalty while granting us
the greatest flexibility. The tree structure can be represented by storing the unique path for each leaf (see Mathias's original post on the idea).
Here are the relevant sections of this model:
class Comment
include MongoMapper::Document
# Relationships.
belongs_to :story
# Callbacks.
after_create :set_path
private
The path ends up being a string of object ids. This makes it easier to display our comments nested, with each level in order of karma or votes. If
we specify an index on story_id, path, and votes, the database can handle half the work of getting our comments in nested, sorted order.
The rest of the work can be accomplished with a couple grouping methods, which can be found in the newsmonger source code.
It goes without saying that modeling comments in their own collection also facilitates various site-wide aggregations, including displaying the
latest, grouping by user, etc.
Unfinished business
Document-oriented data modeling is still young. The fact is, many more applications will need to be built on the document model before we can
say anything definitive about best practices. So the foregoing should be taken as suggestions, only. As you discover new patterns, we encourage
you to document them, and feel free to let us know about what works (and what doesn't).
Developers working on object mappers and the like are encouraged to implement the best document patterns in their code, and to be wary of
recreating relational database models in their apps.
Recommendations
Libraries
MongoMapper
Mongoid
Mongomatic
MongoDoc
MongoModel
Candy
MongoRecord
Recommendations
First we advise that you get to know how the database itself works. This is best accomplished by playing with the shell and experimenting with the
Ruby driver (or any of the other drivers, for that matter)*.
Once you understand how MongoDB works, you'll be in a good position to choose the object mapper that best suits your needs. So long as you
pick an OM that's used in production and is actively developed, you really can't make a bad choice.
Libraries
MongoMapper
John Nunemaker's OM. Used in production and actively-developed. ActiveModel support forthcoming.
Installation:
Source:
mongo_mapper on github
Documentation:
Articles:
Mongoid
If you're using Mongoid, please read the Using Mongoid page on this site.
Durran Jordan's OM. Used in production and actively-developed. Supports ActiveModel and Rails 3.
Installation:
Source:
mongoid on github
Documentation:
Docs at mongoid.org
Mongomatic
Installation:
Source:
mongomatic on github
MongoDoc
MongoDoc is a simple, fast ODM for MongoDB. The project will eventually be merged into Mongoid.
Installation:
Source:
mongodoc on github
MongoModel
Notes:
Installation:
Source:
mongomodel on github
Candy
Notes:
Installation:
Source:
candy on github
MongoRecord
Notes:
MongoRecord is an ActiveRecord-like OM, and the first of its kind developed for MongoDB. Favored by a contingent of developers for its
simplicity, MongoRecord currently receives a lot of love from Nate Wiger.
Installation:
Source:
mongo-record on github
Using Mongoid
Mongoid is a mature ODM for MongoDB. Much work has gone into the project, and it sports an active user community and excellent
documentation. That said, we've seen a few of Mongoid's design decisions cause problems for users in production. This page is an attempt to
make current and future users aware of these issues.
Most of the issues mentioned here will be resolved with the release of Mongoid 2.0.
These principles should be applied to every MongoDB object mapper, regardless of implementation language. We still recommend Mongoid, but
only if the following points are taken into account.
The second problem is that storing an object id as a string requires 16 extra bytes of storage per object id. This will be duplicated in any index
where it appears. Thus, storing object ids as strings needlessly increases storage size.
A final problem with storing object ids as strings is that upserts will always insert an object id proper. If you ever want to use upserts, you must
store object ids and object ids proper. Otherwise, your collection will contain object ids of multiple types.
Solution
In the Mongoid config, make sure you set
use_object_ids: true
All object mappers should use real, non-string object ids by default.
Problem
Mongoid (and MongoMapper) allows developers to define indexes on the model layer. Because of this, we've now seen numerous examples of
developers accidentally triggering new index builds on production boxes. This can cause unwanted downtime and worse, depending on how the
developers react.
We've also noticed that this index creation API doesn't encourage compound indexes, which are often the best choice for certain queries. If you're
not familiar with compound indexes, read our indexing advice
Solution
The best solution for the moment is to avoid defining indexes in the model. We'd recommend creating some kind of rake task that updates
indexes so that you never inadvertently trigger an index creation. You can easily accomplish this with the Ruby driver API. Read the docs on
create_index
It's also important to know how and when to create compound indexes. Again, check our this indexing advice.
Problem
The Mongoid API and documentation can lead newer users to believe that embedded documents are almost always the way to represent
one-to-many relations. However, there are plenty of situations where storing the related documents in a separate collection is the better choice.
Too much embedding can lead to extra large documents (> 100kb), which can be hard to work with. In addition, these large documents can be
inefficient when updating on the server, transferring across the network, and/or serializing to and from BSON.
Solution
Know that related documents can be a good choice just as frequently as embedded documents. Consult these schema design resources:
Problem
We've seen methods that invoke automated sorts by _id to preserve order. This is fine if the right indexes are defined, but can start to result in
slow queries as the collection grows.
Solution
If you have large collections, be sure that you have the proper indexes defined so that sorts on _id don't slow down your system.
Problem
Mongoid uses :safe mode by default for every insert and update. This isn't always necessary. Safe mode should be used when an error is
expected or when you want to use replication acknowledgment.
Solution
We suggest disabling safe mode in the Mongoid config, especially if performance is critical.
persist_in_safe_mode: false
Then, decide which operations actually need it. If you have a unique on a collection, or if you're doing updates that you think could fail, then safe
mode is a good idea. If you're logging, doing analytics, or performing a bulk insert, it may not be necessary.
The API should allow users to set safe mode on individual insert and update operations.
Final thoughts
This isn't an indictment of Mongoid or of any other object mapper. We think Mongoid is a great project, and we hope to see it continue to flourish.
But we've seen enough pain caused by some of its design decisions to warrant this page. Our only hope is that the recommendations here help
users have a better experience with Mongoid and MongoDB.
Screencasts
Presentations
Articles
Projects
Libraries
Screencasts
Presentations
MongoDB: A Ruby Document Store that doesn't rhyme with 'Ouch' (Slides)
Wynn Netherland's introduction to MongoDB with some comparisons to CouchDB.
Articles
Projects
Mongo Queue
An extensible thread safe job/message queueing system that uses mongodb as the persistent storage engine.
Resque-mongo
A port of the Github's Resque to MongoDB.
Mongo Admin
A Rails plugin for browsing and managing MongoDB data. See the live demo.
Sinatra Resource
Resource Oriented Architecture (REST) for Sinatra and MongoMapper.
Shorty
A URL-shortener written with Sinatra and the MongoDB Ruby driver.
NewsMonger
A simple social news application demonstrating MongoMapper and Rails.
Watchtower
An example application using Mustache, MongoDB, and Sinatra.
Shapado
A question and answer site similar to Stack Overflow. Live version at shapado.com.
Libraries
ActiveExpando
An extension to ActiveRecord to allow the storage of arbitrary attributes in MongoDB.
ActsAsTree (MongoMapper)
ActsAsTree implementation for MongoMapper.
Mongo-Delegate
A delegation library for experimenting with production data without altering it. A quite useful pattern.
MongoTree (MongoRecord)
MongoTree adds parent / child relationships to MongoRecord.
Merb_MongoMapper
a plugin for the Merb framework for supporting MongoMapper models.
Mongolytics (MongoMapper)
A web analytics tool.
Rack-GridFS
A Rack middleware component that creates HTTP endpoints for files stored in GridFS.
Can I run [insert command name here] from the Ruby driver?
Does the Ruby driver support an EXPLAIN command?
I see that BSON supports a symbol type. Does this mean that I can store Ruby symbols in MongoDB?
Why can't I access random elements within a cursor?
Why can't I save an instance of TimeWithZone?
I keep getting CURSOR_NOT_FOUND exceptions. What's happening?
I periodically see connection failures between the driver and MongoDB. Why can't the driver retry the operation automatically?
Can I run [insert command name here] from the Ruby driver?
Yes. You can run any of the available database commands from the driver using the DB#command method. The only trick is to use an
OrderedHash when specifying the command. For example, here's how you'd run an asynchronous fsync from the driver:
# Run it.
@db.command(cmd)
It's important to keep in mind that some commands, like fsync, must be run on the admin database, while other commands can be run on any
database. If you're having trouble, check the command reference to make sure you're using the command correctly.
Yes. explain is, technically speaking, an option sent to a query that tells MongoDB to return an explain plan rather than the query's results. You
can use explain by constructing a query and calling explain at the end:
@collection = @db['users']
result = @collection.find({:name => "jones"}).explain
{"cursor"=>"BtreeCursor name_1",
"startKey"=>{"name"=>"Jones"},
"endKey"=>{"name"=>"Jones"},
"nscanned"=>1.0,
"n"=>1,
"millis"=>0,
"oldPlan"=>{"cursor"=>"BtreeCursor name_1",
"startKey"=>{"name"=>"Jones"},
"endKey"=>{"name"=>"Jones"}
},
"allPlans"=>[{"cursor"=>"BtreeCursor name_1",
"startKey"=>{"name"=>"Jones"},
"endKey"=>{"name"=>"Jones"}}]
}
Because this collection has an index on the "name" field, the query uses that index, only having to scan a single record. "n" is the number of
records the query will return. "millis" is the time the query takes, in milliseconds. "oldPlan" indicates that the query optimizer has already seen this
kind of query and has, therefore, saved an efficient query plan. "allPlans" shows all the plans considered for this query.
I see that BSON supports a symbol type. Does this mean that I can store Ruby symbols in MongoDB?
You can store Ruby symbols in MongoDB, but only as values. BSON specifies that document keys must be strings. So, for instance, you can do
this:
@collection = @db['test']
Notice that the symbol values are returned as expected, but that symbol keys are treated as strings.
MongoDB cursors are designed for sequentially iterating over a result set, and all the drivers, including the Ruby driver, stick closely to this
directive. Internally, a Ruby cursor fetches results in batches by running a MongoDB getmore operation. The results are buffered for efficient
iteration on the client-side.
What this means is that a cursor is nothing more than a device for returning a result set on a query that's been initiated on the server. Cursors are
not containers for result sets. If we allow a cursor to be randomly accessed, then we run into issues regarding the freshness of the data. For
instance, if I iterate over a cursor and then want to retrieve the cursor's first element, should a stored copy be returned, or should the cursor re-run
the query? If we returned a stored copy, it may not be fresh. And if the the query is re-run, then we're technically dealing with a new cursor.
To avoid those issues, we're saying that anyone who needs flexible access to the results of a query should store those results in an array and
then access the data as needed.
MongoDB stores times in UTC as the number of milliseconds since the epoch. This means that the Ruby driver serializes Ruby Time objects only.
While it would certainly be possible to serialize a TimeWithZone, this isn't preferable since the driver would still deserialize to a Time object.
All that said, if necessary, it'd be easy to write a thin wrapper over the driver that would store an extra time zone attribute and handle the
serialization/deserialization of TimeWithZone transparently.
The most likely culprit here is that the cursor is timing out on the server. Whenever you issue a query, a cursor is created on the server. Cursor
naturally time out after ten minutes, which means that if you happen to be iterating over a cursor for more than ten minutes, you risk a
CURSOR_NOT_FOUND exception.
1. Limit your query. Use some combination of limit and skip to reduce the total number of query results. This will, obviously, bring down the
time it takes to iterate.
2. Turn off the cursor timeout. To do that, invoke find with a block, and pass :timeout => true:
I periodically see connection failures between the driver and MongoDB. Why can't the driver retry the operation automatically?
A connection failure can indicate any number of failure scenarios. Has the server crashed? Are we experiencing a temporary network partition? Is
there a bug in our ssh tunnel?
Without further investigation, it's impossible to know exactly what has caused the connection failure. Furthermore, when we do see a connection
failure, it's impossible to know how many operations prior to the failure succeeded. Imagine, for instance, that we're using safe mode and we send
an $inc operation to the server. It's entirely possible that the server has received the $inc but failed on the call to getLastError. In that case,
retrying the operation would result in a double-increment.
Because of the indeterminacy involved, the MongoDB drivers will not retry operations on connection failure. How connection failures should be
handled is entirely dependent on the application. Therefore, we leave it to the application developers to make the best decision in this case.
The drivers will reconnect on the subsequent operation.
Tutorial
API Documentation
Downloads
Specific Topics
Concurrency
Saving Objects
Data Types
3rd Party
POJO Mappers
Code Generation
Sculptor - mongodb-based DSL -> Java (code generator)
GuicyData - DSL -> Java generator with Guice integration
Blog Entries
Misc
Clojure
Groovy
Groovy Tutorial for MongoDB
MongoDB made more Groovy
GMongo, a Groovy wrapper to the mongodb Java driver
GMongo 0.5 Released
Scala
Lift-MongoDB - Wrapper, Mapper, and Record back-end implementation. Part of the Lift Web Framework .
mongo-scala-driver is a thin wrapper around mongo-java-driver to make working with MongoDB more Scala-like.
Wiki
Mailing list
Casbah Casbah is a Scala oriented series of wrappers and extensions to the MongoDB Java driver to provide a more
scala-friendly interface to MongoDB. Implements the Scala 2.8 collection interfaces to improve interaction, and a fluid query
syntax which closely matches the MongoDB interface. Support for ORM-style Object mapping is coming soon, as well.
Tutorial
Mailing List
GitHub Project Page
JavaScript
MongoDB-Rhino - A toolset to provide full integration between the Rhino JavaScript engine for the JVM and MongoDB. Uses the
MongoDB Java driver.
JRuby
jmongo A thin ruby wrapper around the mongo-java-driver for vastly better jruby performance.
If there is a project missing here, just add a comment or email the list and we'll add it.
Presentations
Using MongoDB with Scala - Brendan McAdams' Presentation at the New York Scala Enthusiasts (August 2010)
Java Development - Brendan McAdams' Presentation from MongoNYC (May 2010)
Java Development - James Williams' Presentation from MongoSF (April 2010)
Building a Mongo DSL in Scala at Hot Potato - Lincoln Hochberg's Presentation from MongoSF (April 2010)
Java Driver Concurrency
The Java MongoDB driver is thread safe. If you are using in a web serving environment, for example, you should create a single Mongo instance,
and you can use it in every request. The Mongo object maintains an internal pool of connections to the database (default pool size of 10).
However, if you want to ensure complete consistency in a "session" (maybe an http request), you probably want the driver to use the same socket
for that session (which isn't necessarily the case since Mongo instances have built-in connection pooling). This is only necessary for a write heavy
environment, where you might read data that you wrote.
DB db...;
db.requestStart();
code....
db.requestDone();
For example, suppose one had a class called Tweet that they wanted to save:
collection.insert(myTweet);
When a document is retrieved from the database, it is automatically converted to a DBObject. To convert it to an instance of your class, use
DBCollection.setObjectClass():
collection.setObjectClass(Tweet);
Java Tutorial
Introduction
A Quick Tour
Making A Connection
Authentication (Optional)
Getting A List Of Collections
Getting A Collection
Inserting a Document
Finding the First Document In A Collection using findOne()
Adding Multiple Documents
Counting Documents in A Collection
Using a Cursor to Get All the Documents
Getting A Single Document with A Query
Getting A Set of Documents With a Query
Creating An Index
Getting a List of Indexes on a Collection
Quick Tour of the Administrative Functions
Getting A List of Databases
Dropping A Database
Introduction
This page is a brief overview of working with the MongoDB Java Driver.
For more information about the Java API, please refer to the online API Documentation for Java Driver
A Quick Tour
Using the Java driver is very simple. First, be sure to include the driver jar mongo.jar in your classpath. The following code snippets come from
the examples/QuickTour.java example code found in the driver.
Making A Connection
To make a connection to a MongoDB, you need to have at the minimum, the name of a database to connect to. The database doesn't have to
exist - if it doesn't, MongoDB will create it for you.
Additionally, you can specify the server address and port when connecting. The following example shows three ways to connect to the database
mydb on the local machine :
import com.mongodb.Mongo;
import com.mongodb.DB;
import com.mongodb.DBCollection;
import com.mongodb.BasicDBObject;
import com.mongodb.DBObject;
import com.mongodb.DBCursor;
DB db = m.getDB( "mydb" );
At this point, the db object will be a connection to a MongoDB server for the specified database. With it, you can do further operations.
Note: The Mongo object instance actually represents a pool of connections to the database; you will only need one object of class Mongo even
with multiple threads. See the concurrency doc page for more information.
Authentication (Optional)
MongoDB can be run in a secure mode where access to databases is controlled through name and password authentication. When run in this
mode, any client application must provide a name and password before doing any operations. In the Java driver, you simply do the following with
the connected mongo object :
If the name and password are valid for the database, auth will be true. Otherwise, it will be false. You should look at the MongoDB log for
further information if available.
Each database has zero or more collections. You can retrieve a list of them from the db (and print out any that are there) :
and assuming that there are two collections, name and address, in the database, you would see
name
address
as the output.
Getting A Collection
To get a collection to use, just specify the name of the collection to the getCollection(String collectionName) method:
Once you have this collection object, you can now do things like insert data, query for data, etc
Inserting a Document
Once you have the collection object, you can insert documents into the collection. For example, lets make a little document that in JSON would be
represented as
{
"name" : "MongoDB",
"type" : "database",
"count" : 1,
"info" : {
x : 203,
y : 102
}
}
Notice that the above has an "inner" document embedded within it. To do this, we can use the BasicDBObject class to create the document
(including the inner document), and then just simply insert it into the collection using the insert() method.
doc.put("name", "MongoDB");
doc.put("type", "database");
doc.put("count", 1);
info.put("x", 203);
info.put("y", 102);
doc.put("info", info);
coll.insert(doc);
To show that the document we inserted in the previous step is there, we can do a simple findOne() operation to get the first document in the
collection. This method returns a single document (rather than the DBCursor that the find() operation returns), and it's useful for things where
there only is one document, or you are only interested in the first. You don't have to deal with the cursor.
In order to do more interesting things with queries, let's add multiple simple documents to the collection. These documents will just be
{
"i" : value
}
Notice that we can insert documents of different "shapes" into the same collection. This aspect is what we mean when we say that MongoDB is
"schema-free"
Now that we've inserted 101 documents (the 100 we did in the loop, plus the first one), we can check to see if we have them all using the
getCount() method.
System.out.println(coll.getCount());
In order to get all the documents in the collection, we will use the find() method. The find() method returns a DBCursor object which allows
us to iterate over the set of documents that matched our query. So to query all of the documents and print them out :
while(cur.hasNext()) {
System.out.println(cur.next());
}
We can create a query to pass to the find() method to get a subset of the documents in our collection. For example, if we wanted to find the
document for which the value of the "i" field is 71, we would do the following ;
query.put("i", 71);
cur = coll.find(query);
while(cur.hasNext()) {
System.out.println(cur.next());
}
We can use the query to get a set of documents from our collection. For example, if we wanted to get all documents where "i" > 50, we could write
:
cur = coll.find(query);
while(cur.hasNext()) {
System.out.println(cur.next());
}
which should print the documents where i > 50. We could also get a range, say 20 < i <= 30 :
cur = coll.find(query);
while(cur.hasNext()) {
System.out.println(cur.next());
}
Creating An Index
MongoDB supports indexes, and they are very easy to add on a collection. To create an index, you just specify the field that should be indexed,
and specify if you want the index to be ascending (1) or descending (-1). The following creates an ascending index on the "i" field :
m.dropDatabase("my_new_db");
Java Types
Object Ids
Regular Expressions
Dates/Times
Database References
Binary Data
Embedded Documents
Arrays
Object Ids
Regular Expressions
Dates/Times
collection.save(time);
Database References
Binary Data
Embedded Documents
{
"x" : {
"y" : 3
}
}
Arrays
{
"x" : [
1,
2,
{"foo" : "bar"},
4
]
}
The driver has been compiled successfully on Linux, OS X, Windows, and Solaris.
API Documentation
HOWTO
Connecting
Tailable Cursors
Mongo Database and C++ Driver Source Code (at github). See the client subdirectory for client driver related files.
Download
Additional Notes
The Building documentation covers compiling the entire database, but some of the notes there may be helpful for compiling client
applications too.
There is also a pure C driver for MongoDB. For true C++ apps we recommend using the C++ driver.
Overview
The MongoDB C++ driver library includes a bson package that implements the BSON specification (see http://www.bsonspec.org/). This library
can be used standalone for object serialization and deserialization even when one is not using MongoDB at all.
Include bson/bson.h or db/jsobj.h in your application (not both). bson.h is new and may not work in some situations, was is good for light
header-only usage of BSON (see the bsondemo.cpp example).
Key classes:
Let's now create a BSON "person" object which contains name and age. We might invoke:
BSONObjBuilder b;
b.append("name", "Joe");
b.append("age", 33);
BSONObj p = b.obj();
Or more concisely:
Use the GENOID helper to add an object id to your object. The server will add an _id automatically if it is not included explicitly.
BSONObj p = BSON( GENOID << "name" << "Joe" << "age" << 33 );
// result is: { _id : ..., name : "Joe", age : 33 }
GENOID should be at the beginning of the generated object. We can do something similar with the non-stream builder syntax:
BSONObj p =
BSONObjBuilder().genOID().append("name","Joe").append("age",33).obj();
Examples
http://github.com/mongodb/mongo/blob/master/bson/bsondemo/bsondemo.cpp
API Docs
http://api.mongodb.org/cplusplus/
Add
to your code to use the following shorter more C++ style names for the BSON classes:
// from bsonelement.h
namespace bson {
typedef mongo::BSONElement be;
typedef mongo::BSONObj bo;
typedef mongo::BSONObjBuilder bob;
}
C++ Tutorial
Installing the Driver Library and Headers
Unix
From Source
Windows
Compiling
Writing Client Code
Connecting
BSON
Inserting
Querying
Indexing
Sorting
Updating
Further Reading
This document is an introduction to usage of the MongoDB database from a C++ program.
Next, you may wish to take a look at the Developer's Tour guide for a language independent look at how to use MongoDB. Also, we suggest
some basic familiarity with the mongo shell -- the shell is one's primary database administration tool and is useful for manually inspecting the
contents of a database after your C++ program runs.
A good source for general information about setting up a MongoDB development environment on various operating systems is the building page.
Unix
From Source
When installing from source, use scons --full install to install the libraries. --full tells the install target to include the library and header
files; by default library and header files are installed in /usr/local. You can use --prefix to change the install path: scons --prefix
/opt/mongo --full install. You can also specify --sharedclient to build a shared library instead of a statically linked library.
The normal db distribution used to include the C++ driver, but now you have to build from source.
Windows
For more information on Boost setup see the Building for Windows page.
Compiling
The C++ drivers requires the pcre and boost libraries (with headers) to compile. Be sure they are in your include and lib paths. You can usually
install them from your OS's package manager if you don't already have them.
Note: for brevity, the examples below are simply inline code. In a real application one will define classes for each database object typically.
Connecting
Let's make a tutorial.cpp file that connects to the database (see client/examples/tutorial.cpp for full text of the examples below):
#include <iostream>
#include "client/dbclient.h"
void run() {
DBClientConnection c;
c.connect("localhost");
}
int main() {
try {
run();
cout << "connected ok" << endl;
} catch( DBException &e ) {
cout << "caught " << e.what() << endl;
}
return 0;
}
If you are using gcc on Linux or OS X, you would compile with something like this, depending on location of your include files and libraries:
$ g++ tutorial.cpp -lmongoclient -lboost_thread-mt -lboost_filesystem -lboost_program_options -o
tutorial
$ ./tutorial
connected ok
$
Depending on your boost version you might need to link against the boost_system library as well: -lboost_system. Also, you
may need to append "-mt" to boost_filesystem and boost_program_options. And, of course, you may need to use -I and -L to
specify the locations of your mongo and boost headers and libraries.
BSON
The Mongo database stores data in BSON format. BSON is a binary object format that is JSON-like in terms of the data which can be stored
(some extensions exist, for example, a Date datatype).
To save data in the database we must create objects of class BSONObj. The components of a BSONObj are represented as BSONElement
objects. We use BSONObjBuilder to make BSON objects, and BSONObjIterator to enumerate BSON objects.
Let's now create a BSON "person" object which contains name and age. We might invoke:
BSONObjBuilder b;
b.append("name", "Joe");
b.append("age", 33);
BSONObj p = b.obj();
Or more concisely:
BSONObjBuilder b;
b << "name" << "Joe" << "age" << 33;
BSONObj p = b.obj();
Use the GENOID helper to add an object id to your object. The server will add an _id automatically if it is not included explicitly.
BSONObj p = BSON( GENOID << "name" << "Joe" << "age" << 33 );
// result is: { _id : ..., name : "Joe", age : 33 }
GENOID should be at the beginning of the generated object. We can do something similar with the non-stream builder syntax:
BSONObj p =
BSONObjBuilder().genOID().append("name","Joe").append("age",33).obj();
Inserting
c.insert("tutorial.persons", p);
The first parameter to insert is the namespace. tutorial is the database and persons is the collection name.
Querying
Let's now fetch all objects from the persons collection, and display them. We'll also show here how to use count().
auto_ptr<DBClientCursor> cursor =
c.query("tutorial.persons", emptyObj);
while( cursor->more() )
cout << cursor->next().toString() << endl;
emptyObj is the empty BSON object -- we use it to represent {} which indicates an empty query pattern (an empty query is a query for all objects).
We use BSONObj::toString() above to print out information about each object retrieved. BSONObj::toString is a diagnostic function which prints
an abbreviated JSON string representation of the object. For full JSON output, use BSONObj::jsonString.
Let's now write a function which prints out the name (only) of all persons in the collection whose age is a given value:
getStringField() is a helper that assumes the "name" field is of type string. To manipulate an element in a more generic fashion we can retrieve
the particular BSONElement from the enclosing object:
{ age : <agevalue> }
Queries are BSON objects of a particular format -- in fact, we could have used the BSON() macro above instead of QUERY(). See class Query in
dbclient.h for more information on Query objects, and the Sorting section below.
use tutorial;
db.persons.find( { age : 33 } );
Indexing
Let's suppose we want to have an index on age so that our queries are fast. We would use:
c.ensureIndex("tutorial.persons", fromjson("{age:1}"));
The ensureIndex method checks if the index exists; if it does not, it is created. ensureIndex is intelligent and does not repeat transmissions to the
server; thus it is safe to call it many times in your code, for example, adjacent to every insert operation.
In the above example we use a new function, fromjson. fromjson converts a JSON string to a BSONObj. This is sometimes a convenient way to
specify BSON. Alternatively we could have written:
c.ensureIndex("tutorial.persons", BSON( "age" << 1 ));
Sorting
Let's now make the results from printIfAge sorted alphabetically by name. To do this, we change the query statement from:
to
Here we have used Query::sort() to add a modifier to our query expression for sorting.
Updating
Use the update() method to perform a database update . For example the following update in the mongo shell :
db.update( "tutorial.persons" ,
BSON( "name" << "Joe" << "age" << 33 ),
BSON( "$inc" << BSON( "visits" << 1 ) ) );
Further Reading
This overview just touches on the basics of using Mongo from C++. There are many more capabilities. For further exploration:
Connecting
The C++ driver includes several classes for managing collections under the parent class DBClientInterface.
In general, you will want to instantiate either a DBClientConnection object, or a DBClientPaired object. DBClientConnection is our normal
connection class for a connection to a single MongoDB database server (or shard manager). We use DBClientPaired to connect to database
replica pairs.
Note : replica pairs will soon be replaced by Replica Sets; a new / adjusted interface will be available then.
Installing
Start a MongoDB server instance (mongod) before installing so that the tests will pass. The mongod cannot be running as a
slave for the tests to pass.
Some tests may be skipped, depending on the version of the database you are running.
CPAN
The Perl driver is available through CPAN as the package MongoDB. It should build cleanly on *NIX and Windows (via Strawberry Perl).
If you would like to try the latest code or are contributing to the Perl driver, it is available at Github. There is also documentation generated after
every commit.
You can see if it's a good time to grab the bleeding edge code by seeing if the build is green.
$ perl Makefile.PL
$ make
$ make test # make sure mongod is running, first
$ sudo make install
Please note that the tests will not pass without a mongod process running.
Big-Endian Systems
The driver will work on big-endian machines, but the database will not. The tests assume that mongod will be running on localhost unless
%ENV{MONGOD} is set. So, to run the tests, start the database on a little-endian machine (at, say, "example.com") and then run the tests with:
Next Steps
If you're interested in contributing to the Perl driver, check out Contributing to the Perl Driver.
Entities::Backend::MongoDB
Entities::Backend::MongoDB is a backend for the Entities user management and authorization system stores all entities and relations
between them in a MongoDB database, using the MongoDB module. This is a powerful, fast backend that gives you all the features of MongoDB.
MojoX::Session::Store::MongoDB
MojoX::Session::Store::MongoDB is a store for MojoX::Session that stores a session in a MongoDB database. Created by Ask Bjørn
Hansen.
MongoDB::Admin
MongoX
Fixing Bugs
You can choose a bug on Jira and fix it. Make a comment that you're working on it, to avoid overlap.
Writing Tests
The driver could use a lot more tests. We would be grateful for any and all tests people would like to write.
Adding Features
If you think a feature is missing from the driver, you're probably right. Check on IRC or the mailing list, then go ahead and create a Jira case and
add the feature. The Perl driver was a bit neglected for a while (although it's now getting a lot of TLC) so it's missing a lot of things that the other
drivers have. You can look through their APIs for ideas.
Contribution Guildlines
The best way to make changes is to create an account on [Github], fork the driver, make your improvements, and submit a merge request.
To make sure your changes are approved and speed things along:
Make sure your change works on Perl 5.8, 5.10, Windows, Mac, Linux, etc.
Code Layout
Perl Tutorial
Redirection Notice
This page should redirect to http://search.cpan.org/dist/MongoDB/lib/MongoDB/Tutorial.pod.
See Also
BSON http://bsonspec.org Description of the BSON binary document format. Fundamental to how Mongo and it's client software works.
Mongo Wire Protocol Specification for the basic socket communications protocol used between Mongo and clients.
Mongo Driver Requirements Description of what functionality is expected from a Mongo Driver
GridFS Specification Specification of GridFS - a convention for storing large objects in Mongo
Mongo Extended JSON Description of the extended JSON protocol for the REST-ful interface (ongoing development)
Additionally we recommend driver authors take a look at existing driver source code as an example.
bsonspec.org
High priority
BSON serialization/deserialization
full cursor support (e.g. support OP_GET_MORE operation)
close exhausted cursors via OP_KILL_CURSORS
support for running database commands
handle query errors
convert all strings to UTF-8 (part of proper support for BSON)
hint, explain, count, $where
database profiling: set/get profiling level, get profiling info
advanced connection management (replica pairs, slave okay)
automatic reconnection
Medium priority
A driver should be able to connect to a single server. By default this must be localhost:27017, and must also allow the server to be specified
by hostname and port.
How the driver does this is up to the driver - make it idiomatic. However, a driver should make it explicit and clear what is going on.
A driver must be able to support "Pair Mode" configurations, where two mongod servers are specified, and configured for hot-failover.
The driver should determine which of the pair is the current master, and send all operations to that server. In the event of an error, either socket
error or a "not a master" error, the driver must restart the determination process. It must not assume the other server in the pair is now the master.
A driver may optionally allow a driver to connect deliberately to the "non-master" in the pair, for debugging, admin or operational purposes.
DB db = m.getDB(name);
List<String> getDBNameList();
Database Object
/**
* Get a list of all the collection names in this database
*/
List<String> cols = db.getCollectionNames();
/**
* get a collection object. Can optionally create it if it
* doesn't exist, or just be strict. (XJDM has strictness as an option)
*/
Collection coll = db.getCollection(string);
/**
* Create a collection w/ optional options. Can fault
* if the collection exists, or can just return it if it already does
*/
Collection coll = db.createCollection( string);
Collection coll = db.createCollection( string, options);
/**
* Drop a collection by its name or by collection object.
* Driver could invalidate any outstanding Collection objects
* for that collection, or just hope for the best.
*/
boolean b = db.dropCollection(name);
boolean b = db.dropCollection(Collection);
/**
* Execute a command on the database, returning the
* BSON doc with the results
*/
Document d = db.executeCommand(command);
/**
* Close the [logical] database
*/
void db.close();
/**
* Erase / drop an entire database
*/
bool dropDatabase(dbname)
Database Administration
These methods have to do with database metadata: profiling levels and collection validation. Each admin object is associated with a database.
These methods could either be built into the Database class or provided in a separate Admin class whose instances are only available from a
database instance.
/* get an admin object from a database object. */
Admin admin = db.getAdmin();
/**
* Get profiling level. Returns one of the strings "off", "slowOnly", or
* "all". Note that the database returns an integer. This method could
* return an int or an enum instead --- in Ruby, for example, we return
* symbols.
*/
String profilingLevel = admin.getProfilingLevel();
/**
* Set profiling level. Takes whatever getProfilingLevel() returns.
*/
admin.setProfilingLevel("off");
/**
* Retrieves the database's profiling info.
*/
Document profilingInfo = admin.getProfilingInfo();
/**
* Returns true if collection is valid; raises an exception if not.
*/
boolean admin.validateCollection(collectionName);
/**
* full query capabilities - limit, skip, returned fields, sort, etc
*/
Cursor find(...);
void insert(...) // insert one or more objects into the collection, local variants on args
void remove(query) // remove objects that match the query
void modify(selector, modifier) // modify all objects that match selector w/ modifier object
void replace(selector, object) // replace first object that match selector w/ specified
object
void repsert(selector, object) // replace first object that matches, or insert **upsert w/
modifier makes no logical sense*
long getCount();
long getCount(query);
Index Operations
Misc Operations
document explain(query)
options getOptions();
string getName();
void close();
Cursor Object
document getNextDocument()
iterator getIterator() // again, local to language
bool hasMore()
void close()
See Also
Driver Requirements
BSON
The main Database Internals page
Functionality Checklist
Essential
BSON serialization/deserialization
Basic operations: query, save, update, remove, ensureIndex, findOne, limit, sort
Fetch more data from a cursor when necessary (dbGetMore)
Sending of KillCursors operation when use of a cursor has completed (ideally for efficiently these are sent in batches)
Convert all strings to utf8
Authentication
Recommended
More Recommended
More Optional
More Optional
[connection pooling]
Automatic reconnect on connection failure
DBRef Support:
Ability to generate easily
Automatic traversal
See Also
The Driver and Integration Center for information about the latest drivers
The [top page] for this section
The main Database Internals page
The starting point for all Home
Interface Conventions
It is desirable to keep driver interfaces consistent when possible. Of course, idioms vary by language, and when they do adaptation is appropriate.
However, when the idiom is the same, keeping the interfaces consistent across drivers is desirable.
Terminology
In general, use these terms when naming identifiers. Adapt the names to the normal "punctuation" style of your language -- foo_bar in C might
be fooBar in Java.
Introduction
The Mongo Wire Protocol is a simple socket-based, request-response style protocol. Clients communicate with the database server through a
regular TCP/IP socket.
To describe the message structure, a C-like struct is used. The types used in this document (cstring, int32, etc.) are the
same as those defined in the BSON specification. The standard message header is typed as MsgHeader. Integer constants are
in capitals (e.g. ZERO for the integer value of 0).
In the case where more than one of something is possible (like in a OP_INSERT or OP_KILL_CURSORS), we again use the
notation from the BSON specification (e.g. int64*). This simply indicates that one or more of the specified type can be written
to the socket, one after another.
Byte Ordering
Note that like BSON documents, all data in the mongo wire protocol is little-endian.
TableOfContents
There are two types of messages, client requests and database responses, each having a slightly different structure.
In general, each message consists of a standard message header followed by request-specific data. The standard message header is structured
as follows :
struct MsgHeader {
int32 messageLength; // total message size, including this
int32 requestID; // identifier for this message
int32 responseTo; // requestID from the original request
// (used in reponses from db)
int32 opCode; // request type - see table below
}
messageLength : This is the total size of the message in bytes. This total includes the 4 bytes that holds the message length.
requestID : This is a client or database-generated identifier that uniquely identifies this message. For the case of client-generated messages
(e.g. CONTRIB:OP_QUERY and CONTRIB:OP_GET_MORE), it will be returned in the
responseTo field of the CONTRIB:OP_REPLY message. Along with the reponseTo field in responses, clients can use this to associate query
responses with the originating query.
responseTo : In the case of a message from the database, this will be the requestID taken from the CONTRIB:OP_QUERY or
CONTRIB:OP_GET_MORE messages from the client. Along with the requestID field in queries, clients can use this to associate query
responses with the originating query.
opCode : Type of message. See the table below in the next section.
Request Opcodes
TableOfContents
TableOfContents
Clients can send all messages except for CONTRIB:OP_REPLY. This is reserved for use by the database.
Note that only the CONTRIB:OP_QUERY and CONTRIB:OP_GET_MORE messages result in a response from the database. There will be no
response sent for any other message.
You can determine if a message was successful with a $$$ TODO get last error command.
OP_UPDATE
The OP_UPDATE message is used to update a document in a collection. The format of a OP_UPDATE message is
struct OP_UPDATE {
MsgHeader header; // standard message header
int32 ZERO; // 0 - reserved for future use
cstring fullCollectionName; // "dbname.collectionname"
int32 flags; // bit vector. see below
document selector; // the query to select the document
document update; // specification of the update to perform
}
fullCollectionName : The full collection name. The full collection name is the concatenation of the database name with the collection name,
using a "." for the concatenation. For example, for the database "foo" and the collection "bar", the full collection name is "foo.bar".
flags :
0 Upsert If set, the database will insert the supplied object into the collection if no matching document is found.
1 MultiUpdate If set, the database will update all matching objects in the collection. Otherwise only updates first matching doc.
selector : BSON document that specifies the query for selection of the document to update.
update : BSON document that specifies the update to be performed. For information on specifying updates see the documentation on Updating.
OP_INSERT
The OP_INSERT message is used to insert one or more documents into a collection. The format of the OP_INSERT message is
struct {
MsgHeader header; // standard message header
int32 ZERO; // 0 - reserved for future use
cstring fullCollectionName; // "dbname.collectionname"
document* documents; // one or more documents to insert into the collection
}
fullCollectionName : The full collection name. The full collection name is the concatenation of the database name with the collection name,
using a "." for the concatenation. For example, for the database "foo" and the collection "bar", the full collection name is "foo.bar".
documents : One or more documents to insert into the collection. If there are more than one, they are written to the socket in sequence, one after
another.
OP_QUERY
The OP_QUERY message is used to query the database for documents in a collection. The format of the OP_QUERY message is :
struct OP_QUERY {
MsgHeader header; // standard message header
int32 flags; // bit vector of query options. See below for details.
cstring fullCollectionName; // "dbname.collectionname"
int32 numberToSkip; // number of documents to skip
int32 numberToReturn; // number of documents to return
// in the first OP_REPLY batch
document query; // query object. See below for details.
[ document returnFieldSelector; ] // Optional. Selector indicating the fields
// to return. See below for details.
}
flags :
1 TailableCursor Tailable means cursor is not closed when the last data is retrieved. Rather, the cursor marks the final object's
position. You can resume using the cursor later, from where it was located, if more data were received. Like any
"latent cursor", the cursor may become invalid at some point (CursorNotFound) – for example if the final object it
references were deleted.
2 SlaveOk Allow query of replica slave. Normally these return an error except for namespace "local".
4 NoCursorTimeout The server normally times out idle cursors after an inactivity period (10 minutes) to prevent excess memory use. Set
this option to prevent that.
5 AwaitData Use with TailableCursor. If we are at the end of the data, block for a while rather than returning no data. After a
timeout period, we do return as normal.
6 Exhaust Stream the data down full blast in multiple "more" packages, on the assumption that the client will fully read all data
queried. Faster when you are pulling a lot of data and know you want to pull it all down. Note: the client is not
allowed to not read all the data unless it closes the connection.
fullCollectionName : The full collection name. The full collection name is the concatenation of the database name with the collection name,
using a "." for the concatenation. For example, for the database "foo" and the collection "bar", the full collection name is "foo.bar".
numberToSkip : Sets the number of documents to omit - starting from the first document in the resulting dataset - when returning the result of
the query.
numberToReturn : Limits the number of documents in the first CONTRIB:OP_REPLY message to the query. However, the database will still
establish a cursor and return the cursorID to the client if there are more results than numberToReturn. If the client driver offers 'limit'
functionality (like the SQL LIMIT keyword), then it is up to the client driver to ensure that no more than the specified number of document are
returned to the calling application. If numberToReturn is 0, the db will used the default return size. If the number is negative, then the database
will return that number and close the cursor. No futher results for that query can be fetched. If numberToReturn is 1 the server will treat it as -1
(closing the cursor automatically).
query : BSON document that represents the query. The query will contain one or more elements, all of which must match for a document to be
included in the result set. Possible elements include $query, $orderby, $hint, $explain, and $snapshot.
returnFieldsSelector : OPTIONAL BSON document that limits the fields in the returned documents. The returnFieldsSelector contains one
or more elements, each of which is the name of a field that should be returned, and and the integer value 1. In JSON notation, a
returnFieldsSelector to limit to the fields "a", "b" and "c" would be :
{ a : 1, b : 1, c : 1}
OP_GETMORE
The OP_GETMORE message is used to query the database for documents in a collection. The format of the OP_GETMORE message is :
struct {
MsgHeader header; // standard message header
int32 ZERO; // 0 - reserved for future use
cstring fullCollectionName; // "dbname.collectionname"
int32 numberToReturn; // number of documents to return
int64 cursorID; // cursorID from the OP_REPLY
}
fullCollectionName : The full collection name. The full collection name is the concatenation of the database name with the collection name,
using a "." for the concatenation. For example, for the database "foo" and the collection "bar", the full collection name is "foo.bar".
numberToReturn : Limits the number of documents in the first CONTRIB:OP_REPLY message to the query. However, the database will still
establish a cursor and return the cursorID to the client if there are more results than numberToReturn. If the client driver offers 'limit'
functionality (like the SQL LIMIT keyword), then it is up to the client driver to ensure that no more than the specified number of document are
returned to the calling application. If numberToReturn is 0, the db will used the default return size.
cursorID : Cursor identifier that came in the CONTRIB:OP_REPLY. This must be the value that came from the database.
OP_DELETE
The OP_DELETE message is used to remove one or more messages from a collection. The format of the OP_DELETE message is :
struct {
MsgHeader header; // standard message header
int32 ZERO; // 0 - reserved for future use
cstring fullCollectionName; // "dbname.collectionname"
int32 flags; // bit vector - see below for details.
document selector; // query object. See below for details.
}
fullCollectionName : The full collection name. The full collection name is the concatenation of the database name with the collection name,
using a "." for the concatenation. For example, for the database "foo" and the collection "bar", the full collection name is "foo.bar".
flags :
0 SingleRemove If set, the database will remove only the first matching document in the collection. Otherwise all matching documents
will be removed.
selector : BSON document that represent the query used to select the documents to be removed. The selector will contain one or more
elements, all of which must match for a document to be removed from the collection. Please see $$$ TODO QUERY for more information.
OP_KILL_CURSORS
The OP_KILL_CURSORS message is used to close an active cursor in the database. This is necessary to ensure that database resources are
reclaimed at the end of the query. The format of the OP_KILL_CURSORS message is :
struct {
MsgHeader header; // standard message header
int32 ZERO; // 0 - reserved for future use
int32 numberOfCursorIDs; // number of cursorIDs in message
int64* cursorIDs; // sequence of cursorIDs to close
}
cursorIDs : "array" of cursor IDs to be closed. If there are more than one, they are written to the socket in sequence, one after another.
Note that if a cursor is read until exhausted (read until OP_QUERY or OP_GETMORE returns zero for the cursor id), there is no need to kill the
cursor.
OP_MSG
Deprecated. OP_MSG sends a diagnostic message to the database. The database sends back a fixed resonse. The format is
struct {
MsgHeader header; // standard message header
cstring message; // message for the database
}
TableOfContents
OP_REPLY
struct {
MsgHeader header; // standard message header
int32 responseFlags; // bit vector - see details below
int64 cursorID; // cursor id if client needs to do get more's
int32 startingFrom; // where in the cursor this reply is starting
int32 numberReturned; // number of documents in the reply
document* documents; // documents
}
responseFlags :
0 CursorNotFound Set when getMore is called but the cursor id is not valid at the server. Returned with zero results.
1 QueryFailure Set when query failed. Results consist of one document containing an "$err" field describing the failure.
2 ShardConfigStale Drivers should ignore this. Only mongos will ever see this set, in which case, it needs to update config from the
server.
3 AwaitCapable Set when the server supports the AwaitData Query option. If it doesn't, a client should sleep a little between
getMore's of a Tailable cursor. Mongod version 1.6 supports AwaitData and thus always sets AwaitCapable.
cursorID : The cursorID that this OP_REPLY is a part of. In the event that the result set of the query fits into one OP_REPLY message,
cursorID will be 0. This cursorID must be used in any CONTRIB:OP_GET_MORE messages used to get more data, and also must be closed
by the client when no longer needed via a CONTRIB:OP_KILL_CURSORS message.
BSON
bsonspec.org
BSON and MongoDB
Language-Specific Examples
C
C++
Java
PHP
Python
Ruby
MongoDB Document Types
bsonspec.org
BSON is a bin-ary-en-coded seri-al-iz-a-tion of JSON-like doc-u-ments. BSON is designed to be lightweight, traversable, and efficient. BSON, like
JSON, supports the embedding of objects and arrays within other objects and arrays. See bsonspec.org for the spec and more information in
general.
MongoDB uses BSON as the data storage and network transfer format for "documents".
BSON at first seems BLOB-like, but there exists an important difference: the Mongo database understands BSON internals. This means that
MongoDB can "reach inside " BSON objects, even nested ones. Among other things, this allows MongoDB to build indexes and match objects
against query expressions on both top-level and nested BSON keys.
Language-Specific Examples
We often map from a language's "dictionary" type – which may be its native objects – to BSON. The mapping is particularly natural in dynamically
typed languages:
bson b;
bson_buffer buf;
bson_buffer_init( &buf )
bson_append_string( &buf, "name", "Joe" );
bson_append_int( &buf, "age", 33 );
bson_from_buffer( &b, &buf );
bson_print( &b );
C++
See the BSON section of the C++ Tutorial for more information.
Java
PHP
The PHP driver includes bson_encode and bson_decode functions. bson_encode takes any PHP type and serializes it, returning a string of
bytes:
$bson = bson_encode(null);
$bson = bson_encode(true);
$bson = bson_encode(4);
$bson = bson_encode("hello, world");
$bson = bson_encode(array("foo" => "bar"));
$bson = bson_encode(new MongoDate());
Mongo-specific objects (MongoId, MongoDate, MongoRegex, MongoCode) will be encoded in their respective BSON formats. For other objects,
it will create a BSON representation with the key/value pairs you would get by running for ($object as $key => $value).
bson_decode takes a string representing a BSON object and parses it into an associative array.
Python
PyMongo also supports "ordered dictionaries" through the pymongo.son module. The BSON class can handle SON instances using the same
methods you would use for regular dictionaries.
Ruby
There are now two gems that handle BSON-encoding: bson and bson_ext. These gems can be used to work with BSON independently of the
MongoDB Ruby driver.
irb
>> require 'rubygems'
=> true
>> require 'bson'
=> true
>> doc = {:hello => "world"}
>> bson = BSON.serialize(doc).to_s
=> "\026\000\000\000\002hello\000\006\000\000\000world\000\000"
>> BSON.deserialize(bson.unpack("C*"))
=> {"hello" => "world"}
The BSON class also supports ordered hashes. Simply construct your documents using the OrderedHash class, also found in the MongoDB Ruby
Driver.
1. Data storage (user documents). These are the regular JSON-like objects that the database stores for us. These BSON documents are
sent to the database via the INSERT operation. User documents have limitations on the "element name" space due to the usage of
special characters in the JSON-like query language.
a. A user document element name cannot begin with "$".
b. A user document element name cannot have a "." in the name.
c. The element name "_id" is reserved for use as a primary key id, but you can store anything that is unique in that field.
The database expects that drivers will prevent users from creating documents that violate these constraints.
2. Query "Selector" Documents : Query documents (or selectors) are BSON documents that are used in QUERY, DELETE and UPDATE
operations. They are used by these operations to match against documents. Selector objects have no limitations on the "element name"
space, as they must be able to supply special "marker" elements, like "$where" and the special "command" operations.
3. "Modifier" Documents : Documents that contain 'modifier actions' that modify user documents in the case of an update (see Updating).
data_binary <bindata> is
the base64
{ "$binary" { "$binary" : { "$binary" : representation
: "<bindata>", "<bindata>", of a binary
"<bindata>" "$type" : "<t>" } "$type" : "<t>" } string. <t> is
, "$type" : the
"<t>" } hexadecimal
representation
of a single byte
indicating the
data type.
data_regex <sRegex> is a
string of valid
{ "$regex" /<jRegex>/<jOptions> /<jRegex>/<jOptions> JSON
: characters.
"<sRegex>", <jRegex> is a
"$options" : string that may
"<sOptions>" contain valid
} JSON
characters and
unescaped '"'
characters, but
may not
contain
unescaped '/'
characters.
<sOptions> is
a string
containing
letters of the
alphabet.
<jOptions> is a
string that may
contain only
the characters
'g', 'i', and 'm'.
Because the
JS and
TenGen
representations
support a
limited range of
options, any
nonconforming
options will be
dropped when
converting to
this
representation.
data_oid <id> is a 24
character
{ "$oid" : { "$oid" : "<id>" } ObjectId( "<id>" ) hexadecimal
"<id>" } string. Note
that these
representations
require a
data_oid value
to have an
associated
field name
"_id".
data_ref <name> is a
string of valid
{ "$ref" : { "$ref" : "<name>" Dbref( "<name>", JSON
"<name>", , "$id" : "<id>" } "<id>" ) characters.
"$id" : <id> is a 24
"<id>" } character
hexadecimal
string.
GridFS Specification
Introduction
Specification
Storage Collections
files
chunks
Indexes
Introduction
GridFS is a storage specification for large objects in MongoDB. It works by splitting large object into small chunks, usually 256k in size. Each
chunk is stored as a separate document in a chunks collection. Metadata about the file, including the filename, content type, and any optional
information needed by the developer, is stored as a document in a files collection.
So for any given file stored using GridFS, there will exist one document in files collection and one or more documents in the chunks collection.
If you're just interested in using GridFS, see the docs on storing files. If you'd like to understand the GridFS implementation, read on.
Specification
Storage Collections
In order to make more than one GridFS namespace possible for a single database, the files and chunks collections are named with a prefix. By
default the prefix is fs., so any default GridFS store will consist of collections named fs.files and fs.chunks. The drivers make it possible to
change this prefix, so you might, for instance, have another GridFS namespace specifically for photos where the collections would be
photos.files and photos.chunks.
/*
* specified root collection usage - optional
*/
Note that the above API is for demonstration purposes only - this spec does not (at this time) recommend any API. See individual driver
documentation for API specifics.
files
{
"_id" : <unspecified>, // unique ID for this file
"length" : data_number, // size of the file in bytes
"chunkSize" : data_number, // size of each of the chunks. Default is 256k
"uploadDate" : data_date, // date when object first stored
"md5" : data_string // result of running the "filemd5" command on this file's
chunks
}
Any other desired fields may be added to the files document; common ones include the following:
{
"filename" : data_string, // human name for the file
"contentType" : data_string, // valid mime type for the object
"aliases" : data_array of data_string, // optional array of alias strings
"metadata" : data_object, // anything the user wants to store
}
Note that the _id field can be of any type, per the discretion of the spec implementor.
chunks
{
"_id" : <unspecified>, // object id of the chunk in the _chunks collection
"files_id" : <unspecified>, // _id of the corresponding files collection entry
"n" : chunk_number, // chunks are numbered in order, starting with 0
"data" : data_binary, // the chunk's payload as a BSON binary type
}
Notes:
The _id is whatever type you choose. As with any MongoDB document, the default will be a BSON object id.
The files_id is a foreign key containing the _id field for the relevant files collection entry
Indexes
GridFS implementations should create a unique, compound index in the chunks collection for files_id and n. Here's how you'd do that from
the shell:
This way, a chunk can be retrieved efficiently using it's files_id and n values. Note that GridFS implementations should use findOne
operations to get chunks individually, and should not leave open a cursor to query for all chunks. So to get the first chunk, we could do:
The admin database is special. In addition to several commands that are administrative being possible only on admin, authentication on admin
gives one read and write access to all databases on the server. Effectively, admin access means root access to the db.
Note on a single socket we may authenticate for any number of databases, and as different users. This authentication persists for the life of the
database connection (barring a logout command).
Authentication is a two step process. First the driver runs a getnonce command to get a nonce for use in the subsequent authentication. We
can view a sample getnonce invocation from dbshell:
> db.$cmd.findOne({getnonce:1})
{ "nonce":"7268c504683936e1" , "ok":1
The next step is to run an authenticate command for the database on which to authenticate. The authenticate command has the form:
where
{ ok : 1 }
when successful.
Details of why an authentication command failed may be found in the Mongo server's log files.
The following code from the Mongo Javascript driver provides an example implementation:
DB.prototype.addUser = function( username , pass ){
var c = this.getCollection( "system.users" );
c.save( u );
}
var a = this.runCommand(
{
authenticate : 1 ,
user : username ,
nonce : n.nonce ,
key : hex_md5( n.nonce + username + hex_md5( username + ":mongo:" + pass ) )
}
);
return a.ok;
}
Logout
Drivers may optionally implement the logout command which deauthorizes usage for the specified database for this connection. Note other
databases may still be authorized.
> db.$cmd.findOne({logout:1})
{
"ok" : 1.0
}
For drivers that support replica pairs, extra care with replication is required.
When switching from one server in a pair to another (on a failover situation), you must reauthenticate. Clients will likely want to cache
authentication from the user so that the client can reauthenticate with the new server when appropriate.
Be careful also with operations such as Logout - if you log out from only half a pair, that could be an issue.
See Also
When asynchronous, one must be careful to continue using the same connection (socket). This ensures that the next operation will not begin until
after the write completes.
An individual socket connection to the database has associated authentication state. Thus, if you pool connections, you probably want a separate
pool for each authentication case (db + username).
Pseudo-code
The following pseudo-code illustrates our recommended approach to implementing connection pooling in a driver's connection class. This handles
authentication, grouping operations from a single "request" onto the same socket, and a couple of other gotchas:
class Connection:
init(pool_size, addresses, auto_start_requests):
this.pool_size = pool_size
this.addresses = addresses
this.auto_start_requests = auto_start_requests
this.thread_map = {}
this.locks = Lock[pool_size]
this.sockets = Socket[pool_size]
this.socket_auth = String[pool_size][]
this.auth = {}
this.find_master()
find_master():
for address in this.addresses:
if address.is_master():
this.master = address
pick_and_acquire_socket():
choices = random permutation of [0, ..., this.pool_size - 1]
choices.sort(order: ascending,
value: size of preimage of choice under this.thread_map)
sock = choices[0]
this.locks[sock].blocking_acquire()
return sock
get_socket():
if this.thread_map[current_thread] >= 0:
sock_number = this.thread_map[current_thread]
this.locks[sock_number].blocking_acquire()
else:
sock_number = this.pick_and_lock_socket()
if this.auto_start_requests or current_thread in this.thread_map:
this.thread_map[current_thread] = sock_number
if not this.sockets[sock_number]:
this.sockets[sock_number] = Socket(this.master)
return sock_number
send_message_without_response(message):
sock_number = this.get_socket()
this.check_auth()
this.sockets[sock_number].send(message)
this.locks[sock_number].release()
send_message_with_response(message):
sock_number = this.get_socket()
this.check_auth()
this.sockets[sock_number].send(message)
result = this.sockets[sock_number].receive()
this.locks[sock_number].release()
return result
logout(database):
delete this.auth[database]
check_auth(sock_number):
for db in this.socket_auth[sock_number]:
if db not in this.auth.keys():
this.sockets[sock_number].send(logout_message)
this.socket_auth[sock_number].remove(db)
for db in this.auth.keys():
if db not in this.socket_auth[sock_number]:
this.sockets[sock_number].send(authenticate_message)
this.socket_auth[sock_number].append(db)
# somewhere we need to do error checking - if you get not master then everything
# in this.sockets gets closed and set to null and we call find_master() again.
# we also need to reset the socket_auth information - nothing is authorized yet
# on the new master.
See Also
The Driver and Integration Center for information about the latest drivers
The [top page] for this section
The main Database Internals page
The starting point for all Home
1. The user, when opening the connection, specifies host[:port] for one or more members of the set. Not all members need be specified --
in fact the exact members of the set might change over time. This list for the connect call is the seed list.
2. The driver then connects to all servers on the seed list, perhaps in parallel to minimize connect time. Send an ismaster command to each
server.
3. When the server is in replSet mode, it will return a hosts field with all members of the set that are potentially eligible to serve data. The
client should cache this information. Ideally this refreshes too, as the set's config could change over time.
4. Choose a server with which to communicate.
a. If ismaster == true, that server is primary for the set. This server can be used for writes and immediately consistent reads.
b. If secondary == true, that server is not primary, but is available for eventually consistent reads. In this case, you can use the
primary field to see which server the master should be.
5. If an error occurs with the current connection, find the new primary and resume use there.
For example, if we run the ismaster command on a non-primary server, we might get something like:
> db.runCommand("ismaster")
{
"ismaster" : false,
"secondary" : true,
"hosts" : [
"ny1.acme.com",
"ny2.acme.com",
"sf1.acme.com"
],
"passives" : [
"ny3.acme.com",
"sf3.acme.com"
],
"arbiters" : [
"sf2.acme.com",
]
"primary" : "ny2.acme.com",
"ok" : true
}
There are three servers with priority > 0 (ny1, ny2, and sf1), two passive servers (ny3 and sf3), and an arbiter (sf2). The primary should be ny2,
but the driver should call ismaster on that server before it assumes it is.
The error object has a first field guaranteed to have the reserved key $err. For example:
/* db response format
*/
See Also
The Driver and Integration Center for information about the latest drivers
The [top page] for this section
The main Database Internals page
The starting point for all Home
Developer Zone
Tutorial
Shell
Manual
Databases
Collections
Indexes
Data Types and Conventions
GridFS
Inserting
Updating
Querying
Removing
Optimization
Developer FAQ
If you have a comment or question about anything, please contact us through IRC (freenode.net#mongodb) or the mailing list, rather than leaving
a comment at the bottom of a page. It is easier for us to respond to you through those channels.
Introduction
MongoDB is a collection-oriented, schema-free document database.
By collection-oriented, we mean that data is grouped into sets that are called 'collections'. Each collection has a unique name in the database,
and can contain an unlimited number of documents. Collections are analogous to tables in a RDBMS, except that they don't have any defined
schema.
By schema-free, we mean that the database doesn't need to know anything about the structure of the documents that you store in a collection. In
fact, you can store documents with different structure in the same collection if you so choose.
By document, we mean that we store data that is a structured collection of key-value pairs, where keys are strings, and values are any of a rich
set of data types, including arrays and documents. We call this data format "BSON" for "Binary Serialized dOcument Notation."
The MongoDB process listens on port 27017 by default (note that this can be set at start time - please see Command Line Parameters for more
information).
Clients connect to the MongoDB process, optionally authenticate themselves if security is turned on, and perform a sequence of actions, such as
inserts, queries and updates.
MongoDB stores its data in files (default location is /data/db/), and uses memory mapped files for data management for efficiency.
MongoDB can also be configured for automatic data replication , as well as automatic fail-over .
For more information on MongoDB administration, please see Mongo Administration Guide.
MongoDB Functionality
As a developer, MongoDB drivers offer a rich range of operations:
Queries: Search for documents based on either query objects or SQL-like "where predicates". Queries can be sorted, have limited return
sizes, can skip parts of the return document set, and can also return partial documents.
Inserts and Updates : Insert new documents, update existing documents.
Index Management : Create indexes on one or more keys in a document, including substructure, deleted indexes, etc
General commands : Any MongoDB operation can be managed via DB Commands over the regular socket.
Tutorial
Getting the Database
Getting A Database Connection
Inserting Data into A Collection
Accessing Data From a Query
Specifying What the Query Returns
findOne() - Syntactic Sugar
Limiting the Result Set via limit()
More Help
What Next
First, run through the Quickstart guide for your platform to get up and running.
Let's now try manipulating the database with the database shell . (We could perform similar operations from any programming language using an
appropriate driver. The shell is convenient for interactive and administrative use.)
$ bin/mongo
By default the shell connects to database "test" on localhost. You then see:
"connecting to:" tells you the name of the database the shell is using. To switch databases, type:
Switching to a database with the use command won't immediately create the database - the database is created lazily the first
time data is inserted. This means that if you use a database for the first time it won't show up in the list provided by ` show dbs`
until data is inserted.
Let's create a test collection and insert some data into it. We will create two objects, j and t, and then save them in the collection things.
In the following examples, '>' indicates commands typed at the shell prompt.
We did not predefine the collection. The database creates it automatically on the first insert.
The documents we store can have any "structure" - in fact in this example, the documents have no common data elements at all. In
practice, one usually stores documents of the same structure within collections. However, this flexibility means that schema migration and
augmentation are very easy in practice - rarely will you need to write scripts which perform "alter table" type operations.
Upon being inserted into the database, objects are assigned an object ID (if they do not already have one) in the field _id.
When you run the above example, your ObjectID values will be different.
Note that not all documents were shown - the shell limits the number to 20 when automatically iterating a cursor. Since we already had 2
documents in the collection, we only see the first 18 of the newly-inserted documents.
If we want to return the next set of results, there's the it shortcut. Continuing from the code above:
Technically, find() returns a cursor object. But in the cases above, we haven't assigned that cursor to a variable. So, the shell automatically
iterates over the cursor, giving us an initial result set, and allowing us to continue iterating with the it command.
But we can also work with the cursor directly; just how that's done is discussed in the next section.
Before we discuss queries in any depth, lets talk about how to work with the results of a query - a cursor object. We'll use the simple find()
query method, which returns everything in a collection, and talk about how to create specific queries later on.
In order to see all the elements in the collection when using the mongo shell, we need to explicitly use the cursor returned from the find()
operation.
Lets repeat the same query, but this time use the cursor that find() returns, and iterate over it in a while loop :
The above example shows cursor-style iteration. The hasNext() function tells if there are any more documents to return, and the next()
function returns the next document. We also used the built-in tojson() method to render the document in a pretty JSON-style format.
When working in the JavaScript shell, we can also use the functional features of the language, and just call forEach on the cursor. Repeating
the example above, but using forEach() directly on the cursor rather than the while loop:
> db.things.find().forEach(printjson);
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c2209f9f3924d31102bd84a"), "name" : "mongo" }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c2209fef3924d31102bd84b"), "x" : 3 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd856"), "x" : 4, "j" : 1 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd857"), "x" : 4, "j" : 2 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd858"), "x" : 4, "j" : 3 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd859"), "x" : 4, "j" : 4 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85a"), "x" : 4, "j" : 5 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85b"), "x" : 4, "j" : 6 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85c"), "x" : 4, "j" : 7 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85d"), "x" : 4, "j" : 8 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85e"), "x" : 4, "j" : 9 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85f"), "x" : 4, "j" : 10 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd860"), "x" : 4, "j" : 11 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd861"), "x" : 4, "j" : 12 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd862"), "x" : 4, "j" : 13 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd863"), "x" : 4, "j" : 14 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd864"), "x" : 4, "j" : 15 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd865"), "x" : 4, "j" : 16 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd866"), "x" : 4, "j" : 17 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd867"), "x" : 4, "j" : 18 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd868"), "x" : 4, "j" : 19 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd869"), "x" : 4, "j" : 20 }
In the case of a forEach() we must define a function that is called for each document in the cursor.
In the mongo shell, you can also treat cursors like an array :
When using a cursor this way, note that all values up to the highest accessed (cursor[4] above) are loaded into RAM at the same time. This is
inappropriate for large result sets, as you will run out of memory. Cursors should be used as an iterator with any query which returns a large
number of elements.
In addition to array-style access to a cursor, you may also convert the cursor to a true array:
Please note that these array features are specific to mongo - The Interactive Shell, and not offered by all drivers.
MongoDB cursors are not snapshots - operations performed by you or other users on the collection being queried between the first and last call to
next() of your cursor may or may not be returned by the cursor. Use explicit locking to perform a snapshotted query.
Now that we know how to work with the cursor objects that are returned from queries, lets now focus on how to tailor queries to return specific
things.
In general, the way to do this is to create "query documents", which are documents that indicate the pattern of keys and values that are to be
matched.
These are easier to demonstrate than explain. In the following examples, we'll give example SQL queries, and demonstrate how to represent the
same query using MongoDB via the mongo shell. This way of specifying queries is fundamental to MongoDB, so you'll find the same general
facility in any driver or language.
> db.things.find({name:"mongo"}).forEach(printjson);
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c2209f9f3924d31102bd84a"), "name" : "mongo" }
SELECT * FROM things WHERE x=4
> db.things.find({x:4}).forEach(printjson);
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd856"), "x" : 4, "j" : 1 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd857"), "x" : 4, "j" : 2 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd858"), "x" : 4, "j" : 3 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd859"), "x" : 4, "j" : 4 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85a"), "x" : 4, "j" : 5 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85b"), "x" : 4, "j" : 6 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85c"), "x" : 4, "j" : 7 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85d"), "x" : 4, "j" : 8 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85e"), "x" : 4, "j" : 9 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd85f"), "x" : 4, "j" : 10 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd860"), "x" : 4, "j" : 11 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd861"), "x" : 4, "j" : 12 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd862"), "x" : 4, "j" : 13 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd863"), "x" : 4, "j" : 14 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd864"), "x" : 4, "j" : 15 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd865"), "x" : 4, "j" : 16 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd866"), "x" : 4, "j" : 17 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd867"), "x" : 4, "j" : 18 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd868"), "x" : 4, "j" : 19 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd869"), "x" : 4, "j" : 20 }
The query expression is an document itself. A query document of the form { a:A, b:B, ... } means "where a==A and b==B and ...". More
information on query capabilities may be found in the Queries and Cursors section of the Mongo Developers' Guide.
MongoDB also lets you return "partial documents" - documents that have only a subset of the elements of the document stored in the database.
To do this, you add a second argument to the find() query, supplying a document that lists the elements to be returned.
To illustrate, lets repeat the last example find({x:4}) with an additional argument that limits the returned document to just the "j" elements:
For convenience, the mongo shell (and other drivers) lets you avoid the programming overhead of dealing with the cursor, and just lets you
retrieve one document via the findOne() function. findOne() takes all the same parameters of the find() function, but instead of returning a
cursor, it will return either the first document returned from the database, or null if no document is found that matches the specified query.
As an example, lets retrieve the one document with name=='mongo'. There are many ways to do it, including just calling next() on the cursor
(after checking for null, of course), or treating the cursor as an array and accessing the 0th element.
However, the findOne() method is both convenient and efficient:
> printjson(db.things.findOne({name:"mongo"}));
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c2209f9f3924d31102bd84a"), "name" : "mongo" }
This is more efficient because the client requests a single object from the database, so less work is done by the database and the network. This is
the equivalent of find({name:"mongo"}).limit(1).
You may limit the size of a query's result set by specifing a maximum number of results to be returned via the limit() method.
This is highly recommended for performance reasons, as it limits the work the database does, and limits the amount of data returned over the
network. For example:
> db.things.find().limit(3);
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c2209f9f3924d31102bd84a"), "name" : "mongo" }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c2209fef3924d31102bd84b"), "x" : 3 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c220a42f3924d31102bd856"), "x" : 4, "j" : 1 }
More Help
In addition to the general "help" command, you can call help on db and db.whatever to see a summary of methods available.
If you are curious about what a function is doing, you can type it without the {{()}}s and the shell will print the source, for example:
> printjson
function (x) {
print(tojson(x));
}
mongo is a full JavaScript shell, so any JavaScript function, syntax, or class can be used in the shell. In addition, MongoDB defines some of its
own classes and globals (e.g., db). You can see the full API at http://api.mongodb.org/js/.
What Next
After completing this tutorial the next step to learning MongoDB is to dive into the manual for more details.
Manual
This is the MongoDB manual. Except where otherwise noted, all examples are in JavaScript for use with the mongo shell. There is a table
available giving the equivalent syntax for each of the drivers.
Connections
Databases
Commands
Clone Database
fsync Command
Index-Related Commands
Last Error Commands
Windows Service
Viewing and Terminating Current Operation
Validate Command
getLastError
List of Database Commands
Mongo Metadata
Collections
Capped Collections
Using a Large Number of Collections
Data Types and Conventions
Internationalized Strings
Object IDs
Database References
GridFS
Indexes
Using Multikeys to Simulate a Large Number of Indexes
Geospatial Indexing
Indexing as a Background Operation
Multikeys
Indexing Advice and FAQ
Inserting
Legal Key Names
Schema Design
Trees in MongoDB
Optimization
Optimizing Storage of Small Objects
Query Optimizer
Querying
Mongo Query Language
Retrieving a Subset of Fields
Advanced Queries
Dot Notation (Reaching into Objects)
Full Text Search in Mongo
min and max Query Specifiers
OR operations in query expressions
Queries and Cursors
Tailable Cursors
Server-side Code Execution
Sorting and Natural Order
Aggregation
Removing
Updating
Atomic Operations
findandmodify Command
Updating Data in Mongo
MapReduce
Data Processing Manual
Connections
MongoDB is a database server: it runs in the foreground or background and waits for connections from the user. Thus, when you start MongoDB,
you will see something like:
~/$ ./mongod
#
# some logging output
#
Tue Mar 9 11:15:43 waiting for connections on port 27017
Tue Mar 9 11:15:43 web admin interface listening on port 28017
It will stop printing output at this point but it hasn't frozen, it is merely waiting for connections on port 27017. Once you connect and start sending
commands, it will continue to log what it's doing. You can use any of the MongoDB drivers or Mongo shell to connect to the database.
You cannot connect to MongoDB by going to http://localhost:27017 in your web browser. The database cannot be accessed via HTTP on port
27017.
The uri scheme described on this page is not yet supported by all of the drivers. Refer to a specific driver's documentation to
see how much (if any) of the standard connection uri is supported. All drivers support an alternative method of specifying
connections if this format is not supported.
mongodb://[username:password@]host1[:port1][,host2[:port2],...[,hostN[:portN]]][/database]
mongodb:// is a required prefix to identify that this is a string in the standard connection format.
username:password@ are optional. If given, the driver will attempt to login to a database after connecting to a database server.
host1 is the only required part of the URI. It identifies a server address to connect to.
:portX is optional and defaults to :27017 if not provided.
/database is the name of the database to login to and thus is only relevant if the username:password@ syntax is used. If not
specified the "admin" database will be used by default.
As many hosts as necessary may be specified (for connecting to replica pairs/sets).
Examples
mongodb://localhost
Connect and login to the admin database as user "fred" with password "foobar":
mongodb://fred:foobar@localhost
Connect and login to the "baz" database as user "fred" with password "foobar":
mongodb://fred:foobar@localhost/baz
Connect to a replica pair, with one server on example1.com and another server on example2.com:
mongodb://example1.com:27017,example2.com:27017
Connect to a replica set with three servers running on localhost (on ports 27017, 27018, and 27019):
mongodb://localhost,localhost:27018,localhost:27019
Connection Pooling
The server will use one thread per TCP connection, therefore it is highly recomended that your application use some sort of connection pooling.
Luckily, most drivers handle this for you behind the scenes. One notable exception is setups where your app spawns a new process for each
request, such as CGI and some configurations of PHP.
Databases
Each MongoDB server can support multiple databases. Each database is independent, and the data for each database is stored separately, for
security and ease of management.
A database consists of one or more collections, the documents (objects) in those collections, and an optional set of security credentials for
controlling access.
Commands
Clone Database
fsync Command
Index-Related Commands
Last Error Commands
Windows Service
Viewing and Terminating Current Operation
Validate Command
getLastError
List of Database Commands
Mongo Metadata
Commands
Introduction
The Mongo database has a concept of a database command. Database commands are ways to ask the database to perform special operations,
or to request information about its current operational status.
Introduction
Privileged Commands
Getting Help Info for a Command
More Command Documentation
A command is sent to the database as a query to a special collection namespace called $cmd. The database will return a single document with
the command results - use findOne() for that if your driver has it.
For example, to check our database's current profile level setting, we can invoke:
> db.runCommand({profile:-1});
{
"was" : 0.0 ,
"ok" : 1.0
}
For many db commands, some drivers implement wrapper methods are implemented to make usage easier. For example, the mongo shell offers
> db.getProfilingLevel()
0.0
Many commands have helper functions - see your driver's documentation for more information.
Privileged Commands
Certain operations are for the database administrator only. These privileged operations may only be performed on the special database named
admin.
If the db variable is not set to 'admin', you can use _adminCommand to switch to the right database automatically (and just for that operation):
> db._adminCommand("shutdown");
(For this particular command there is also a shell helper function, db.shutdownServer.)
Clone Database
fsync Command
Index-Related Commands
Last Error Commands
Windows Service
Viewing and Terminating Current Operation
Validate Command
getLastError
List of Database Commands
Clone Database
MongoDB includes commands for copying a database from one server to another.
fsync Command
fsync Command
Lock, Snapshot and Unlock
Caveats
Snapshotting Slaves
See Also
The fsync command allows us to flush all pending writes to datafiles. More importantly, it also provides a lock option that makes backups easier.
fsync Command
> db.runCommand({fsync:1,async:true});
To fsync on a regular basis, use the --syncdelay command line option (see mongod --help output). By default a full flush is forced every 60
seconds.
The fsync command supports a lock option that allows one to safely snapshot the database's datafiles. While locked, all write operations are
blocked, although read operations are still allowed. After snapshotting, use the unlock command to unlock the database and allow locks again.
Example:
> db.$cmd.sys.unlock.findOne();
{ "ok" : 1, "info" : "unlock requested" }
> // unlock is now requested. it may take a moment to take effect.
> db.currentOp()
{ "inprog" : [ ] }
Caveats
While the database can be read while locked for snapshotting, if a write is attempted, this will block readers due to the database's use of a
read/write lock. This should be addressed in the future : http://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SERVER-1423
Snapshotting Slaves
The above procedure works on replica slaves. The slave will not apply operations while locked. However, see the above caveats section.
See Also
Backups
Index-Related Commands
Create Index
ensureIndex() is the helper function for this. Its implementation creates an index by adding its info to the system.indexes table.
> db.myCollection.ensureIndex(<keypattern>);
> // same as:
> db.system.indexes.insert({ name: "name", ns: "namespaceToIndex",
key: <keypattern> });
Note: Once you've inserted the index, all subsequent document inserts for the given collection will be indexed, as will all pre-existing documents
in the collection. If you have a large collection, this can take a significant amount of time and will block other operations. However, beginning with
version 1.3.2, you can specify that indexing happen in the background. See the background indexing docs for details.
You can query system.indexes to see all indexes for a table foo:
>db.system.indexes.find( { ns: "foo" } );
In some drivers, ensureIndex() remembers if it has recently been called, and foregoes the insert operation in that case. Even if this is not the
case, ensureIndex() is a cheap operation, so it may be invoked often to ensure that an index exists.
Dropping an Index
db.mycollection.dropIndex(<name_or_pattern>)
db.mycollection.dropIndexes()
// example:
t.dropIndex( { name : 1 } );
From a driver (raw command object form; many drivers have helpers):
Index Namespace
Each index has a namespace of its own for the btree buckets. The namespace is:
<collectionnamespace>.$<indexname>
Since MongoDB doesn't wait for a response by default when writing to the database, a couple commands exist for ensuring that these operations
have succeeded. These commands can be invoked automatically with many of the drivers when saving and updating in "safe" mode. But what's
really happening is that a special command called getlasterror is being invoked. Here, we explain how this works.
getlasterror
Drivers
Use Cases
Mongo Shell Behavior
fsync option
With Replication
getPrevError
getlasterror
The getlasterror command checks for an error on the last database operation for this connection. Since it's a command, there are a few ways
to invoke it:
> db.$cmd.findOne({getlasterror:1})
Or
> db.runCommand("getlasterror")
> db.getLastError()
The drivers support getlasterror in the command form and many also offer a "safe" mode for operations. If you're using Python, for example,
you automatically call getlasterror on insert as follows:
If the save doesn't succeed, an exception will be raised. For more on "safe" mode, see your driver's documentation.
Use Cases
getlasterror is primarily useful for write operations (although it is set after a command or query too). Write operations by default do not have a
return code: this saves the client from waiting for client/server turnarounds during write operations. One can always call getLastError if one wants
a return code.
If you're writing data to MongoDB on multiple connections, then it can sometimes be important to call getlasterror on one connection to be
certain that the data has been committed to the database. For instance, if you're writing to connection #1 and want those writes to be reflected in
reads from connection #2, you can assure this by calling getlasterror after writing to connection #1.
Note: The special mongo wire protocol killCursors operation does not support getlasterror. (This is really only of significant to driver developers .)
The database shell performs a resetError() before each read/eval/print loop command evaluation - and automatically prints the error, if one
occurred, after each evaluation. Thus, after an error, at the shell prompt db.getLastError() will return null. However, if called before returning
to the prompt, the result is as one would expect:
fsync option
Include the fsync option to force the database to fsync all files before returning (v1.3+):
> db.runCommand({getlasterror:1,fsync:true})
{ "err" : null, "n" : 0, "fsyncFiles" : 2, "ok" : 1 }
With Replication
getPrevError
When performing bulk write operations, resetError() and getPrevError() can be an efficient way to check for success of the operation.
For example if we are inserting 1,000 objects in a collection, checking the return code 1,000 times over the network is slow. Instead one might do
something like this:
db.resetError();
for( loop 1000 times... )
db.foo.save(something...);
if( db.getPrevError().err )
print("didn't work!");
Windows Service
On windows mongod.exe has native support for installing and running as a windows service.
mongod --install
mongod --service
mongod --remove
mongod --reinstall
You may also option pass the following to --install and --reinstall
--serviceName {arg}
--serviceUser {arg}
--servicePassword {arg}
The --install and --remove options install and remove the mongo daemon as a windows service respectively. The --service option starts the
service. --reinstall will attempt to remove the service, and then install it. If the service is not already installed, --reinstall will still work.
Both --remove and --reinstall will stop the service if it is currently running.
To change the name of the service use --serviceName. To make mongo execute as a local or domain user, as opposed to the Local System
account, use --serviceUser and --servicePassword.
Whatever other arguments you pass to mongod.exe on the command line alongside --install are the arguments that the service is configured to
execute mongod.exe with. Take for example the following command line:
Will cause a service to be created called Mongo that will execute the following command:
> db.currentOp();
> // same as: db.$cmd.sys.inprog.findOne()
{ inprog: [ { "opid" : 18 , "op" : "query" , "ns" : "mydb.votes" ,
"query" : "{ score : 1.0 }" , "inLock" : 1 }
]
}
Fields:
NOTE: currentOp's output format varies from version 1.0 and version 1.1 of MongoDB. The format above is for 1.1 and higher.
db.$cmd.sys.inprog.find()
or this version which prints all connections
db.$cmd.sys.inprog.find( { $all : 1 } )
// <= v1.2
> db.killOp()
> // same as: db.$cmd.sys.killop.findOne()
{"info" : "no op in progress/not locked"}
// v>= 1.3
> db.killOp(1234/*opid*/)
> // same as: db.$cmd.sys.killop.findOne({op:1234})
Validate Command
Use this command to check that a collection is valid (not corrupt) and to get various statistics.
This command scans the entire collection and its indexes and will be very slow on large datasets.
> db.foo.validate()
{"ns" : "test.foo" , "result" : "
validate
details: 08D03C9C ofs:963c9c
firstExtent:0:156800 ns:test.foo
lastExtent:0:156800 ns:test.foo
# extents:1
datasize?:144 nrecords?:3 lastExtentSize:2816
padding:1
first extent:
loc:0:156800 xnext:null xprev:null
ns:test.foo
size:2816 firstRecord:0:1568b0 lastRecord:0:156930
3 objects found, nobj:3
192 bytes data w/headers
144 bytes data wout/headers
deletedList: 0000000100000000000
deleted: n: 1 size: 2448
nIndexes:1
test.foo.$x_1 keys:3
" , "ok" : 1 , "valid" : true , "lastExtentSize" : 2816}
> db.$cmd.findOne({validate:"foo" } );
validate takes an optional scandata parameter which skips the scan of the base collection (but still scans indexes).
getLastError
Redirection Notice
This page should redirect to Last Error Commands in about 3 seconds.
Most drivers, and the db shell, support a getlasterror capability. This lets one check the error code on the last operation.
Database commands, as well as queries, have a direct return code.
getlasterror is primarily useful for write operations (although it is set after a command or query too). Write operations by default do not have a
return code: this saves the client from waiting for client/server turnarounds during write operations. One can always call getLastError if one wants
a return code.
> db.runCommand("getlasterror")
> db.getLastError()
Note: The special mongo wire protocol killCursors operation does not support getlasterror. (This is really only of significant to driver developers .)
getPrevError
When performing bulk write operations, resetError() and getPrevError() can be an efficient way to check for success of the operation.
For example if we are inserting 1,000 objects in a collection, checking the return code 1,000 times over the network is slow. Instead one might do
something like this:
db.resetError();
for( loop 1000 times... )
db.foo.save(something...);
if( db.getPrevError().err )
print("didn't work!");
The database shell performs a resetError() before each read/eval/print loop command evaluation - and automatically prints the error, if one
occurred, after each evaluation. Thus, after an error, at the shell prompt db.getLastError() will return null. However, if called before returning
to the prompt, the result is as one would expect:
Include the fsync option to force the database to fsync all files before returning (v1.3+):
> db.runCommand({getlasterror:1,fsync:true})
{ "err" : null, "n" : 0, "fsyncFiles" : 2, "ok" : 1 }
Also: with v1.5+, run mongod with --rest enabled, and then go to http://localhost:28017/_commands
Mongo Metadata
The <dbname>.system.* namespaces in MongoDB are special and contain database system information. System collections include:
Note: $ is a reserved character. Do not use it in namespace names or within field names. Internal collections for indexes use the $ character in
their names. These collection store b-tree bucket data and are not in BSON format (thus direct querying is not possible).
Collections
MongoDB collections are essentially named groupings of documents. You can think of them as roughly equivalent to relational database tables.
Details
A MongoDB collection is a collection of BSON documents. These documents are usually have the same structure, but this is not a requirement
since MongoDB is a schema-free database. You may store a heterogeneous set of documents within a collection, as you do not need predefine
the collection's "columns" or fields.
Collection names should begin with letters or an underscore and may include numbers; $ is reserved. Collections can be organized in
namespaces; these are named groups of collections defined using a dot notation. For example, you could define collections blog.posts and
blog.authors, both reside under "blog". Note that this is simply an organizational mechanism for the user -- the collection namespace is flat from
the database's perspective.
Programmatically, we access these collections using the dot notation. For example, using the mongo shell:
if( db.blog.posts.findOne() )
print("blog.posts exists and is not empty.");
The maximum size of a collection name is 128 characters (including the name of the db and indexes). It is probably best to keep it under 80/90
chars.
See also:
Capped Collections
Using a Large Number of Collections
Capped Collections
Capped collections are fixed sized collections that have a very high performance auto-LRU age-out feature (age out is based on insertion order).
In addition, capped collections automatically, with high performance, maintain insertion order for the objects in the collection; this is very powerful
for certain use cases such as logging.
Unlike a standard collection, you must explicitly create a capped collection, specifying a collection size in bytes. The collection's data space is
then preallocated. Note that the size specified includes database headers.
Behavior
Once the space is fully utilized, newly added objects will replace the oldest objects in the collection.
If you perform a find() on the collection with no ordering specified, the objects will always be returned in insertion order. Reverse order
is always retrievable with find().sort({$natural:-1}).
Applications
Logging. Capped collections provide a high-performance means for storing logging documents in the database. Inserting objects in an
unindexed capped collection will be close to the speed of logging to a filesystem. Additionally, with the built-in LRU mechanism, you are
not at risk of using excessive disk space for the logging.
Caching. If you wish to cache a small number of objects in the database, perhaps cached computations of information, the capped tables
provide a convenient mechanism for this. Note that for this application you will likely use an index on the capped table as there will be
more reads than writes.
Auto Archiving. If you know you want data to automatically "roll out" over time as it ages, a capped collection can be an easier way to
support than writing manual archival cron scripts.
Recommendations
For maximum performance, do not create indexes on a capped collection. If the collection will be written to much more than it is read
from, it is better to have no indexes. Note that you may create indexes on a capped collection; however, you are then moving from "log
speed" inserts to "database speed" inserts -- that is, it will still be quite fast by database standards.
Use natural ordering to retrieve the most recently inserted elements from the collection efficiently. This is (somewhat) analogous to tail on
a log file.
You may also cap the number of objects in the collection. Once the limit is reached, items roll out on a least recently inserted basis.
Note: When specifying a cap on the number of objects, you must also cap on size. Be sure to leave enough room for your chosen number of
objects or items will roll out faster than expected. You can use the validate() utility method to see how much space an existing collection uses,
and from that estimate your size needs.
Tip: When programming, a handy way to store the most recently generated version of an object can be a collection capped with max=1.
The createCollection command may be used for non capped collections as well. For example:
db.createCollection("mycoll", {size:10000000});
db.createCollection("mycoll", {size:10000000, autoIndexId:false});
Explicitly creating a non capped collection via createCollection allows parameters of the new collection to be specified. For example,
specification of a collection size causes the corresponding amount of disk space to be preallocated for use by the collection. The autoIndexId
field may be set to true or false to explicitly enable or disable automatic creation of a unique key index on the _id object field. By default, such an
index is created for non capped collections but is not created for capped collections.
See Also
For example, suppose we are logging objects/documents to the database, and want to have M logs: perhaps a dev log, a debug log, an ops log,
etc. We could store them all in one collection 'logs' containing objects like:
// logs.dev:
{ ts : ..., info : ... }
Of course, this only makes sense if we do not need to query for items from multiple logs at the same time.
Generally, having a large number of collections has no significant performance penalty, and results in very good performance.
Limits
By default MongoDB has a limit of approximately 24,000 namespaces per database. Each collection counts as a namespace, as does each
index. Thus if every collection had one index, we can create up to 12,000 collections. Use the --nssize parameter to set a higher limit.
Be aware that there is a certain minimum overhead per collection -- a few KB. Further, any index will require at least 8KB of data space as the
b-tree page size is 8KB.
--nssize
If more collections are required, run mongod with the --nssize parameter specified. This will make the <database>.ns file larger and support more
collections. Note that --nssize sets the size used for newly created .ns files -- if you have an existing database and wish to resize, after running
the db with --nssize, run the db.repairDatabase() command from the shell to adjust the size.
Mongo uses special data types in addition to the basic JSON types of string, integer, boolean, double, null, array, and object. These types include
date, object id, binary data, regular expression, and code. Each driver implements these types in language-specific ways, see your driver's
documentation for details.
Internationalization
Database References
Internationalized Strings
MongoDB supports UTF-8 for strings in stored objects and queries. (Specifically, BSON strings are UTF-8.)
Generally, drivers for each programming language convert from the language's string format of choice to UTF-8 when serializing and deserializing
BSON. For example, the Java driver converts Java Unicode strings to UTF-8 on serialization.
In most cases this means you can effectively store most international characters in MongoDB strings. A few notes:
Object IDs
Documents in MongoDB are required to have a key, _id, which uniquely identifies them.
Every MongoDB document has an _id field as its first attribute. This value usually a BSON ObjectId. Such an id must be unique for each
member of a collection; this is enforced if the collection has an index on _id, which is the case by default.
If a user tries to insert a document without providing an id, the database will automatically generate an _object id and store it the _id field.
Users are welcome to use their own conventions for creating ids; the _id value may be of any type so long as it is a unique.
Although _id values can be of any type, a special BSON datatype is provided for object ids. This type is a 12-byte binary value designed to have
a reasonably high probability of being unique when allocated. All of the officially-supported MongoDB drivers use this type by default for _id
values. Also, the Mongo database itself uses this type when assigning _id values on inserts where no _id value is present.
In the MongoDB shell, ObjectId() may be used to create ObjectIds. ObjectId(string) creates an object ID from the specified hex string.
A BSON ObjectID is a 12-byte value consisting of a 4-byte timestamp (seconds since epoch), a 3-byte machine id, a 2-byte process id, and a
3-byte counter. Note that the timestamp and counter fields must be stored big endian unlike the rest of BSON. This is because they are compared
byte-by-byte and we want to ensure a mostly increasing order. Here's the schema:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
time machine pid inc
Document Timestamps
One useful consequence of this specification is that it provides documents with a creation timestamp for free. All of the drivers implement methods
for extracting these timestamps; see the relevant api docs for details.
Sequence Numbers
Traditional databases often use monotonically increasing sequence numbers for primary keys. In MongoDB, the preferred approach is to use
Object IDs instead. Object IDs are more synergistic with sharding and distribution.
However, sometimes you may want a sequence number. The Insert if Not Present section of the Atomic Operations page shows an example of
how to do this.
Database References
Simple Manual References
DBRef
DBRef in Different Languages / Drivers
C#
C++
Java
Javascript (mongo shell)
PHP
Python
Ruby
See Also
As MongoDB is non-relational (no joins), references ("foreign keys") between documents are generally resolved client-side by additional queries
to the server. Two conventions are common for references in MongoDB: first simple manual references, and second, the DBRef standard, which
many drivers support explicitly.
Note: Often embedding of objects eliminates the need for references, but sometimes references are still appropriate.
Generally, manually coded references work just fine. We simply store the value that is present in _id in some other document in the database.
For example:
> p = db.postings.findOne();
{
"_id" : ObjectId("4b866f08234ae01d21d89604"),
"author" : "jim",
"title" : "Brewing Methods"
}
> // get more info on author
> db.users.findOne( { _id : p.author } )
{ "_id" : "jim", "email" : "[email protected]" }
DBRef
DBRef is a more formal specification for creating references between documents. DBRefs (generally) include a collection name as well as an
oject id. Most developers only use DBRefs if the collection can change from one document to the next. If your referenced collection will always
be the same, the manual references outlined above are more efficient.
A DBRef is a reference from one document (object) to another within a database. A database reference is a standard embedded (JSON/BSON)
object: we are defining a convention, not a special type. By having a standard way to represent, drivers and data frameworks can add helper
methods which manipulate the references in standard ways.
DBRef's have the advantage of allowing optional automatic client-side dereferencing with some drivers, although more features may be added
later. In many cases, you can just get away with storing the _id as a reference then dereferencing manually as detailed in the "Simple Manual
References" section above.
where <collname> is the collection name referenced (without the database name), and <idvalue> is the value of the _id field for the object
referenced. $db is optional (currently unsupported by many of the drivers) and allows for references to documents in other databases (specified
by <dbname>).
The ordering for DBRefs does matter, fields must be in the order specified above.
C#
Use the DBRef class. It takes the collection name and _id as parameters to the constructor. Then you can use the FollowReference method on
the Database class to get the referenced document.
C++
The C++ driver does not yet provide a facility for automatically traversing DBRefs. However one can do it manually of course.
Java
Example:
> x = { name : 'Biology' }
{ "name" : "Biology" }
> db.courses.save(x)
> x
{ "name" : "Biology", "_id" : ObjectId("4b0552b0f0da7d1eb6f126a1") }
> stu = { name : 'Joe', classes : [ new DBRef('courses', x._id) ] }
// or we could write:
// stu = { name : 'Joe', classes : [ {$ref:'courses',$id:x._id} ] }
> db.students.save(stu)
> stu
{
"name" : "Joe",
"classes" : [
{
"$ref" : "courses",
"$id" : ObjectId("4b0552b0f0da7d1eb6f126a1")
}
],
"_id" : ObjectId("4b0552e4f0da7d1eb6f126a2")
}
> stu.classes[0]
{ "$ref" : "courses", "$id" : ObjectId("4b0552b0f0da7d1eb6f126a1") }
> stu.classes[0].fetch()
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b0552b0f0da7d1eb6f126a1"), "name" : "Biology" }
>
PHP
PHP supports DB references with the MongoDBRef class, as well as creation and deferencing methods at the database (MongoDB::createDBRef
and MongoDB::getDBRef) and collection (MongoCollection::createDBRef and MongoCollection::getDBRef) levels.
Python
To create a DB reference in python use the pymongo.dbref.DBRef class. You can also use the dereference method on Database instances to
make dereferencing easier.
Python also supports auto-ref and auto-deref - check out the auto_reference example.
Ruby
Ruby also supports DB references using the DBRef class and a dereference method on DB instances. For example:
@db = Connection.new.db("blog")
@user = @db["users"].save({:name => "Smith"})
@post = @db["posts"].save({:title => "Hello World", :user_id => @user.id})
@ref = DBRef.new("users", @post.user_id)
assert_equal @user, @db.dereference(@ref)
See Also
Schema Design
GridFS
GridFS is a specification for storing large files in MongoDB. All of the officially supported driver implement the GridFS spec.
Rationale
Implementation
Language Support
Command Line Tools
See also
Rationale
The database supports native storage of binary data within BSON objects. However, BSON objects in MongoDB are limited to 4MB in size. The
GridFS spec provides a mechanism for transparently dividing a large file among multiple documents. This allows us to efficiently store large
objects, and in the case of especially large files, such as videos, permits range operations (e.g., fetching only the first N bytes of a file).
Implementation
To facilitate this, a standard is specified for the chunking of files. Each file has a metadata object in a files collection, and one or more chunk
objects in a chunks collection. Details of how this is stored can be found in the GridFS Specification; however, you do not really need to read that,
instead, just look at the GridFS API in each language's client driver or mongofiles tool.
Language Support
Most drivers include GridFS implementations; for languages not listed below, check the driver's API documentation. (If a language does not
include support, see the GridFS specification -- implementing a handler is usually quite easy.)
Command line tools are available to write and read GridFS files from and to the local filesystem.
See also
C++
A PHP GridFS Blog Article
Indexes
Indexes enhance query performance, often dramatically. It's important to think about the kinds of queries your application will need so that you
can define relevant indexes. Once that's done, actually creating the indexes in MongoDB is relatively easy.
Indexes in MongoDB are conceptually similar to those in RDBMSes like MySQL. You will want an index in MongoDB in the same sort of situations
where you would have wanted an index in MySQL.
Basics
Default Indexes
Embedded Keys
Documents as Keys
Arrays
Compound Keys Indexes
Unique Indexes
Missing Keys
Duplicate Values
Background Index Building
Dropping Indexes
ReIndex
Additional Notes on Indexes
Index Performance
Using sort() without an Index
Geospatial
Webinar
Basics
An index is a data structure that collects information about the values of the specified fields in the documents of a collection. This data structure is
used by Mongo's query optimizer to quickly sort through and order the documents in a collection. Formally speaking, these indexes are
implemented as "B-Tree" indexes.
In the shell, you can create an index by calling the ensureIndex() function, and providing a document that specifies one or more keys to index.
Referring back to our examples database from Mongo Usage Basics, we can index on the 'j' field as follows:
db.things.ensureIndex({j:1});
The ensureIndex() function only creates the index if it does not exist.
Once a collection is indexed on a key, random access on query expressions which match the specified key are fast. Without the index, MongoDB
has to go through each document checking the value of specified key in the query:
db.things.find({j : 2}); // fast - uses index
db.things.find({x : 3}); // slow - has to check all because 'x' isn't indexed
You can run db.things.getIndexes(); to see the existing indexes on the collection.
Default Indexes
An index is always created on _id. This index is special and cannot be deleted. The _id index enforces uniqueness for its keys. For Capped
Collections no index is created.
Embedded Keys
With MongoDB you can even index on a key inside of an embedded document. For example:
db.things.ensureIndex({"address.city": 1})
Documents as Keys
There are pros and cons to the two approaches. When using the entire (sub-)document as a key, compare order is predefined and is ascending
key order in the order the keys occur in the BSON document. With compound indexes reaching in, you can mix ascending and descending keys,
and the query optimizer will then be able to use the index for queries on solely the first key(s) in the index too.
Arrays
When a document's stored value for a index key field is an array, MongoDB indexes each element of the array. See the Multikeys page for more
information.
In addition to single-key basic indexes, MongoDB also supports multi-key "compound" indexes. Just like basic indexes, you use the
ensureIndex() function in the shell to create the index, but instead of specifying only a single key, you can specify several :
db.things.ensureIndex({j:1, name:-1});
When creating an index, the number associated with a key specifies the direction of the index, so it should always be 1 (ascending) or -1
(descending). Direction doesn't matter for single key indexes or for random access retrieval but is important if you are doing sorts or range queries
on compound indexes.
If you have a compound index on multiple fields, you can use it to query on the beginning subset of fields. So if you have an index on
a,b,c
a,b
a,b,c
New in 1.6+
Now you can also use the compound index to service any combination of equality (and some inequality) queries from the
constitute fields.
Unique Indexes
MongoDB supports unique indexes, which guarantee that no documents are inserted whose values for the indexed keys match those of an
existing document. To create an index that guarantees that no two documents have the same values for both firstname and lastname you
would do:
Missing Keys
When a document is saved to a collection with unique indexes, any missing indexed keys will be inserted with null values. Thus, it won't be
possible to insert multiple documents missing the same indexed key.
Duplicate Values
A unique index cannot be created on a key that has duplicate values. If you would like to create the index anyway, keeping the first document the
database indexes and deleting all subsequent documents that have duplicate values, add the dropDups option.
By default, building an index blocks other database operations. v1.3.2 and higher has a background index build option .
Dropping Indexes
db.collection.dropIndexes();
db.collection.dropIndex({x: 1, y: -1})
ReIndex
db.myCollection.reIndex()
// same as:
db.runCommand( { reIndex : 'myCollection' } )
Usually this is unnecessary. You may wish to do this if the size of your collection has changed dramatically or the disk space used by indexes
seems oddly large.
MongoDB indexes (and string equality tests in general) are case sensitive.
When you update an object, if the object fits in its previous allocation area, only those indexes whose keys have changed are updated.
This improves performance. Note that if the object has grown and must move, all index keys must then update, which is slower.
Index information is kept in the system.indexes collection, run db.system.indexes.find() to see example data.
Index Performance
Indexes make retrieval by a key, including ordered sequential retrieval, very fast. Updates by key are faster too as MongoDB can find the
document to update very quickly.
However, keep in mind that each index created adds a certain amount of overhead for inserts and deletes. In addition to writing data to the base
collection, keys must then be added to the B-Tree indexes. Thus, indexes are best for collections where the number of reads is much greater than
the number of writes. For collections which are write-intensive, indexes, in some cases, may be counterproductive. Most collections are
read-intensive, so indexes are a good thing in most situations.
You may use sort() to return data in order without an index if the data set to be returned is small (less than four megabytes). For these cases it
is best to use limit() and sort() together.
Geospatial
Webinar
Indexing with MongoDB webinar video (http://bit.ly/bQK1Op) and slides (http://bit.ly/9qeMjC). More detailed slides (http://bit.ly/dAHrQk).
In addition to being able to have an unlimited number of attributes types, we can also add new types dynamically.
This is mainly useful for simply attribute lookups; the above pattern is not necessary helpful for sorting or certain other query types.
See Also
Discussion thread MongoDB for a chemical property search engine for a more complex real world example.
Geospatial Indexing
Creating the Index
Querying
Compound Indexes
geoNear Command
Bounds Queries
The Earth is Round but Maps are Flat
New Spherical Model
Sharded Environments
Implementation
v1.3.3+
MongoDB supports two-dimensional geospatial indexes. It is designed with location-based queries in mind, such as "find me the closest N items
to my location." It can also efficiently filter on additional criteria, such as "find me the closest N museums to my location."
In order to use the index, you need to have a field in your object that is either a sub-object or array where the first 2 elements are x,y coordinates
(or y,x - just be consistent; it might be advisible to use order-preserving dictionaries/hashes in your client code, to ensure consistency). Some
examples:
{ loc : [ 50 , 30 ] }
{ loc : { x : 50 , y : 30 } }
{ loc : { foo : 50 , y : 30 } }
{ loc : { lat : 40.739037, long: 73.992964 } }
By default, the index assumes you are indexing latitude/longitude and is thus configured for a [-180..180] value range.
If you are indexing something else, you can specify some options:
that will scale the index to store values between -500 and 500. Currently geo indexing is limited to indexing squares with no "wrapping" at the
outer boundaries. You cannot insert values on the boundaries, for example, using the code above, the point (-500, -500) could not to be
inserted.
you can only have 1 geo2d index per collection right now
Querying
Of course, that is not very interesting. More important is a query to find points near another point, but not necessarily matching exactly:
The above query finds the closest points to (50,50) and returns them sorted by distance (there is no need for an additional sort parameter). Use
limit() to specify a maximum number of points to return (a default limit of 100 applies if unspecified):
Compound Indexes
MongoDB geospatial indexes optionally support specification of secondary key values. If you are commonly going to be querying on both a
location and other attributes at the same time, add the other attributes to the index. The other attributes are annotated within the index to make
filtering faster. For example:
geoNear Command
While the find() syntax above is typically preferred, MongoDB also has a geoNear command which performs a similar function. The geoNear
command has the added benefit of returning the distance of each item from the specified point in the results, as well as some diagnostics for
troubleshooting.
> db.runCommand( { geoNear : "places" , near : [50,50], num : 10 } );
> db.runCommand({geoNear:"asdf", near:[50,50]})
{
"ns" : "test.places",
"near" : "1100110000001111110000001111110000001111110000001111",
"results" : [
{
"dis" : 69.29646421910687,
"obj" : {
"_id" : ObjectId("4b8bd6b93b83c574d8760280"),
"y" : [
1,
1
],
"category" : "Coffee"
}
},
{
"dis" : 69.29646421910687,
"obj" : {
"_id" : ObjectId("4b8bd6b03b83c574d876027f"),
"y" : [
1,
1
]
}
}
],
"stats" : {
"time" : 0,
"btreelocs" : 1,
"btreelocs" : 1,
"nscanned" : 2,
"nscanned" : 2,
"objectsLoaded" : 2,
"objectsLoaded" : 2,
"avgDistance" : 69.29646421910687
},
"ok" : 1
}
The above command will return the 10 closest items to (50,50). (The loc field is automatically determined by checking for a 2d index on the
collection.)
Bounds Queries
v1.3.4
$within can be used instead of $near to find items within a shape. At the moment, $box (rectangles) and $center (circles) are supported.
To query for all points within a rectangle, you must specify the lower-left and upper-right corners:
The current implementation assumes an idealized model of a flat earth, meaning that an arcdegree of latitude (y) and longitude (x) represent the
same distance everywhere. This is only true at the equator where they are both about equal to 69 miles or 111km. However, at the 10gen offices
at { x : -74 , y : 40.74 } one arcdegree of longitude is about 52 miles or 83 km (latitude is unchanged). This means that something 1 mile to the
north would seem closer than something 1 mile to the east.
In 1.7.0 we added support for correctly using spherical distances by adding "Sphere" to the name of the query. So far, only $centerSphere queries
are supported but support for $nearSphere is planned. There are a few caveats that you must be aware of when using spherical distances:
1. The code assumes that you are using decimal degrees in (X,Y) / (longitude, latitude) order. This is the same order used for the GeoJSON
spec.
2. All distances use radians. This allows you to easily multiply by the radius of the earth (about 6371 km or 3959 miles) to get the distance in
your choice of units. Conversely, divide by the radius of the earth when doing queries.
3. We don't currently handle wrapping at the poles or at the transition from -180° to +180° longitude, however we detect when a search
would wrap and raise an error.
Sharded Environments
Support for geospatial in sharded collections is coming; please watch this ticket: http://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SHARDING-83.
In the meantime sharded clusters can use geospatial indexes for unsharded collections within the cluster.
Implementation
The current implementation encodes geographic hash codes atop standard MongoDB b-trees. Results of $near queries are exact. The problem
with geohashing is that prefix lookups don't give you exact results, especially around bit flip areas. MongoDB solves this by doing a grid by grid
search after the initial prefix scan. This guarantees performance remains very high while providing correct results.
Slaves and replica secondaries build all indexes in the foreground in certain releases (including the latest). Thus even when
using background:true on the primary, the slave/secondary will be unavailable to service queries while the index builds there.
By default the ensureIndex() operation is blocking, and will stop other operations on the database from proceeding until completed. However,
in v1.3.2+, a background indexing option is available.
To build an index in the background, add background:true to your index options. Examples:
With background mode enabled, other operations, including writes, will not be obstructed during index creation. The index is not used for queries
until the build is complete.
Although the operation is 'background' in the sense that other operations may run concurrently, the command will not return to the shell prompt
until completely finished. To do other operations at the same time, open a separate mongo shell instance.
Please note that background mode building uses an incremental approach to building the index which is slower than the default foreground mode:
time to build the index will be greater.
While the build progresses, it is possible to see that the operation is still in progress with the db.currentOp() command (will be shown as an
insert to system.indexes). You may also use db.killOp() to terminate the build process.
While the build progresses, the index is visible in system.indexes, but it is not used for queries until building completes.
Notes
Multikeys
MongoDB provides an interesting "multikey" feature that can automatically index arrays of an object's values. A good example is tagging.
Suppose you have an article tagged with some category names:
$ dbshell
> db.articles.save( { name: "Warm Weather", author: "Steve",
tags: ['weather', 'hot', 'record', 'april'] } )
> db.articles.find()
{"name" : "Warm Weather" , "author" : "Steve" ,
"tags" : ["weather","hot","record","april"] , "_id" : "497ce4051ca9ca6d3efca323"}
We can easily perform a query looking for a particular value in the tags array:
Further, we can index on the tags array. Creating an index on an array element indexes results in the database indexing each element of the
array:
Additionally the same technique can be used for fields in embedded objects:
By using the $all query option, a set of values may be supplied each of which must be present in a matching object field. For example:
See Also
The Multikeys section of the Full Text Search in Mongo document for information about this feature.
Second, and even more importantly, know that advice on indexing can only take you so far. The best indexes for your application should always
be based on a number of important factors, including the kinds of queries you expect, the ratio of reads to writes, and even the amount of free
memory on your system. This means that the best strategy for designing indexes will always be to profile a variety of index configurations with
data sets similar to the ones you'll be running in production, and see which perform best. There's no substitute for good empirical analyses.
Indexing Strategies
Create indexes to match your queries.
One index per query.
Make sure your indexes can fit in RAM.
Be careful about single-key indexes with low selectivity.
Use explain.
Understanding explain's output.
Pay attention to the read/write ratio of your application.
Indexing Properties
1. The sort column must be the last column used in the index.
2. The range query must also be the last column in an index. This is an axiom of 1 above.
3. Only use a range query or sort on one column.
4. Conserve indexes by re-ordering columns used on equality (non-range) queries.
5. MongoDB's $ne or $nin operator's aren't efficient with indexes.
FAQ
I've started building an index, and the database has stopped responding. What's going on? What do I do?
I'm using $ne or $nin in a query, and while it uses the index, it's still slow. What's happening?
Indexing Strategies
If you only query on a single key, then a single-key index will do. For instance, maybe you're searching for a blog post's slug:
However, it's common to query on multiple keys and to sort the results. For these situations, compound indexes are best. Here's an example for
querying the latest comments with a 'mongodb' tag:
Note that if we wanted to sort by created_at ascending, this index would be less effective.
It's sometimes thought that queries on multiple keys can use multiple indexes; this is not the case with MongoDB. If you have a query that selects
on multiple keys, and you want that query to use an index efficiently, then a compound-key index is necessary.
db.comments.totalIndexSize();
65443
If your queries seem sluggish, you should verify that your indexes are small enough to fit in RAM. For instance, if you're running on 4GB RAM and
you have 3GB of indexes, then your indexes probably aren't fitting in RAM. You may need to add RAM and/or verify that all the indexes you've
created are actually being used.
Suppose you have a field called 'status' where the possible values are 'new' and 'processeed'. If you add an index on 'status' then you've created
a low-selectivity index, meaning that the index isn't going to be very helpful in locating records and might just be be taking up space.
A better strategy, depending on your queries, of course, would be to create a compound index that includes the low-selectivity field. For instance,
you could have a compound-key index on 'status' and 'created_at.'
Another option, again depending on your use case, might be to use separate collections, one for each status. As with all the advice here,
experimentation and benchmarks will help you choose the best approach.
Use explain.
MongoDB includes an explain command for determining how your queries are being processed and, in particular, whether they're using an
index. explain can be used from of the drivers and also from the shell:
This will return lots of useful information, including the number of items scanned, the time the query takes to process in milliseconds, which
indexes the query optimizer tried, and the index ultimately used.
There are three main fields to look for when examining the explain command's output:
cursor: the value for cursor can be either BasicCursor or BtreeCursor. The second of these indicates that the given query is using
an index.
nscanned: he number of documents scanned.
n: the number of documents returned by the query. You want the value of n to be close to the value of nscanned. What you want to
avoid is doing a collection scan, that is, where every document in the collection is accessed. This is the case when nscanned is equal to
the number of documents in the collection.
millis: the number of milliseconds require to complete the query. This value is useful for comparing indexing strategies, indexed vs.
non-indexed queries, etc.
This is important because, whenever you add an index, you add overhead to all insert, update, and delete operations on the given collection. If
your application is read-heavy, as are most web applications, the additional indexes are usually a good thing. But if your application is
write-heavy, then be careful when creating new indexes, since each additional index with impose a small write-performance penalty.
In general, don't be cavalier about adding indexes. Indexes should be added to complement your queries. Always have a good reason for
adding a new index, and make sure you've benchmarked alternative strategies.
Indexing Properties
Here are a few properties of compound indexes worth keeping in mind (Thanks to Doug Green and Karoly Negyesi for their help on this).
These examples assume a compound index of three fields: a, b, c. So our index creation would look like this:
db.foo.ensureIndex({a: 1, b: 1, c: 1})
1. The sort column must be the last column used in the index.
Good:
find(a=1).sort(a)
find(a=1).sort(b)
find(a=1, b=2).sort(c)
Bad:
find(a=1).sort(c)
even though c is the last column used in the index, a is that last column used, so you can only sort on a or b.
2. The range query must also be the last column in an index. This is an axiom of 1 above.
Good:
find(a=1,b>2)
find(a>1 and a<10)
find(a>1 and a<10).sort(a)
Bad:
find(a>1, b=2)
Good:
find(a=1,b=2).sort(c)
find(a=1,b>2)
find(a=1,b>2 and b<4)
find(a=1,b>2).sort(b)
Bad:
find(a>1,b>2)
find(a=1,b>2).sort(c)
find(a=1,b=1,d=1)
find(a=1,b=1,c=1,d=1)
When excluding just a few documents, it's better to retrieve extra rows from MongoDB and do the exclusion on the client side.
FAQ
I've started building an index, and the database has stopped responding. What's going on? What do I do?
Building an index can be an IO-intensive operation, especially you have a large collection. This is true on any database system that supports
secondary indexes, including MySQL. If you'll need to build an index on a large collection in the future, you'll probably want to consider building
the index in the background, a feature available beginning with 1.3.2. See the docs on background indexing for more info.
As for the long-building index, you only have a few options. You can either wait for the index to finish building or kill the current operation (see
killOp()). If you choose the latter, the partial index will be deleted.
I'm using $ne or $nin in a query, and while it uses the index, it's still slow. What's happening?
The problem with $ne and $nin is that much of an index will match queries like these. If you need to use $nin, it's often best to make sure that an
additional, more selective criterion is part of the query.
Inserting
When we insert data into MongoDB, that data will always be in document-form. Documents are data structure analogous to JSON, Python
dictionaries, and Ruby hashes, to take just a few examples. Here, we discuss more about document-orientation and describe how to insert data
into MongoDB.
Document-Orientation
JSON
Mongo-Friendly Schema
Store Example
Document-Orientation
Document-oriented databases store "documents" but by document we mean a structured document – the term perhaps coming from the phrase
"XML document". However other structured forms of data, such as JSON or even nested dictionaries in various languages, have similar
properties.
The documents stored in Mongo DB are JSON-like. JSON is a good way to store object-style data from programs in a manner that is
language-independent and standards based.
To be efficient, MongoDB uses a format called BSON which is a binary representation of this data. BSON is faster to scan for specific fields than
JSON. Also BSON adds some additional types such as a data data type and a byte-array (bindata) datatype. BSON maps readily to and from
JSON and also to various data structures in many programming languages.
Client drivers serialize data to BSON, then transmit the data over the wire to the db. Data is stored on disk in BSON format. Thus, on a retrieval,
the database does very little translation to send an object out, allowing high efficiency. The client driver unserialized a received BSON object to its
native language format.
JSON
{ author: 'joe',
created : new Date('03/28/2009'),
title : 'Yet another blog post',
text : 'Here is the text...',
tags : [ 'example', 'joe' ],
comments : [ { author: 'jim', comment: 'I disagree' },
{ author: 'nancy', comment: 'Good post' }
]
}
This document is a blog post, so we can store in a "posts" collection using the shell:
MongoDB understands the internals of BSON objects -- not only can it store them, it can query on internal fields and index keys based upon
them. For example the query
is possible and means "find any blog post where at least one comment subjobject has author == 'jim'".
Mongo-Friendly Schema
Mongo can be used in many ways, and one's first instincts when using it are probably going to be similar to how one would write an application
with a relational database. While this work pretty well, it doesn't harness the real power of Mongo. Mongo is designed for and works best with a
rich object model.
Store Example
If you're building a simple online store that sells products with a relation database, you might have a schema like:
item
title
price
sku
item_features
sku
feature_name
feature_value
You would probably normalize it like this because different items would have different features, and you wouldn't want a table with all possible
features. You could model this the same way in mongo, but it would be much more efficient to do
item : {
"title" : <title> ,
"price" : <price> ,
"sku" : <sku> ,
"features" : {
"optical zoom" : <value> ,
...
}
}
Now, at first glance there might seem to be some issues, but we've got them covered.
you might want to insert or update a single feature. mongo lets you operate on embedded files like:
Does adding a feature require moving the entire object on disk? No. mongo has a padding heuristic that adapts to your data so it will
leave some empty space for the object to grow. This will prevent indexes from being changed, etc.
The '$' character must not be the first character in the key name.
The '.' character must not appear anywhere in the key name.
Schema Design
Introduction
Embed vs. Reference
Use Cases
Index Selection
How Many Collections?
See Also
Introduction
With Mongo, you do less "normalization" than you would perform designing a relational schema because there are no server-side "joins".
Generally, you will want one database collection for each of your top level objects.
You do not want a collection for every "class" - instead, embed objects. For example, in the diagram below, we have two collections, students and
courses. The student documents embed address documents and the "score" documents, which have references to the courses.
Compare this with a relational schema, where you would almost certainly put the scores in a separate table, and have a foreign-key relationship
back to the students.
The key question in Mongo schema design is "does this object merit its own collection, or rather should it embed in objects in other collections?"
In relational databases, each sub-item of interest typically becomes a separate table (unless denormalizing for performance). In Mongo, this is not
recommended - embedding objects is much more efficient. Data is then colocated on disk; client-server turnarounds to the database are
eliminated. So in general the question to ask is, "why would I not want to embed this object?"
So why are references slow? Let's consider our students example. If we have a student object and perform:
print( student.address.city );
This operation will always be fast as address is an embedded object, and is always in RAM if student is in RAM. However for
print( student.scores[0].for_course.name );
if this is the first access to scores[0], the shell or your driver must execute the query
student.scores[0].for_course = db.courses.findOne({_id:_course_id_to_find_});
Thus, each reference traversal is a query to the database. Typically, the collection in question is indexed on _id. The query will then be
reasonably fast. However, even if all data is in RAM, there is a certain latency given the client/server communication from appserver to database.
In general, expect 1ms of time for such a query on a ram cache hit. Thus if we were iterating 1,000 students, looking up one reference per student
would be quite slow - over 1 second to perform even if cached. However, if we only need to look up a single item, the time is on the order of 1ms,
and completely acceptable for a web page load. (Note that if already in db cache, pulling the 1,000 students might actually take much less than 1
second, as the results return from the database in large batches.)
"First class" objects, that are at top level, typically have their own collection.
Line item detail objects typically are embedded.
Objects which follow an object modelling "contains" relationship should generally be embedded.
Many to many relationships are generally by reference.
Collections with only a few objects may safely exist as separate collections, as the whole collection is quickly cached in application server
memory.
Embedded objects are harder to reference than "top level" objects in collections, as you cannot have a DBRef to an embedded object (at
least not yet).
It is more difficult to get a system-level view for embedded objects. For example, it would be easier to query the top 100 scores across all
students if Scores were not embedded.
If the amount of data to embed is huge (many megabytes), you may reach the limit on size of a single object.
If performance is an issue, embed.
Use Cases
orders should be a collection. customers a collection. line-items should be an array of line-items embedded in the order object.
1. Blogging system.
posts should be a collection. post author might be a separate collection, or simply a field within posts if only an email address.
comments should be embedded objects within a post for performance.
Index Selection
A second aspect of schema design is index selection. As a general rule, where you want an index in a relational database, you want an index in
Mongo.
The MongoDB profiling facility provides useful information for where an index should be added that is missing.
Note that adding an index slows writes to a collection, but not reads. Use lots of indexes for collections with a high read : write ratio (assuming
one does not mind the storage overage). For collections with more writes than reads, indexes are very expensive.
As Mongo collections are polymorphic, one could have a collection objects and put everything in it! This approach is taken by some object
databases. For performance reasons, we do not recommend this approach. Data within a Mongo collection tends to be contiguous on disk. Thus,
table scans of the collection are possible, and efficient. Collections are very important for high throughput batch processing.
See Also
Trees in MongoDB
Patterns
Full Tree in Single Document
Parent Links
Child Links
Array of Ancestors
Materialized Paths (Full Path in Each Node)
acts_as_nested_set
See Also
The best way to store a tree usually depends on the operations you want to perform; see below for some different options. In practice, most
developers find that one of the "Full Tree in Single Document", "Parent Links", and "Array of Ancestors" patterns works best.
Patterns
Pros:
Cons:
Hard to search
Hard to get back partial results
Can get unwieldy if you need a huge tree (there is a 4MB per doc limit)
Parent Links
Storing all nodes in a single collection, with each node having the id of its parent, is a simple solution. The biggest problem with this approach is
getting an entire subtree requires several query turnarounds to the database (or use of db.eval).
> t = db.tree1;
> t.find()
{ "_id" : 1 }
{ "_id" : 2, "parent" : 1 }
{ "_id" : 3, "parent" : 1 }
{ "_id" : 4, "parent" : 2 }
{ "_id" : 5, "parent" : 4 }
{ "_id" : 6, "parent" : 4 }
Child Links
Another option is storing the ids of all of a node's children within each node's document. This approach is fairly limiting, although ok if no
operations on entire subtrees are necessary. It may also be good for storing graphs where a node has multiple parents.
> t = db.tree2
> t.find()
{ "_id" : 1, "children" : [ 2, 3 ] }
{ "_id" : 2 }
{ "_id" : 3, "children" : [ 4 ] }
{ "_id" : 4 }
Array of Ancestors
Here we store all the ancestors of a node in an array. This makes a query like "get all descendents of x" fast and easy.
> t = db.mytree;
> t.find()
{ "_id" : "a" }
{ "_id" : "b", "ancestors" : [ "a" ], "parent" : "a" }
{ "_id" : "c", "ancestors" : [ "a", "b" ], "parent" : "b" }
{ "_id" : "d", "ancestors" : [ "a", "b" ], "parent" : "b" }
{ "_id" : "e", "ancestors" : [ "a" ], "parent" : "a" }
{ "_id" : "f", "ancestors" : [ "a", "e" ], "parent" : "e" }
{ "_id" : "g", "ancestors" : [ "a", "b", "d" ], "parent" : "d" }
ensureIndex and MongoDB's multikey feature makes the above queries efficient.
In addition to the ancestors array, we also stored the direct parent in the node to make it easy to find the node's immediate parent when that is
necessary.
Materialized paths make certain query options on trees easy. We store the full path to the location of a document in the tree within each node.
Usually the "array of ancestors" approach above works just as well, and is easier as one doesn't have to deal with string building, regular
expressions, and escaping of characters. (Theoretically, materialized paths will be slightly faster.)
The best way to do this with MongoDB is to store the path as a string and then use regex queries. Simple regex expressions beginning with "^"
can be efficiently executed. As the path is a string, you will need to pick a delimiter character -- we use ',' below. For example:
> t = db.tree
test.tree
> // get entire tree -- we use sort() to make the order nice
> t.find().sort({path:1})
{ "_id" : "a", "path" : "a," }
{ "_id" : "b", "path" : "a,b," }
{ "_id" : "c", "path" : "a,b,c," }
{ "_id" : "d", "path" : "a,b,d," }
{ "_id" : "g", "path" : "a,b,g," }
{ "_id" : "e", "path" : "a,e," }
{ "_id" : "f", "path" : "a,e,f," }
{ "_id" : "g", "path" : "a,b,g," }
acts_as_nested_set
See http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Acts/NestedSet/ClassMethods.html
This pattern is best for datasets that rarely change as modifications can require changes to many documents.
See Also
Optimization
Optimizing A Simple Example
Optimization #1: Create an index
Optimization #2: Limit results
Optimization #3: Select only relevant fields
Using the Profiler
Optimizing Statements that Use count()
Increment Operations
Circular Fixed Size Collections
Server Side Code Execution
Explain
Hint
See Also
Let's consider an example. Suppose our task is to display the front page of a blog - we wish to display headlines of the 10 most recent posts. Let's
assume the posts have a timestamp field ts.
Our first optimization should be to create an index on the key that is being used for the sorting:
db.posts.ensureIndex({ts:1});
With an index, the database is able to sort based on index information, rather than having to check each document in the collection directly. This
is much faster.
MongoDB cursors return results in groups of documents that we'll call 'chunks'. The chunk returned might contain more than 10 objects - in some
cases, much more. These extra objects are a waste of network transmission and resources both on the app server and the database.
As we know how many results we want, and that we do not want all the results, we can use the limit() method for our second optimization.
The blog post object may be very large, with the post text and comments embedded. Much better performance will be achieved by selecting only
the fields we need:
The above code assumes that the getSummary() method only references the fields listed in the find() method.
Note if you fetch only select fields, you have a partial object. An object in that form cannot be updated back to the database:
MongoDB includes a database profiler which shows performance characteristics of each operation against the database. Using the profiler you
can find queries (and write operations) which are slower than they should be; use this information, for example, to determine when an index is
needed. See the [Performance Tuning] section of the Mongo Developers' Guide for more information.
To speed operations that rely on count(), create an index on the field involved in the count query expression.
db.posts.ensureIndex({author:1});
db.posts.find({author:"george"}).count();
Increment Operations
MongoDB supports simple object field increment operations; basically, this is an operation indicating "increment this field in this document at the
server". This can be much faster than fetching the document, updating the field, and then saving it back to the server and are particularly useful
for implementing real time counters. See the Updates section of the Mongo Developers' Guide for more information.
Circular Fixed Size Collections
MongoDB provides a special circular collection type that is pre-allocated at a specific size. These collections keep the items within well-ordered
even without an index, and provide very high-speed writes and reads to the collection. Originally designed for keeping log files - log events are
stored in the database in a circular fixed size collection - there are many uses for this feature. See the Capped Collections section of the Mongo
Developers' Guide for more information.
Occasionally, for maximal performance, you may wish to perform an operation in process on the database server to eliminate client/server
network turnarounds. These operations are covered in the Server-Side Processing section of the Mongo Developers' Guide.
Explain
A great way to get more information on the performance of your database queries is to use the $explain feature. This will display "explain plan"
type info about a query from the database.
When using the mongo - The Interactive Shell, you can find out this "explain plan" via the explain() function called on a cursor. The result will
be a document that contains the "explain plan".
db.collection.find(query).explain();
{
"cursor" : "BasicCursor",
"indexBounds" : [ ],
"nscanned" : 57594,
"nscannedObjects" : 57594,
"n" : 3 ,
"millis" : 108
}
This will tell you the type of cursor used (BtreeCursor is another type – which will include a lower & upper bound), the number of records the
DB had to examine as part of this query, the number of records returned by the query, and the time in milliseconds the query took to execute.
Hint
While the mongo query optimizer often performs very well, explicit "hints" can be used to force mongo to use a specified index, potentially
improving performance in some situations. When you have a collection indexed and are querying on multiple fields (and some of those fields are
indexed), pass the indexe as a hint to the query. You can do this in two different ways. You may either set it per query, or set it for the entire
collection.
To set the hint for a particular query, call the hint() function on the cursor before accessing any data, and specify a document with the key to be
used in the query:
db.collection.find({user:u, foo:d}).hint({user:1});
Be sure to Index
For the above hints to work, you need to have run ensureIndex() to index the collection on the user field.
To force the query optimizer to not use indexes (do a table scan), use:
> db.collection.find().hint({$natural:1})
See Also
currentOp()
Sorting and Natural Order
Mongo automatically adds an object ID to each document and sets it to a unique value. Additionally this field in indexed. For tiny objects this
takes up significant space.
The best way to optimize for this is to use _id explicitly. Take one of your fields which is unique for the collection and store its values in _id. By
doing so, you have explicitly provided IDs. This will effectively eliminate the creation of a separate _id field. If your previously separate field was
indexed, this eliminates an extra index too.
Consider a record
The strings "last_name" and "best_score" will be stored in each object's BSON. Using shorter strings would save space:
Would save 9 bytes per document. This of course reduces expressiveness to the programmer and is not recommended unless you have a
collection where this is of significant concern.
Field names are not stored in indexes as indexes have a predefined structure. Thus, shortening field names will not help the size of indexes. In
general it is not necessary to use short field names.
Combining Objects
Fundamentally, there is a certain amount of overhead per document in MongoDB. One technique is combining objects. In some cases you may
be able to embed objects in other objects, perhaps as arrays of objects. If your objects are tiny this may work well, but will only make sense for
certain use cases.
Query Optimizer
The MongoDB query optimizer generates query plans for each query submitted by a client. These plans are executed to return results. Thus,
MongoDB supports ad hoc queries much like say, MySQL.
The database uses an interesting approach to query optimization though. Traditional approaches (which tend to be cost-based and statistical) are
not used, as these approaches have a couple of problems.
First, the optimizer might consistently pick a bad query plan. For example, there might be correlations in the data of which the optimizer is
unaware. In a situation like this, the developer might use a query hint.
Also with the traditional approach, query plans can change in production with negative results. No one thinks rolling out new code without testing
is a good idea. Yet often in a production system a query plan can change as the statistics in the database change on the underlying data. The
query plan in effect may be a plan that never was invoked in QA. If it is slower than it should be, the application could experience an outage.
The Mongo query optimizer is different. It is not cost based -- it does not model the cost of various queries. Instead, the optimizer simply tries
different query plans and learn which ones work well. Of course, when the system tries a really bad plan, it may take an extremely long time to
run. To solve this, when testing new plans, MongoDB executes multiple query plans in parallel. As soon as one finishes, it terminates the other
executions, and the system has learned which plan is good. This works particularly well given the system is non-relational, which makes the
space of possible query plans much smaller (as there are no joins).
Sometimes a plan which was working well can work poorly -- for example if the data in the database has changed, or if the parameter values to
the query are different. In this case, if the query seems to be taking longer than usual, the database will once again run the query in parallel to try
different plans.
This approach adds a little overhead, but has the advantage of being much better at worst-case performance.
See Also
MongoDB hint() and explain() operators
Querying
One of MongoDB's best capabilities is its support for dynamic (ad hoc) queries. Systems that support dynamic queries don't require any special
indexing to find data; users can find data using any criteria. For relational databases, dynamic queries are the norm. If you're moving to MongoDB
from a relational databases, you'll find that many SQL queries translate easily to MongoDB's document-based query language.
MongoDB supports a number of query objects for fetching data. Queries are expressed as BSON documents which indicate a query pattern. For
example, suppose we're using the MongoDB shell and want to return every document in the users collection. Our query would look like this:
db.users.find({})
In this case, our selector is an empty document, which matches every document in the collection. Here's a more selective example:
db.users.find({'last_name': 'Smith'})
Here our selector will match every document where the last_name attribute is 'Smith.'
MongoDB support a wide array of possible document selectors. For more examples, see the MongoDB Tutorial or the section on Advanced
Queries. If you're working with MongoDB from a language driver, see the driver docs:
Query Options
Field Selection
In addition to the query expression, MongoDB queries can take some additional arguments. For example, it's possible to request only certain
fields be returned. If we just wanted the social security numbers of users with the last name of 'Smith,' then from the shell we could issue this
query:
// retrieve all fields *except* the thumbnail field, for all documents:
db.users.find({}, {thumbnail:0});
Note the _id field is always returned even when not explicitly requested.
Sorting
MongoDB queries can return sorted results. To return all documents and sort by last name in ascending order, we'd query like so:
db.users.find({}).sort({last_name: 1});
MongoDB also supports skip and limit for easy paging. Here we skip the first 20 last names, and limit our result set to 10:
db.users.find().skip(20).limit(10);
db.users.find({}, {}, 10, 20); // same as above, but less clear
slaveOk
When querying a replica pair or replica set, drivers route their requests to the master mongod by default; to perform a query against an
(arbitrarily-selected) slave, the query can be run with the slaveOk option. Here's how to do so in the shell:
Note: some language drivers permit specifying the slaveOk option on each find(), others make this a connection-wide setting. See your
language's driver for details.
Cursors
Database queries, performed with the find() method, technically work by returning a cursor. Cursors are then used to iteratively retrieve all the
documents returned by the query. For example, we can iterate over a cursor in the mongo shell like this:
More info
This was just an introduction to querying in Mongo. For the full details please look in at the pages in the "Querying" sub-section to the right of your
screen.
See Also
> db.users.find( { x : 3, y : "abc" } ).sort({x:1}); // select * from users where x=3 and y='abc'
order by x asc;
However, the MongoDB server actually looks at all the query parameters (ordering, limit, etc.) as a single object. In the above example from the
mongo shell, the shell is adding some syntactic sugar for us. Many of the drivers do this too. For example the above query could also be written:
Field Negation
We can say "all fields except x" – for example to remove specific fields that you know will be large:
// get all posts about 'tennis' but without the comments field
db.posts.find( { tags : 'tennis' }, { comments : 0 } );
Dot Notation
> t.find({})
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c23f0486dad1c3a68457d20"), "x" : { "y" : 1, "z" : [ 1, 2, 3 ] } }
> t.find({}, {'x.y':1})
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4c23f0486dad1c3a68457d20"), "x" : { "y" : 1 } }
You can use the $slice operator to retrieve a subrange of elements in an array.
See Also
example slice1
Advanced Queries
Introduction
Retrieving a Subset of Fields
$slice operator
Conditional Operators : <, <=, >, >=
Conditional Operator : $ne
Conditional Operator : $in
Conditional Operator : $nin
Conditional Operator : $mod
Conditional Operator: $all
Conditional Operator : $size
Conditional Operator: $exists
Conditional Operator: $type
$or
Regular Expressions
Value in an Array
Conditional Operator: $elemMatch
Value in an Embedded Object
Meta operator: $not
Javascript Expressions and $where
sort()
limit()
skip()
snapshot()
count()
group()
Special operators
See Also
Introduction
MongoDB offers a rich query environment with lots of features. This page lists some of those features.
Queries in MongoDB are represented as JSON-style objects, very much like the documents we actually store in the database. For example:
Note that any of the operators on this page can be combined in the same query document. For example, to find all document where j is not equal
to 3 and k is greater than 10, you'd query like so:
By default on a find operation, the entire document/object is returned. However we may also request that only certain fields are returned. Note
that the _id field is always returned automatically.
You can also remove specific fields that you know will be large:
$slice operator
You can use the $slice operator to retrieve a subset of elements in an array.
Use these special forms for greater than and less than comparisons in queries, since they have to be represented in the query document:
db.collection.find({ "field" : { $gt: value } } ); // greater than : field > value
db.collection.find({ "field" : { $lt: value } } ); // less than : field < value
db.collection.find({ "field" : { $gte: value } } ); // greater than or equal to : field >= value
db.collection.find({ "field" : { $lte: value } } ); // less than or equal to : field <= value
For example:
db.collection.find({ "field" : { $gt: value1, $lt: value2 } } ); // value1 < field < value
db.things.find( { x : { $ne : 3 } } );
The $in operator is analogous to the SQL IN modifier, allowing you to specify an array of possible matches.
Let's consider a couple of examples. From our things collection, we could choose to get a subset of documents based upon the value of the 'j'
key:
db.things.find({j:{$in: [2,4,6]}});
Suppose the collection updates is a list of social network style news items; we want to see the 10 most recent updates from our friends. We
might invoke:
db.updates.ensureIndex( { ts : 1 } ); // ts == timestamp
var myFriends = myUserObject.friends; // let's assume this gives us an array of DBRef's of my friends
var latestUpdatesForMe = db.updates.find( { user : { $in : myFriends } } ).sort( { ts : -1 }
).limit(10);
The $nin operator is similar to $in except that it selects objects for which the specified field does not have any value in the specified array. For
example
db.things.find({j:{$nin: [2,4,6]}});
The $mod operator allows you to do fast modulo queries to replace a common case for where clauses. For example, the following $where query:
The $all operator is similar to $in, but instead of matching any value in the specified array all values in the array must be matched. For
example, the object
{ a: [ 1, 2, 3 ] }
would be matched by
db.things.find( { a: { $all: [ 2, 3 ] } } );
but not
db.things.find( { a: { $all: [ 2, 3, 4 ] } } );
An array can have more elements than those specified by the $all criteria. $all specifies a minimum set of elements that must be matched.
The $size operator matches any array with the specified number of elements. The following example would match the object { a:["foo"]},
since that array has just one element:
db.things.find( { a : { $size: 1 } } );
You cannot use $size to find a range of sizes (for example: arrays with more than 1 element). If you need to query for a range, create an extra
size field that you increment when you add elements.
Currently $exists is not able to use an index. Indexes on other fields are still used.
Double 1
String 2
Object 3
Array 4
Binary data 5
Object id 7
Boolean 8
Date 9
Null 10
Regular expression 11
JavaScript code 13
Symbol 14
32-bit integer 16
Timestamp 17
64-bit integer 18
$or
The $or operator lets you use a boolean or expression to do queries. You give $or a list of expressions, any of which can satisfy the query.
Simple:
db.foo.find( { $or : [ { a : 1 } , { b : 2 } ] } )
The $or operator retrieves matches for each or clause individually and eliminates duplicates when returning results. A number of $or
optimizations are planned for 1.8. See this thread for details.
Regular Expressions
For simple prefix queries (also called rooted regexps) like /^prefix/, the database will use an index when available and appropriate (much like
most SQL databases that use indexes for a LIKE 'prefix%' expression). This only works if you don't have i (case-insensitivity) in the flags.
While /^a/, /^a.*/, and /^a.*$/ are equivalent and will all use an index in the same way, the later two require scanning the
whole string so they will be slower. The first format can stop scanning after the prefix is matched.
i - Case insensitive. Letters in the pattern match both upper and lower
case letters.
m - Multiline. By default, Mongo treats the subject string as consisting of a single line of characters (even if it actually contains newlines).
The "start of line" metacharacter (^) matches only at the start of the string, while the "end of line" metacharacter ($) matches only at the
end of the string, or before a terminating newline.
When m it is set, the "start of line" and "end of line" constructs match immediately following or immediately before internal newlines in the
subject string, respectively, as well as at the very start and end. If there are no newlines in a subject string, or no occurrences of ^ or $ in
a pattern, setting m has no effect.
x - Extended. If set, whitespace data characters in the pattern are totally ignored except when escaped or inside a character class.
Whitespace does not include the VT character (code 11). In addition, characters between an unescaped # outside a character class and
the next newline, inclusive, are also ignored.
This option makes it possible to include comments inside complicated patterns. Note, however, that this applies only to data characters.
Whitespace characters may never appear within special character sequences in a pattern, for example within the sequence (?( which
introduces a conditional subpattern.
Value in an Array
That is, when "colors" is inspected, if it is an array, each value in the array is checked. This technique may be mixed with the embedded object
technique below.
Use $elemMatch to check if an element in an array matches the specified match expression.
Note that a single array element must match all the criteria specified; thus, the following query is semantically different in that each criteria can
match a different element in the x array:
For example, to look author.name=="joe" in a postings collection with embedded author objects:
The $not meta operator can be used to negate the check performed by a standard operator. For example:
In addition to the structured query syntax shown so far, you may specify query expressions as Javascript. To do so, pass a string containing a
Javascript expression to find(), or assign such a string to the query object member $where. The database will evaluate this expression for
each object scanned. When the result is true, the object is returned in the query results.
For example, the following statements all do the same thing:
db.myCollection.find( { a : { $gt: 3 } } );
db.myCollection.find( { $where: "this.a > 3" } );
db.myCollection.find("this.a > 3");
f = function() { return this.a > 3; } db.myCollection.find(f);
Javascript executes more slowly than the native operators listed on this page, but is very flexible. See the server-side processing page for more
information.
sort()
sort() is analogous to the ORDER BY statement in SQL - it requests that items be returned in a particular order. We pass sort() a key
pattern which indicates the desired order for the result.
sort() may be combined with the limit() function. In fact, if you do not have a relevant index for the specified key pattern, limit() is
recommended as there is a limit on the size of sorted results when an index is not used. Without a limit(), or index, a full in-memory sort must
be done but by using a limit() it reduces the memory and increases the speed of the operation by using an optimized sorting algorithm.
limit()
limit() is analogous to the LIMIT statement in MySQL: it specifies a maximum number of results to return. For best performance, use limit()
whenever possible. Otherwise, the database may return more objects than are required for processing.
In the shell (and most drivers), a limit of 0 is equivalent to setting no limit at all.
skip()
The skip() expression allows one to specify at which object the database should begin returning results. This is often useful for implementing
"paging". Here's an example of how it might be used in a JavaScript application:
snapshot()
Indicates use of snapshot mode for the query. Snapshot mode assures no duplicates are returned, or objects missed, which were present at both
the start and end of the query's execution (even if the object were updated). If an object is new during the query, or deleted during the query, it
may or may not be returned, even with snapshot mode.
Note that short query responses (less than 1MB) are always effectively snapshotted.
Currently, snapshot mode may not be used with sorting or explicit hints.
count()
The count() method returns the number of objects matching the query specified. It is specially optimized to perform the count in the MongoDB
server, rather than on the client side for speed and efficiency:
Note that you can achieve the same result with the following, but the following is slow and inefficient as it requires all documents to be put into
memory on the client, and then counted. Don't do this:
nstudents = db.students.find({'address.state' : 'CA'}).toArray().length; // VERY BAD: slow and uses
excess memory
On a query using skip() and limit(), count ignores these parameters by default. Use count(true) to have it consider the skip and limit values in the
calculation.
n = db.students.find().skip(20).limit(10).count(true);
group()
The group() method is analogous to GROUP BY in SQL. group() is more flexible, actually, allowing the specification of arbitrary reduction
operations. See the Aggregation section of the Mongo Developers' Guide for more information.
Special operators
db.foo.find()._addSpecial("$returnKey" , true )
t.find()._addSpecial( "$maxScan" , 50 )
See Also
MongoDB is designed for store JSON-style objects. The database understands the structure of these objects and can reach into them to evaluate
query expressions.
> db.persons.findOne()
{ name: "Joe", address: { city: "San Francisco", state: "CA" } ,
likes: [ 'scuba', 'math', 'literature' ] }
Querying on a top-level field is straightforward enough using Mongo's JSON-style query objects:
But what about when we need to reach into embedded objects and arrays? This involves a bit different way of thinking about queries than one
would do in a traditional relational DBMS. To reach into embedded objects, we use a "dot notation":
Reaching into arrays is implicit: if the field being queried is an array, the database automatically assumes the caller intends to look for a value
within the array:
db.persons.ensureIndex( { "address.state" : 1 } );
db.blogposts.ensureIndex( { "comments.by" : 1 } );
Suppose there is an author id, as well as name. To store the author field, we can use an object:
> db.blog.save({ title : "My First Post", author: {name : "Jane", id : 1}})
If we want to find any authors named Jane, we use the notation above:
To match only objects with these exact keys and values, we use an object:
Note that
will not match, as subobjects have to match exactly (it would match an object with one field: { "name" : "Jane"}). Note that the embedded
document must also have the same key order, so:
will not match, either. This can make subobject matching unwieldy in languages whose default document representation is unordered.
(The above examples use the mongo shell's Javascript syntax. The same operations can be done in any language for which Mongo has a driver
available.)
Using the $elemMatch query operator (mongod >= 1.3.1), you can match an entire document within an array. This is best illustrated with an
example. Suppose you have the following two documents in your collection:
// Document 1
{ "foo" : [
{
"shape" : "square",
"color" : "purple",
"thick" : false
},
{
"shape" : "circle",
"color" : "red",
"thick" : true
}
] }
// Document 2
{ "foo" : [
{
"shape" : "square",
"color" : "red",
"thick" : true
},
{
"shape" : "circle",
"color" : "purple",
"thick" : false
}
] }
You want to query for a purple square, and so you write the following:
The problem with this query is that it will match the second in addition to matching the first document. In other words, the standard query syntax
won't restrict itself to a single document within the foo array. As mentioned above, subobjects have to match exactly, so
To match an entire document within the foo array, you need to use $elemMatch. To properly query for a purple square, you'd use $elemMatch like
so:
The query will return the first document, which contains the purple square you're looking for.
Introduction
Mongo provides some functionality that is useful for text search and tagging.
Multikeys (Indexing Values in an Array)
The Mongo multikey feature can automatically index arrays of values. Tagging is a good example of where this feature is useful. Suppose you
have an article object/document which is tagged with some category names:
obj = {
name: "Apollo",
text: "Some text about Apollo moon landings",
tags: [ "moon", "apollo", "spaceflight" ]
}
db.articles.ensureIndex( { tags: 1 } );
will index all the tags on the document, and create index entries for "moon", "apollo" and "spaceflight" for that document.
The database creates an index entry for each item in the array. Note an array with many elements (hundreds or thousands) can make inserts very
expensive. (Although for the example above, alternate implementations are equally expensive.)
Text Search
It is fairly easy to implement basic full text search using multikeys. What we recommend is having a field that has all of the keywords in it,
something like:
Your code must split the title above into the keywords before saving. Note that this code (which is not part of Mongo DB) could do stemming, etc.
too. (Perhaps someone in the community would like to write a standard module that does this...)
MongoDB has interesting functionality that makes certain search functions easy. That said, it is not a dedicated full text search engine.
Bulk index building makes building indexes fast, but has the downside of not being realtime. MongoDB is particularly well suited for problems
where the search should be done in realtime. Traditional tools are often not good for this use case.
The Business Insider web site uses MongoDB for its blog search function in production.
Mark Watson's opinions on Java, Ruby, Lisp, AI, and the Semantic Web - A recipe example in Ruby.
If you're using the standard query syntax, you must distinguish between the $min and $max keys and the query selector itself. See here:
The min() value is included in the range and the max() value is excluded.
Normally, it is much preferred to use $gte and $lt rather than to use min and max, as min and max require a corresponding index. Min and max
are primarily useful for compound keys: it is difficult to express the last_name/first_name example above without this feature (it can be done using
$where).
min and max exist primarily to support the mongos (sharding) process.
$in
The $in operator indicates a "where value in ..." expression. For expressions of the form x == a OR x == b, this can be represented as
{ x : { $in : [ a, b ] } }
$where
We can provide arbitrary Javascript expressiosn to the server via the $where operator. This provides a means to perform OR operations. For
example in the mongo shell one might invoke:
The following syntax is briefer and also works; however, if additional structured query components are present, you will need the $where form:
$or
The $or operator lets you use a boolean or expression to do queries. You give $or a list of expressions, any of which can satisfy the query.
Simple:
db.foo.find( { $or : [ { a : 1 } , { b : 2 } ] } )
The $or operator retrieves matches for each or clause individually and eliminates duplicates when returning results.
See Also
Advanced Queries
The shell find() method returns a cursor object which we can then iterate to retrieve specific documents from the result. We use hasNext()
and next() methods for this purpose.
Note that in some languages, like JavaScript, the driver supports an "array mode". Please check your driver documentation for specifics.
In the db shell, to use the cursor in array mode, use array index [] operations and the length property.
Array mode will load all data into RAM up to the highest index requested. Thus it should not be used for any query which can return very large
amounts of data: you will run out of memory on the client.
You may also call toArray() on a cursor. toArray() will load all objects queries into RAM.
The shell findOne() method fetches a single item. Null is returned if no item is found.
Tip: If you only need one row back and multiple match, findOne() is efficient, as it performs the limit() operation, which limits the objects
returned from the database to one.
To find an exact match of an entire embedded object, simply query for that object:
The above query will work if { carrier: "usps" } is an exact match for the entire contained shipping object. If you wish to match any sub-object with
shipping.carrier == "usps", use this syntax:
A latent cursor has (in addition to an initial access) a latent access that occurs after an intervening write operation on the database collection (i.e.,
an insert, update, or delete). Under most circumstances, the database supports these operations.
Conceptually, a cursor has a current position. If you delete the item at the current position, the cursor automatically skips its current position
forward to the next item.
Mongo DB cursors do not provide a snapshot: if other write operations occur during the life of your cursor, it is unspecified if your application will
see the results of those operations or not. See the snapshot docs for more information.
db.runCommand({cursorInfo:1})
See Also
Advanced Queries
Multikeys in the HowTo
Tailable Cursors
MongoDB has a feature known as tailable cursors which are similar to the Unix "tail -f" command.
Tailable means the cursor is not closed once all data is retrieved. Rather, the cursor marks the last known object's position and you can resume
using the cursor later, from where that object was located, provided more data is available.
Like all "latent cursors", the cursor may become invalid at any point -- for example if the last object returned is deleted. Thus, you should be
prepared to requery if the cursor is dead. You can determine if a cursor is dead by checking its id. An id of zero indicates a dead cursor.
In addition, the cursor may be dead upon creation if the initial query returns no matches. In this case a requery is required to create a persistent
tailable cursor.
Tailable cursors are only allowed on capped collections and can only return objects in natural order.
If the field you wish to "tail" is indexed, simply requerying for "field > value" is already quite efficient. Tailable will be slightly
faster in situations such as that. However, if the field is not indexed, tailable provides a huge improvement in performance.
Mongo replication uses this feature to follow the end of the master server's replication op log collection -- the tailable feature eliminates the need
to create an index for the oplog at the master, which would slow log writes.
C++ example:
#include "client/dbclient.h"
#include "util/goodies.h"
auto_ptr<DBClientCursor> c =
conn.query(ns, query, 0, 0, 0, QueryOption_CursorTailable);
while( 1 ) {
if( !c->more() ) {
if( c->isDead() ) {
break; // we need to requery
}
In addition to the regular document-style query specification for find() operations, you can also express the query either as a string containing a
SQL-style WHERE predicate clause, or a full JavaScript function.
When using this mode of query, the database will call your function, or evaluate your predicate clause, for each object in the collection.
In the case of the string, you must represent the object as "this" (see example below). In the case of a full JavaScript function, you use the normal
JavaScript function syntax.
The following four statements in mongo - The Interactive Shell are equivalent:
db.myCollection.find( { a : { $gt: 3 } } );
db.myCollection.find( { $where: "this.a > 3" });
db.myCollection.find( "this.a > 3" );
db.myCollection.find( { $where: function() { return this.a > 3;}});
The first statement is the preferred form. It will be at least slightly faster to execute because the query optimizer can easily interpret that query and
choose an index to use.
You may mix data-style find conditions and a function. This can be advantageous for performance because the data-style expression will be
evaluated first, and if not matched, no further evaluation is required. Additionally, the database can then consider using an index for that
condition's field. To mix forms, pass your evaluation function as the $where field of the query object. For example:
db.myCollection.find( { active: true, $where: function() { return obj.credits - obj.debits < 0; } } );
You may mix data-style find conditions and a function. This can be advantageous for performance because the data-style expression will be
evaluated first, and if not matched, no further evaluation is required. Additionally, the database can then consider using an index for that
condition's field. For example:
Restrictions
Do not write to the collection being inspected from the $where expression.
Map/Reduce
MongoDB supports Javascript-based map/reduce operations on the server. See the map/reduce documentation for more information.
Using db.eval()
Use map/reduce instead of db.eval() for long running jobs. db.eval blocks other operations!
db.eval() returns the return value of the function that was invoked at the server. If invocation fails an exception is thrown.
Let's consider an example where we wish to erase a given field, foo, in every single document in a collection. A naive client-side approach would
be something like
function my_erase() {
db.things.find().forEach( function(obj) {
delete obj.foo;
db.things.save(obj);
} );
}
my_erase();
Calling my_erase() on the client will require the entire contents of the collection to be transmitted from server to client and back again.
Instead, we can pass the function to eval(), and it will be called in the runtime environment of the server. On the server, the db variable is set to
the current database:
db.eval(my_erase);
Examples
> myfunc = function(x){ return x; };
If an error occurs on the evaluation (say, a null pointer exception at the server), an exception will be thrown of the form:
function mycount(collection) {
return db.eval( function(){return db[collection].find({},{_id:ObjId()}).length();} );
}
Example of using db.eval() for doing an atomic increment, plus some calculations:
db.things.remove( {} );
print( tojson( inc( "eliot" , 2 )) );
print( tojson( inc( "eliot" , 3 )) );
There is a special system collection called system.js that can store JavaScript function to be re-used. To store a function, you would do:
Once you do that, you can use foo from any JavaScript context (db.eval, $where, map/reduce)
Notes on Concurrency
eval() blocks the entire mongod process while running. Thus, its operations are atomic but prevent other operations from processing.
This is a good technique for performing batch administrative work. Run mongo on the server, connecting via the localhost interface. The
connection is then very fast and low latency. This is friendlier than db.eval() as db.eval() blocks other operations.
When executing a find() with no parameters, the database returns objects in forward natural order.
For standard tables, natural order is not particularly useful because, although the order is often close to insertion order, it is not guaranteed to be.
However, for Capped Collections, natural order is guaranteed to be the insertion order. This can be very useful.
In general, the natural order feature is a very efficient way to store and retrieve data in insertion order (much faster than say, indexing on a
timestamp field). But remember, the collection must be capped for this to work.
In addition to forward natural order, items may be retrieved in reverse natural order. For example, to return the 50 most recently inserted items
(ordered most recent to less recent) from a capped collection, you would invoke:
> c=db.cappedCollection.find().sort({$natural:-1}).limit(50)
Sorting can also be done on arbitrary keys in any collection. For example, this sorts by 'name' ascending, then 'age' descending:
See Also
Aggregation
Mongo includes utility functions which provide server-side count, distinct, and group by operations. More advanced aggregate functions
can be crafted using MapReduce.
Count
Distinct
Group
Examples
Using Group from Various Languages
Map/Reduce
See Also
Count
count() returns the number of objects in a collection or matching a query. If a document selector is provided, only the number of matching
documents will be returned.
size() is like count() but takes into consideration any limit() or skip() specified for the query.
db.collection.count(selector);
For example:
count is faster if an index exists for the condition in the selector. For example, to make the count on active fast, invoke
db.mycollection.ensureIndex( {active:1} );
Distinct
The distinct command returns returns a list of distinct values for the given key across a collection.
> db.comments.distinct("user.points");
[ 25, 31 ]
Note: the distinct command results are returned as a single BSON object. If the results could be large (> 4 megabytes), use map/reduce instead.
Group
Note: currently one must use map/reduce instead of group() in sharded MongoDB configurations.
group returns an array of grouped items. The command is similar to SQL's group by. The SQL statement
db.coll.group(
{key: { a: true, b:true },
cond: { active:1 },
reduce: function(obj,prev) { prev.csum += obj.c; },
initial: { csum: 0 }
});
Note: the result is returned as a single BSON object and for this reason must be fairly small – less than 10,000 keys, else you will get an
exception. For larger grouping operations without limits, please use map/reduce .
To order the grouped data, simply sort it client-side upon return. The following example is an implementation of count() using group().
Examples
{ domain: "www.mongodb.org"
, invoked_at: {d:"2009-11-03", t:"17:14:05"}
, response_time: 0.05
, http_action: "GET /display/DOCS/Aggregation"
}
db.test.group(
{ cond: {"invoked_at.d": {$gt: "2009-11", $lt: "2009-12"}}
, key: {http_action: true}
, initial: {count: 0, total_time:0}
, reduce: function(doc, out){ out.count++; out.total_time+=doc.response_time }
, finalize: function(out){ out.avg_time = out.total_time / out.count }
} );
[
{
"http_action" : "GET /display/DOCS/Aggregation",
"count" : 1,
"total_time" : 0.05,
"avg_time" : 0.05
}
]
Show me stats for each domain for each day in November 2009:
db.test.group(
{ cond: {"invoked_at.d": {$gt: "2009-11", $lt: "2009-12"}}
, key: {domain: true, invoked_at.d: true}
, initial: {count: 0, total_time:0}
, reduce: function(doc, out){ out.count++; out.total_time+=doc.response_time }
, finalize: function(out){ out.avg_time = out.total_time / out.count }
} );
[
{
"http_action" : "GET /display/DOCS/Aggregation",
"count" : 1,
"total_time" : 0.05,
"avg_time" : 0.05
}
]
Some language drivers provide a group helper function. For those that don't, one can manually issue the db command for group. Here's an
example using the Mongo shell syntax:
> db.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4a92af2db3d09cb83d985f6f") , "x" : 1}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4a92af2fb3d09cb83d985f70") , "x" : 3}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4a92afdab3d09cb83d985f71") , "x" : 3}
> db.$cmd.findOne({group : {
... ns : "foo",
... cond : {},
... key : {x : 1},
... initial : {count : 0},
... $reduce : function(obj,prev){prev.count++;}}})
{"retval" : [{"x" : 1 , "count" : 1},{"x" : 3 , "count" : 2}] , "count" : 3 , "keys" : 2 , "ok" : 1}
If you use the database command with keyf (instead of key) it must be prefixed with a $. For example:
db.$cmd.findOne({group : {
... ns : "foo",
... $keyf : function(doc) { return {"x" : doc.x}; },
... initial : {count : 0},
... $reduce : function(obj,prev) { prev.count++; }}})
Map/Reduce
MongoDB provides a MapReduce facility for more advanced aggregation needs. CouchDB users: please note that basic queries in MongoDB do
not use map/reduce.
See Also
Removing
To remove objects from a collection, use the remove() function in the mongo shell. (Other drivers offer a similar
function, but may call the function "delete". Please check your driver's documentation ).
remove() is like find() in that it takes a JSON-style query document as an argument to select which documents are removed. If you call
remove() without a document argument, or with an empty document {}, it will remove all documents in the collection. Some examples :
db.things.remove({}); // removes all
db.things.remove({n:1}); // removes all where n == 1
If you have a document in memory and wish to delete it, the most efficient method is to specify the item's document _id value as a criteria:
db.things.remove({_id: myobject._id});
You may be tempted to simply pass the document you wish to delete as the selector, and this will work, but it's inefficient.
References
If a document is deleted, any existing references to the document will still exist in the database. These references will return null
when evaluated.
v1.3+ supports concurrent operations while a remove runs. If a simultaneous update (on the same collection) grows an object which matched the
remove criteria, the updated object may not be removed (as the operations are happening at approximately the same time, this may not even be
surprising). In situations where this is undesireable, pass {$atomic : true} in your filter expression:
The remove operation is then completely atomic – however, it will also block other operations while executing.
Updating
MongoDB supports atomic, in-place updates as well as more traditional updates for replacing an entire document.
update()
save() in the mongo shell
Modifier Operations
$inc
$set
$unset
$push
$pushAll
$addToSet
$pop
$pull
$pullAll
The $ positional operator
Upserts with Modifiers
Pushing a Unique Value
Checking the Outcome of an Update Request
Notes
Object Padding
Blocking
See Also
update()
update() replaces the document matching criteria entirely with objNew. If you only want to modify some fields, you should use the atomic
modifiers below.
Arguments:
The save() command in the mongo shell provides a shorthand syntax to perform a single object update with upsert:
save() does an upsert if x has an _id field and an insert if it does not. Thus, normally, you will not need to explicitly request upserts, just use
save().
Modifier Operations
Modifier operations are highly-efficient and useful when updating existing values; for instance, they're great for incrementing a number.
a modifier update has the advantages of avoiding the latency involved in querying and returning the object. The modifier update also features
operation atomicity and very little network data transfer.
To perform an atomic update, simply specify any of the special update operators (which always start with a '$' character) with a relevant update
document:
The preceding example says, "Find the first document where 'name' is 'Joe' and then increment 'n' by one."
While not shown in the examples, most modifier operators will accept multiple field/value pairs when one wishes to modify
multiple fields. For example, the following operation would set x to 1 and y to 2:
{ $set : { x : 1 , y : 2 } }
{ $set : { x : 1 }, $inc : { y : 1 } }
$inc
increments field by the number value if field is present in the object, otherwise sets field to the number value.
$set
{ $set : { field : value } }
$unset
{ $unset : { field : 1} }
$push
appends value to field, if field is an existing array, otherwise sets field to the array [value] if field is not present. If field is present
but is not an array, an error condition is raised.
$pushAll
appends each value in value_array to field, if field is an existing array, otherwise sets field to the array value_array if field is not
present. If field is present but is not an array, an error condition is raised.
$addToSet
Adds value to the array only if its not in the array already.
{ $addToSet : { a : { $each : [ 3 , 5 , 6 ] } } }
$pop
{ $pop : { field : 1 } }
{ $pop : { field : -1 } }
$pull
removes all occurrences of value from field, if field is an array. If field is present but is not an array, an error condition is raised.
$pullAll
The $ operator (by itself) means "position of the matched array item in the query". Use this to find an array member and then manipulate it. For
example:
> t.find()
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b97e62bf1d8c7152c9ccb74"), "title" : "ABC",
"comments" : [ { "by" : "joe", "votes" : 3 }, { "by" : "jane", "votes" : 7 } ] }
> t.find()
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b97e62bf1d8c7152c9ccb74"), "title" : "ABC",
"comments" : [ { "by" : "joe", "votes" : 4 }, { "by" : "jane", "votes" : 7 } ] }
Currently the $ operator only applies to the first matched item in the query. For example:
> t.find();
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b9e4a1fc583fa1c76198319"), "x" : [ 1, 2, 3, 2 ] }
> t.update({x: 2}, {$inc: {"x.$": 1}}, false, true);
> t.find();
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b9e4a1fc583fa1c76198319"), "x" : [ 1, 3, 3, 2 ] }
The positional operator cannot be combined with an upsert since it requires a matching array element. If your update results in an insert then
the "$" will literally be used as the field name.
Using "$unset" with an expression like this "array.$" will result in the array item becoming null, not being removed. You can
issue an update with "{$pull:{x:null}}" to remove all nulls.
You may use upsert with a modifier operation. In such a case, the modifiers will be applied to the update criteria member and the resulting
object will be inserted. The following upsert example may insert the object {name:"Joe",x:1,y:1}.
There are some restrictions. A modifier may not reference the _id field, and two modifiers within an update may not reference the same field, for
example the following is not allowed:
As described above, a non-upsert update may or may not modify an existing object. An upsert will either modify an existing object or insert a new
object. The client may determine if its most recent message on a connection updated an existing object by subsequently issuing a
getlasterror command ( db.runCommand( "getlasterror" ) ). If the result of the getlasterror command contains an
updatedExisting field, the last message on the connection was an update request. If the updatedExisting field's value is true, that update
request caused an existing object to be updated; if updatedExisting is false, no existing object was updated. An upserted field will contain
the new _id value if an insert is performed (new as of 1.5.4).
Notes
Object Padding
When you update an object in MongoDB, the update occurs in-place if the object has not grown in size. This is good for insert performance if the
collection has many indexes.
Mongo adaptively learns if objects in a collection tend to grow, and if they do, it adds some padding to prevent excessive movements. This
statistic is tracked separately for each collection.
Blocking
Staring in 1.5.2, multi updates yield occasionally so you can safely update large amounts of data. If you want a multi update to be truly atomic,
you can use the $atomic flag.
See Also
findandmodify Command
Atomic Operations
Atomic Operations
Modifier operations
"Update if Current"
The ABA Nuance
"Insert if Not Present"
Find and Modify (or Remove)
Applying to Multiple Objects Atomically
MongoDB supports atomic operations on single documents. MongoDB does not support traditional locking and complex transactions for a
number of reasons:
First, in sharded environments, distributed locks could be expensive and slow. Mongo DB's goal is to be lightweight and fast.
We dislike the concept of deadlocks. We want the system to be simple and predictable without these sort of surprises.
We want Mongo DB to work well for realtime problems. If an operation may execute which locks large amounts of data, it might stop
some small light queries for an extended period of time. (We don't claim Mongo DB is perfect yet in regards to being "real-time", but we
certainly think locking would make it even harder.)
MongoDB does support several methods of manipulating single documents atomically, which are detailed below.
Modifier operations
The Mongo DB update command supports several modifiers, all of which atomically update an element in a document. They include:
"Update if Current"
Another strategy for atomic updates is "Update if Current". This is what an OS person would call Compare and Swap. For this we
Should the operation fail, we might then want to try again from step 1.
For example, suppose we wish to fetch one object from inventory. We want to see that an object is available, and if it is, deduct it from the
inventory. The following code demonstrates this using mongo shell syntax (similar functions may be done in any language):
> t=db.inventory
> s = t.findOne({sku:'abc'})
{"_id" : "49df4d3c9664d32c73ea865a" , "sku" : "abc" , "qty" : 30}
> qty_old = s.qty;
> --s.qty;
> t.update({_id:s._id, qty:qty_old}, s); db.$cmd.findOne({getlasterror:1});
{"err" : , "updatedExisting" : true , "n" : 1 , "ok" : 1} // it worked
For the above example, we likely don't care the exact sku quantity as long as it is as least as great as the number to deduct. Thus the following
code is better, although less general -- we can get away with this as we are using a predefined modifier operation ($inc). For more general
updates, the "update if current" approach shown above is recommended.
In the first of the examples above, we basically did "update object if qty is unchanged". However, what if since our read, sku had been modified?
We would then overwrite that change and lose it!
There are several ways to avoid this problem ; it's mainly just a matter of being aware of the nuance.
1. Use the entire object in the update's query expression, instead of just the _id and qty field.
2. Use $set to set the field we care about. If other fields have changed, they won't be effected then.
3. Put a version variable in the object, and increment it on each update.
4. When possible, use a $ operator instead of an update-if-current sequence of operations.
Another optimistic concurrency scenario involves inserting a value when not already there. When we have a unique index constraint for the
criteria, we can do this. The following example shows how to insert monotonically increasing _id values into a collection using optimistic
concurrency:
function insertObject(o) {
x = db.myCollection;
while( 1 ) {
// determine next _id value to try
var c = x.find({},{_id:1}).sort({_id:-1}).limit(1);
var i = c.hasNext() ? c.next()._id + 1 : 1;
o._id = i;
x.insert(o);
var err = db.getLastErrorObj();
if( err && err.code ) {
if( err.code == 11000 /* dup key */ )
continue;
else
print( "unexpected error inserting data: " + tojson(err));
}
break;
}
}
You can use multi-update to apply the same modifier to each object. This will be pseudo-atomic by default. Its one operation, but occasonaly
someone else can get it. To make it full atomic you can use $atomic
non atomic
atomic
findandmodify Command
MongoDB 1.3+ supports a "find, modify, and return" command. This command can be used to atomically modify a document (at most one) and
return it. Note that, by default, the document returned will not include the modifications made on the update.
If you don't need to return the document, you can use Update (which can affect multiple documents, as well).
The MongoDB shell includes a helper method, findAndModify(), for executing the command. Some drivers provide helpers also.
At least one of the update or remove parameters is required; the other arguments are optional.
sort if multiple docs match, choose the first one in the specified sort order as the object to manipulate {}
new set to true if you want to return the modified object rather than the original. Ignored for remove. false
The sort option is useful when storing queue-like data. Let's take the example of fetching the highest priority job that hasn't been grabbed yet and
atomically marking it as grabbed:
job = db.jobs.findAndModify({
query: {inprogress:false},
sort:{priority:-1},
update: {$set: {inprogress: true, started: new Date()}}
});
You could also simply remove the object to be returned, but be careful. If the client crashes before processing the job, the document will be lost
forever.
If your driver doesn't provide a helper function for this command, run the command directly with something like this:
Sharding limitations
findandmodify will behave the same when called through a mongos as long as the collection it is modifying is unsharded. If the collection is
sharded, then the query must contain the shard key. This is the same as regular sharded updates.
See Also
Atomic Operations
As shown in the previous section, the save() method may be used to save a new document to a collection. We can also use save() to update
an existing document in a collection.
Continuing with the example database from the last section, lets add new information to the document {name:"mongo"} that already is in the
collection.
> var mongo = db.things.findOne({name:"mongo"});
> print(tojson(mongo));
{"_id" : "497dab624ee47b3a675d2d9c" , "name" : "mongo"}
> mongo.type = "database";
database
> db.things.save(mongo);
> db.things.findOne({name:"mongo"});
{"_id" : "497dab624ee47b3a675d2d9c" , "name" : "mongo" , "type" : "database"}
>
This was a simple example, adding a string valued element to the existing document. When we called save(), the method saw that the
document already had an "_id" field, so it simply performed an update on the document.
In the next two sections, we'll show how to embed documents within documents (there are actually two different ways), as well as show how to
query for documents based on values of embedded documents.
As another example of updating an existing document, lets embed a document within an existing document in the collection. We'll keep working
with the original {name:"mongo"} document for simplicity.
As you can see, we added new data to the mongo document, adding {a:1, b:2} under the key "data".
Note that the value of "data" is a document itself - it is embedded in the parent mongo document. With BSON, you may nest and embed
documents to any level. You can also query on embedded document fields, as shown here:
Note that the second findOne() doesn't return anything, because there are no documents that match.
Database References
Alternatively, a document can reference other documents which are not embedded via a database reference, which is analogous to a foreign key
in a relational database. A database reference (or "DBRef" for short), is a reference implemented according to the Database References. Most
drivers support helpers for creating DBRefs. Some also support additional functionality, like dereference helpers and auto-referencing. See
specific driver documentation for examples / more information
obj_a.x = obj_b;
Lets repeat the above example, but create a document and place in a different collection, say otherthings, and embed that as a reference in our
favorite "mongo" object under the key "otherdata":
// first, save a new doc in the 'otherthings' collection
// now get our mongo object, and add the 'other' doc as 'otherthings'
// now, lets modify our 'other' document, save it again, and see that when the dbshell
// gets our mongo object and prints it, if follows the dbref and we have the new value
> other.n = 2;
2
> db.otherthings.save(other);
> db.otherthings.find();
{"_id" : "497dbcb36b27d59a708e89a4" , "s" : "other thing" , "n" : 2}
> db.things.findOne().otherthings.fetch();
{"_id" : "497dab624ee47b3a675d2d9c" , "name" : "mongo" , "type" : "database" , "data" : {"a" : 1 , "b"
: 2} , "otherthings" : {"_id" : "497dbcb36b27d59a708e89a4" , "s" : "other thing" , "n" : 2}}
>
MapReduce
Map/reduce in MongoDB is useful for batch manipulation of data and aggregation operations. It is similar in spirit to using something like Hadoop
with all input coming from a collection and output going to a collection. Often, in a situation where you would have used GROUP BY in SQL,
map/reduce is the right tool in MongoDB.
Indexing and standard queries in MongoDB are separate from map/reduce. If you have used CouchDB in the past, note this is a
big difference: MongoDB is more like MySQL for basic querying and indexing. See the queries and indexing documentation for
those operations.
Overview
Map Function
Reduce Function
Finalize Function
Sharded Environments
Examples
Shell Example 1
Shell Example 2
More Examples
Note on Permanent Collections
Parallelism
Presentations
See Also
Overview
Command syntax:
db.runCommand(
{ mapreduce : <collection>,
map : <mapfunction>,
reduce : <reducefunction>
[, query : <query filter object>]
[, sort : <sort the query. useful for optimization>]
[, limit : <number of objects to return from collection>]
[, out : <output-collection name>]
[, keeptemp: <true|false>]
[, finalize : <finalizefunction>]
[, scope : <object where fields go into javascript global scope >]
[, verbose : true]
}
);
keeptemp - if true, the generated collection is not treated as temporary. Defaults to false. When out is specified, the collection is
automatically made permanent.
finalize - function to apply to all the results when finished
verbose - provide statistics on job execution time
scope - can pass in variables that can be access from map/reduce/finalize example mr5
Result:
{ result : <collection_name>,
counts : {
input : <number of objects scanned>,
emit : <number of times emit was called>,
output : <number of items in output collection>
} ,
timeMillis : <job_time>,
ok : <1_if_ok>,
[, err : <errmsg_if_error>]
}
db.collection.mapReduce(mapfunction,reducefunction[,options]);
Map Function
The map function references the variable this to inspect the current object under consideration. A map function must call emit(key,value) at
least once, but may be invoked any number of times, as may be appropriate.
Reduce Function
The reduce function receives a key and an array of values. To use, reduce the received values, and return a result.
The MapReduce engine may invoke reduce functions iteratively; thus, these functions must be idempotent. That is, the following must hold for
your reduce function:
for all k,vals : reduce( k, [reduce(k,vals)] ) == reduce(k,vals)
The output of emit (the 2nd param) and reduce should be the same format to make iterative reduce possible. If not, there will be
weird bugs that are hard to debug.
Currently, the return value from a reduce function cannot be an array (it's typically an object or a number).
Finalize Function
A finalize function may be run after reduction. Such a function is optional and is not necessary for many map/reduce cases. The finalize
function takes a key and a value, and returns a finalized value.
Sharded Environments
In sharded environments, data processing of map/reduce operations runs in parallel on all shards.
Examples
Shell Example 1
The following example assumes we have an events collection with objects of the form:
We then use MapReduce to extract all users who have had at least one event of type "sale":
If we also wanted to output the number of times the user had experienced the event in question, we could modify the reduce function like so:
> r = function(k,vals) {
... var sum=0;
... for(var i in vals) sum += vals[i];
... return sum;
... }
Note, here, that we cannot simply return vals.length, as the reduce may be called multiple times.
Shell Example 2
$ ./mongo
> db.things.insert( { _id : 1, tags : ['dog', 'cat'] } );
> db.things.insert( { _id : 2, tags : ['cat'] } );
> db.things.insert( { _id : 3, tags : ['mouse', 'cat', 'dog'] } );
> db.things.insert( { _id : 4, tags : [] } );
> db[res.result].find()
{"_id" : "cat" , "value" : {"count" : 3}}
{"_id" : "dog" , "value" : {"count" : 2}}
{"_id" : "mouse" , "value" : {"count" : 1}}
> db[res.result].drop()
More Examples
example mr1
Finalize example: example mr2
Even when a permanent collection name is specified, a temporary collection name will be used during processing. At map/reduce completion, the
temporary collection will be renamed to the permanent name atomically. Thus, one can perform a map/reduce job periodically with the same
target collection name without worrying about a temporary state of incomplete data. This is very useful when generating statistical output
collections on a regular basis.
Parallelism
As of right now, MapReduce jobs on a single mongod process are single threaded. This is due to a design limitation in current JavaScript engines.
We are looking into alternatives to solve this issue, but for now if you want to parallelize your MapReduce jobs, you will need to either use
sharding or do the aggregation client-side in your code.
Presentations
Map/reduce, geospatial indexing, and other cool features - Kristina Chodorow at MongoSF (April 2010)
See Also
Aggregation
Kyle's Map/Reduce basics
By "data processing", we generally mean operations performed on large sets of data, rather than small interactive operations.
Import
One can always write a program to load data of course, but the mongoimport utility also works for some situations. mongoimport supports
importing from json, csv, and tsv formats.
A common usage pattern would be to use mongoimport to load data in a relatively raw format and then use a server-side script ( db.eval() or
map/reduce ) to reduce the data to a more clean format.
See Also
Import/Export Tools
Server-Side Code Execution
Map/Reduce
Introduction
The MongoDB distribution includes bin/mongo, the MongoDB interactive shell. This utility is a JavaScript shell that allows you to issue
commands to MongoDB from the command line. (Basically, it is an extended SpiderMonkey shell.)
When you see sample code in this wiki and it looks like JavaScript, assume it is a shell example. See the driver syntax table for a chart that can
be used to convert those examples to any language.
More Information
Shell Overview
Shell Reference
Shell APIDocs
Numbers
The shell treats all numbers as floating-point values. If you have long/integer BSON data from the database you may see something like this:
"bytes" : {
"floatApprox" : 575175
}
In addition, setting/incrementing any number will (most likely) change the data type to a floating point value
Dates
The Date() function returns a string and a "new Date()" will return an object (which is what you should use to store values).
> Date()
Sun May 02 2010 19:07:40 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)
> new Date()
"Sun May 02 2010 19:07:43 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)"
> typeof(new Date())
object
> typeof(Date())
string
BinData
The BSON BinData datatype is represented via class BinData in the shell. Run help misc for more information.
Presentations
CRUD and the JavaScript Shell - Presentation by Mike Dirolf at MongoSF (April 2010)
The interactive shell is included in the standard MongoDB distribution. To start the shell, go into the root directory of the distribution and type
./bin/mongo
It might be useful to add mongo_distribution_root/bin to your PATH so you can just type mongo from anywhere.
If you start with no parameters, it connects to a database named "test" running on your local machine on the default port (27017). You can see the
db to which you are connecting by typing db:
./mongo
type "help" for help
> db
test
You can pass mongo an optional argument specifying the address, port and even the database to initially connect to:
Connecting
If you have not connected via the command line, you can use the following commands:
where host is a string that contains either the name or address of the machine you want to connect to (e.g. "192.168.13.7") or the machine and
port (e.g. "192.168.13.7:9999"). Note that host in an optional argument, and can be omitted if you want to connect to the database instance
running on your local machine. (e.g. conn = new Mongo() )
Basics Commands
The following are three basic commands that provide information about the available databases, and collections in a given database.
show dbs displays all the databases on the server you are connected to
show collections displays a list of all the collections in the current database
Querying
mongo uses a JavaScript API to interact with the database. Because mongo is also a complete JavaScript shell, db is the variable that is the
current database connection.
To query a collection, you simply specify the collection name as a property of the db object, and then call the find() method. For example:
db.foo.find();
This will display the first 10 objects from the foo collection. Typing it after a find() will display the next 10 subsequent objects.
DBQuery.shellBatchSize = #
Inserting Data
In order to insert data into the database, you can simply create a JavaScript object, and call the save() method. For example, to save an object {
name: "sara"} in a collection called foo, type:
Note that MongoDB will implicitly create any collection that doesn't already exist.
Modifying Data
Let's say you want to change someone's address. You can do this using the following mongo commands:
Deleting Data
db.foo.drop() drop the entire foo collection
db.foo.remove( { name : "sara" } ) remove objects from the collection where name is sara
Indexes
Line Continuation
If a line contains open '(' or '{' characters, the shell will request more input before evaluating:
You can press Ctrl-C to escape from "..." mode and terminate line entry.
See Also
dbshell Reference
Command Line
Special Command Helpers
Basic Shell Javascript Operations
Queries
Error Checking
Administrative Command Helpers
Opening Additional Connections
Miscellaneous
Examples
Command Line
--nodb Start without a db, you can connect later with new Mongo() or connect()
--shell After running a .js file from the command line, stay in the shell rather than terminating
use dbname Set the db variable to represent usage of dbname on the server
db The variable that references the current database object / connection. Already defined for you in your
instance.
coll.insert(object) Insert object in collection. No check is made (i.e., no upsert) that the object is not already present in the
collection.
coll.update(...) Update an object in a collection. See the Updating documentation; update() has many options.
coll.update(...)
db.getSisterDB(name) Return a reference to another database using this same connection. Usage example:
db.getSisterDB('production').getCollectionNames()
Queries
coll.find( Find objects matching criteria in the collection. E.g.: coll.find( { name: "Joe" } );
criteria );
coll.findOne( Find and return a single object. Returns null if not found. If you want only one object returned, this is more efficient
criteria ); than just find() as limit(1) is implied. You may use regular expressions if the element type is a string, number,
or date: coll.find( { name: /joe/i } );
coll.find( Get just specific fields from the object. E.g.: coll.find( {}, {name:true} );
criteria, fields
);
coll.find().sort( Return results in the specified order (field ASC). Use -1 for DESC.
{field:1[, field
:1] });
coll.find( ... Limit result to n rows. Highly recommended if you need only a certain number of rows for best performance.
).limit(n)
coll.find( ... Returns the total number of objects that match the query. Note that the number ignores limit and skip; for example if
).count() 100 records match but the limit is 10, count() will return 100. This will be faster than iterating yourself, but still take
time.
More information: see queries.
Error Checking
db.cloneDatabase(fromhost) Clone the current database from the other host specified. fromhost database must be in
noauth mode.
db.copyDatabase(fromdb, todb, Copy fromhost/fromdb to todb on this server. fromhost must be in noauth mode.
fromhost)
db.repairDatabase() Repair and compact the current database. This operation can be very slow on large
databases.
db = Open a new database connection. One may have multiple connections within a single shell,
connect("<host>:<port>/<dbname>") however, automatic getLastError reporting by the shell is done for the 'db' variable only. See
here for an example of connect().
conn = new Mongo("hostname") Open a connection to a new server. Use getDB() to select a database thereafter.
Miscellaneous
Object.bsonsize(db.foo.findOne()) prints the bson size of a db object (mongo version 1.3 and greater)
db.foo.findOne().bsonsize() prints the bson size of a db object (mongo versions predating 1.3)
Examples
The MongoDB source code includes a jstests/ directory with many mongo shell scripts.
Developer FAQ
What's a "namespace"?
How do I copy all objects from one database collection to another?
If you remove an object attribute is it deleted from the store?
Are null values allowed?
Does an update fsync to disk immediately?
How do I do transactions/locking?
How do I do equivalent of SELECT count * and GROUP BY?
What are so many "Connection Accepted" messages logged?
What RAID should I use?
Can I run on Amazon EBS? Any issues?
Why are my data files so large?
What's a "namespace"?
MongoDB stores BSON objects in collections. The concatenation of the database name and the collection name (with a period in between) is
called a namespace.
For example, acme.users is a namespace, where acme is the database name, and users is the collection name. Note that periods can occur in
collection names, so a name such as acme.blog.posts is legal too (in that case blog.posts is the collection name.
See below. The code below may be ran server-side for high performance with the eval() method.
db.myoriginal.find().forEach( function(x){db.mycopy.save(x)} );
Yes, you remove the attribute and then re-save() the object.
For members of an object, yes. You cannot add null to a database collection though as null isn't an object. You can add {}, though.
No, writes to disk are lazy by default. A write may hit disk a couple of seconds later. For example, if the database receives a thousand increments
to an object within one second, it will only be flushed to disk once. (Note fsync options are available though both at the command line and via
getLastError.)
How do I do transactions/locking?
MongoDB does not use traditional locking or complex transactions with rollback, as it is designed to be lightweight and fast and predictable in its
performance. It can be thought of as analogous to the MySQL MyISAM autocommit model. By keeping transaction support extremely simple,
performance is enhanced, especially in a system that may run across many servers.
The system provides alternative models for atomically making updates that are sufficient for many common use cases. See the wiki page
Atomics Operations for detailed information.
See aggregation.
If you see a tremendous number of connection accepted messages in the mongod log, that means clients are repeatedly connecting and
disconnected. This works, but is inefficient.
With CGI this is normal. If you find the speed acceptable for your purposes, run mongod with --quiet to suppress these messages in the log. If
you need better performance, which to a solution where connections are pooled -- such as an Apache module.
We recommend not using RAID-5, but rather, RAID-10 or the like. Both will work of course.
MongoDB does aggressive preallocation of reserved space to avoid file system fragmentation. This is configurable. More info here.
my_query then will have a value such as { name : "Joe" }. If my_query contained special characters such as ", :, {, etc., nothing bad happens, they
are just part of the string.
Javascript
Some care is appropriate when using server-side Javascript. For example when using the $where statement in a query, do not concatenate user
supplied data to build Javascript code; this would be analogous to a SQL injection vulnerability. Fortunately, most queries in MongoDB can be
expressed without Javascript. Also, we can mix the two modes. It's a good idea to make all the user-supplied fields go straight to a BSON field,
and have your Javascript code be static and passed in the $where field.
If you need to pass user-supplied values into a $where clause, a good approach is to escape them using the CodeWScope mechanism. By
setting the user values as variables in the scope document you will avoid the need to have them eval'ed on the server-side.
If you need to use db.eval() with user supplied values, you can either use a CodeWScope or you can supply extra arguments to your function.
Something like: db.eval(function(userVal){...}, user_value); This will ensure that user_value gets sent as data rather than code.
User-Generated Keys
Sometimes it is useful to build a BSON object where the key is user-provided. In these situations, keys will need to have substitutions for the
reserved $ and . characters. If you are unsure what characters to use, the Unicode full width equivalents aren't a bad choice: U+FF04 () and
U+FFOE ()
For example:
The user may have supplied a $ value within a_key. my_object could be { $where : "things" }. Here we can look at a few cases:
Inserting. Inserting into the the database will do no harm. We are not executing this object as a query, we are inserting the data in the
database.
Note: properly written MongoDB client drivers check for reserved characters in keys on inserts.
Update. update(query, obj) allows $ operators in the obj field. $where is not supported in update. Some operators are possible that
manipulate the single document only -- thus, the keys should be escaped as mentioned above if reserved characters are possible.
Querying. Generally this is not a problem as for { x : user_obj }, dollar signs are not top level and have no effect. In theory one might let
the user build a query completely themself and provide it to the database. In that case checking for $ characters in keynames is
important. That however would be a highly unusual case.
One way to handle user-generated keys is to always put them in sub-objects. Then they are never at top level (where $operators live) anyway.
See Also
http://groups.google.com/group/mongodb-user/browse_thread/thread/b4ef57912cbf09d7
mongos
For sharded environments, mongos can perform any number of operations concurrently. This results in downstream operations to mongod
instances. Execution of operations at each mongod is independent; that is, one mongod does not block another.
mongod
The original mongod architecture is concurrency friendly; however, some work with respect to granular locking and latching is not yet done. This
means that some operations can block others. This is particular true in versions < 1.3. Version 1.3+ has improvements to concurrency, although
future work will make things even better.
v1.0-v1.2 Concurrency
In these versions of mongod, most operations prevent concurrent execution of other operations. In many circumstances, this worked reasonably
as most operations can be executed very quickly.
You can also see operations in progress from the adminstrative Http Interface.
Read/Write Lock
mongod uses a read/write lock for many operations. Any number of concurrent read operations are allowed, but typically only one write operation
(although some write operations yield and in the future more concurrency will be added). The write lock acquisition is greedy: a pending write lock
acquisition will prevent further read lock acquisitions until fulfilled.
Operations
OP_INSERT (insert ) Acquires write lock Inserts are normally fast and short-lived operations
OP_DELETE (remove ) Acquires write lock Yields while running to allow other operations to interleave.
OP_UPDATE (update ) Acquires write lock Will yield for interleave (1.5.2+)
create index See notes Batch build acquires write lock. But a background build option is available.
On Javascript
Only one thread in the mongod process executes Javascript at a time (other database operations are often possible concurrent with this).
Multicore
With read operations, it is easy for mongod 1.3+ to saturate all cores. However, because of the read/write lock above, write operations will not yet
fully utilize all cores. This will be improved in the future.
mysqld mongod
mysql mongo
MongoDB queries are expressed as JSON (BSON) objects. This quick reference chart shows examples as both SQL and in Mongo Query
Language syntax.
The query expression in MongoDB (and other things, such as index key patterns) is represented as JSON. However, the actual verb (e.g. "find")
is done in one's regular programming language. The exact forms of these verbs vary by language. The examples below are Javascript and can
be executed from the mongo shell.
Note that some types are treated as equivalent for comparison purposes -- specifically numeric types which undergo conversion before
comparison.
Null
Numbers (ints, longs, doubles)
Symbol, String
Object
Array
BinData
ObjectID
Boolean
Date, Timestamp
Regular Expression
> t = db.mycoll;
> t.insert({x:3});
> t.insert( {x : 2.9} );
> t.insert( {x : new Date()} );
> t.insert( {x : true } )
> t.find().sort({x:1})
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b03155dce8de6586fb002c7"), "x" : 2.9 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b03154cce8de6586fb002c6"), "x" : 3 }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b031566ce8de6586fb002c9"), "x" : true }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b031563ce8de6586fb002c8"), "x" : "Tue Nov 17 2009 16:28:03 GMT-0500 (EST)" }
In addition to the above types MongoDB internally uses a special type for MinKey and MaxKey which are less than, and greater than all other
possible BSON element values, respectively.
For example we can continue our example from above adding two objects which have x key values of MinKey and MaxKey respectively:
From C++
See also the Tailable Cursors page for an example of using MinKey from C++. See also minKey and maxKey definitions in jsobj.h.
Admin Zone
Production Notes
Replication
Sharding
Hosting Center
Monitoring and Diagnostics
Backups
Durability and Repair
Security and Authentication
Admin UIs
Starting and Stopping Mongo
GridFS Tools
DBA Operations from the Shell
Architecture and Components
Troubleshooting
See Also
Commands in Developer Zone
Production Notes
Architecture
Production Options
Backups
Recommended Unix System Settings
TCP Port Numbers
File Systems
Tips
See Also
Architecture
Production Options
Master Slave
1 master, N slaves - failover is handled manually
Version 1.6: Replica Sets
N servers, 1 is always primary, auto-failover, auto-recovery
Backups
File Systems
MongoDB uses large files for storing data, and preallocates these. Some filesystems are much better at this
ext4
xfs
Tips
Handling Halted Replication
See Also
Starting and Stopping the Database
Replication
MongoDB supports asynchronous replication of data between servers for failover and redundancy. Only one server (in the set/shard) is active for
writes (the primary, or master) at a given time. With a single active master at any point in time, strong consistency semantics are available. One
can optionally send read operations to the slaves/secondaries when eventual consistency semantics are acceptable.
Master-Slave Replication
Replica Sets
A client can block until a write operation has been replicated to N servers -- read more here .
Presentations
Replication Video
Replication Slides Only
A client can block until a write operation has been replicated to N servers. Use the getlasterror command with a new parameter w:
db.runCommand( { getlasterror : 1 , w : 2 } )
If w is not set, or equals 1, the command returns immediately, implying the data is on 1 server (itself). If w is 2, then the data is on the current
server and 1 other server (a secondary).
The higher w is, the longer acknowledgement may take. A recommended way of using this feature in a web context is to do all the write
operations for a page, then call this once if needed. That way you're only paying the cost once.
There is an optional wtimeout parameter that allows you to timeout after a certain number of milliseconds and perhaps return an error or
warning to a user. For example, the following will wait for 3 seconds before giving up:
Note: the current implementation returns when the data has been delivered to w servers. Future versions will provide more options for delivery
vs. say, physical fsync at the server.
See also replica set configuration for information on how to change the getlasterror default parameters.
Replica Sets
Replica Sets are MongoDB's new method for replication. They are an elaboration on the existing master/slave replication, adding automatic
failover and automatic recovery of member nodes.
Replica Sets are "Replica Pairs version 2" and are available in MongoDB version 1.6. Replica Pairs will be deprecated.
Features
Docs
To get started:
Try it out
Learn how to configure your set
If you would like to start using replica sets with an existing system:
The admin UI
Administrative commands
More Docs
See Also
Replication Video
Replica Sets Slides
You may place end user application data in local, if you would like it to not replicate to other servers. Put your collections under local.usr.*.
Replica Sets
local.system.replset the replica set's configuration object is stored here. (View via the rs.conf() helper in the shell – or query it
directly.)
local.oplog.rs is a capped collection that is the oplog. You can use the --oplogSize command line parameter to set the size of
this collection.
local.replset.minvalid sometimes contains an object used internally by replica sets to track sync status
Master/Slave Replication
Master
local.oplog.$main the "oplog"
local.slaves
Slave
local.sources
Other
local.me
local.pair.* (replica pairs, which are deprecated)
Use one site, with one or more set members, as primary. Have a member at a remote site with priority=0. For example:
{ _id: 'myset',
members: [
{ _id:0, host:'sf1', priority:1 },
{ _id:1, host:'sf2', priority:1 },
{ _id:2, host:'ny1', priority:0 }
]
}
{ _id: 'myset',
members: [
{ _id:0, host:'sf1', priority:1 },
{ _id:1, host:'ny1', priority:1 },
{ _id:2, host:'uk1', priority:1 }
]
}
If there is no primary (and this condition is not transient), no majority is available. Reconfiguring a minority partition would be dangerous as two
sides of a network partition won't both be aware of the reconfiguration. Thus, this is not allowed.
However, in some administrative circumstances we will want to take action even though there is no majority. Suggestions on how to deal with this
are outlined below.
Example 1
A replica set has three members, which in the past were healthy. Two of the servers are permanently destroyed. We wish to bring the remaining
member online immediately.
One option is to make the last standing mongod a standalone server and not a set member:
We are now back online with a single node that is not a replica set member. Clients can use it for both reads and writes.
Example 2
A replica set has three members, which in the past were healthy. Two of the servers are permanently destroyed. We wish to bring the remaining
member online and add a new member to its set.
We cannot reconfigure the existing set with only 1 of 3 members available. However, we can "break the mirror" and start a new set:
Example 3
A replica set has five members, which in the past were healthy. Three of the servers are permanently destroyed. We wish to bring the remaining
members online.
As in example 2 we will use the "break the mirror" technique. Unfortunately one of the two members must be re-synced.
A write is only truly committed once it has replicated to a majority of members of the set. For important writes, the client should request
acknowledgement of this with a getLastError({w:...}) call.
2.
Writes which are committed at the primary of the set may be visible before the true cluster-wide commit has occurred. This property, which is
more relaxed than some traditional RDBMS products, makes theoretically achievable performance and availability higher.
3.
On a failover, if there is data which has not replicated from the primary, the data is dropped (thus the use of getlasterror in #1 above).
Data is now backed up on rollback, although the assumption is that in most cases this data is never recovered as that would
require operator intervention: http://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SERVER-1512.
If the set is already initiated and this is a new node, verify it is present in the replica set's configuration and there are no typos in the host names:
Introduction
Starting the nodes
Initializing the set
Replication
Failing Over
Changing the replica set configuration
Running with two nodes
Drivers
Introduction
A replica set is group of N mongod nodes that work together to provide automated failover.
Setting up a replica set is a two-step process that requires starting each node and then formally initiating the set. Here, we'll be configuring a set
of three nodes, which is standard.
Once the mongod nodes are started, we'll issue a command to properly initialize the set. After a few seconds, one node will be elected master,
and you can begin writing to and querying the set.
First, create a separate data directory for each of the nodes in the set:
mkdir -p /data/r0
mkdir -p /data/r1
mkdir -p /data/r2
Next, start each mongod process with the --replSet parameter. The parameter requires that you specify the name of the replica set. Let's call
our replica set "foo." We'll launch our first node like so:
mongod --replSet foo --port 27017 --dbpath /data/r0
You should now have three nodes running. At this point, each node should be printing the following warning:
Mon Aug 2 11:30:19 [startReplSets] replSet can't get local.system.replset config from self or any
seed (EMPTYCONFIG)
We can't use the replica set until we've initialized it, which we'll do next.
We can initiate the replica set by connecting to one of the members and running the replSetInitiate command. This command takes a
configuration object that specifies the name of the set and each of the members.
mongo localhost:27017
[kyle@arete ~$]$ mongo localhost:27017
MongoDB shell version: 1.5.7
connecting to: localhost:27017/test
> config = {_id: 'foo', members: [
{_id: 0, host: 'localhost:27017'},
{_id: 1, host: 'localhost:27018'},
{_id: 2, host: 'localhost:27019'}]
}
> rs.initiate(config);
{
"info" : "Config now saved locally. Should come online in about a minute.",
"ok" : 1
}
We specify the config object and then pass it to rs.initiate(). Then, if everything is in order, we get a response saying that the replica set will
be online in a minute. During this time, one of the nodes will be elected master.
You'll see that both of the other members of the set are up. You may also notice that the myState value is 1, indicating that we're connected to
the master node; a value of 2 indicates a slave.
You can also check the set's status in the HTTP Admin UI.
Replication
If you pay attention to the logs on the slave nodes, you'll see the write being replicated. This initial replication is essential for failover; the system
won't fail over to a new master until an initial sync between nodes is complete.
Failing Over
Now, the purpose of a replica set is to provide automated failover. This means that, if the master node is killed, a slave node can take over. To
see how this works in practice, go ahead and kill the master node with ^C:
^CMon Aug 2 11:50:16 got kill or ctrl c or hup signal 2 (Interrupt), will terminate after current cmd
ends
Mon Aug 2 11:50:16 [interruptThread] now exiting
Mon Aug 2 11:50:16 dbexit:
If you look at the logs on the slave nodes, you'll see a series of messages indicating failover. On our first slave, we see this:
Mon Aug 2 11:50:16 [ReplSetHealthPollTask] replSet info localhost:27017 is now down (or slow to
respond)
Mon Aug 2 11:50:17 [conn1] replSet info voting yea for 2
Mon Aug 2 11:50:17 [rs Manager] replSet not trying to elect self as responded yea to someone else
recently
Mon Aug 2 11:50:27 [rs_sync] replSet SECONDARY
And on the second, this:
Mon Aug 2 11:50:17 [ReplSetHealthPollTask] replSet info localhost:27017 is now down (or slow to
respond)
Mon Aug 2 11:50:17 [rs Manager] replSet info electSelf 2
Mon Aug 2 11:50:17 [rs Manager] replSet PRIMARY
Mon Aug 2 11:50:27 [initandlisten] connection accepted from 127.0.0.1:61263 #5
Both nodes notice that the master has gone down and, as a result, a new primary node is elected. In this case, the node at port 27019 is
promoted. If we bring the failed node on 27017 back online, it will come up as a slave.
There are times when you'll want to change the replica set configuration. Suppose, for instance, that you want to adjust the number of votes
available to each node. To do this, you need to pass a new configuration object to the database's replSetReconfig command. Here's how.
Then, add the version to the config object. To do this, you'll need to increment the old config version.
use local
old_config = db.system.replset.findOne();
new_config.version = old_config.version + 1;
Finally, reconfigure:
use admin
db.runCommand({replSetReconfig: new_config});
Suppose you want to run replica sets with just two database servers. This is possible as long as you also use an arbiter on a separate node; most
likely, running the arbiter on one or more application servers will be ideal. With an arbiter in place, the replica set will behave appropriately,
recovering automatically during both network partitions and node failures (e.g., machine crashes).
You start up an arbiter just as you would a standard replica set node, with the --replSet option. However, when initiating, you need to include
the arbiterOnly option in the config document.
With an arbiter, the configuration presented above would look like this instead:
The other requirement here is that the total number of votes for the database nodes needs to consist of a majority. This means that if you have
two database nodes and ten arbiters, there's a total of twelve votes. So the best bet in this case it to give each database node enough votes so
that even if all but a single arbiter goes down, the master still has enough votes to stay up. In that situation, each database node would need at
least three votes.
For more information on arbiters and other interesting config options, see the replica set configuration docs.
Drivers
All of the MongoDB drivers are designed to take any number of replica set seed hosts from a replica set and then cache the hosts of any other
known members.
With this complete set of potential master nodes, the driver can automatically find the new master if the current master fails. See your driver's
documentation for details. If you happen to be using the Ruby driver, check out Replica Sets in Ruby.
Command Line
Each mongod participating in the set should have a --replSet parameter on its command line. The syntax is
The --rest command line parameter is also recommended when using replica sets, as the web admin interface of mongod
(normally at port 28017) shows status information on the set.
Initial Setup
We use the initiate command for initial configuration of a replica set. Send the initiate command to a single server with the set to christen the set.
The member being initiated may have initial data; the other servers in the set should be empty.
A shorthand way to type the above is via a helper method in the shell:
> rs.initiate(<config_object>)
A quick way to initiate a set is to leave out the config object parameter. The initial set will then consist of the member to which the shell is
communicating, along with all the seeds that member knows of. However, see the configuration object details below for more options.
> rs.initiate()
local.system.replset holds a singleton object which contains the replica set configuration. The config object automatically propagates among
members of the set. The object is not directly manipulated, but rather changed via commands (such as replSetInitiate).
members: [
{
_id : <ordinal>,
host : <hostname[:port]>,
[, priority: <priority>]
[, arbiterOnly : true]
[, votes : <n>]
[, hidden : true]
}
, ...
],
settings: {
[getLastErrorDefaults: <lasterrdefaults>]
[, heartbeatSleep : <seconds>]
[, heartbeatTimeout : <seconds>]
[, heartbeatConnRetries : <n>]
}
}
Shell Example 1
Shell Example 2
Adding a new node to an existing replica set is easy. The new node should either have an empty data directory or a recent copy of the data from
another set member. When we start the new node, we only need to provide the replica set name:
After bringing up the new server (we'll call it broadway:27017) we need to add it to the set - we connect to our primary server using the shell:
$ ./mongo
MongoDB shell version: ...
connecting to: test
> rs.add("broadway:27017");
{ "ok" : 1 }
After adding the node it will perform a full resync and come online as a secondary. If the node is started with a recent copy of data from another
node in the set it won't need a full resync.
See also:
Adding an Arbiter
Adding an Arbiter
Arbiters are nodes in a replica set that only participate in elections: they don't have a copy of the data and will never become the primary node (or
even a readable secondary). They are mainly useful for breaking ties during elections (e.g. if a set only has two members).
To add an arbiter, bring up a new node and point it at the replica set using the --replSet flag - this part is identical to when Adding a New Set
Member. To start as an arbiter, we'll use rs.addArb() instead of rs.add(). While connected to the current primary:
> rs.addArb("broadway:27017");
{ "ok" : 1 }
See Also
If you're running MongoDB on a single server, upgrading to replica sets is trivial (and a good idea!). First, we'll initiate a new replica set with a
single node. We need a name for the replica set - in this case we're using foo. Start by shutting down the server and restarting with the
--replSet option, and our set name:
Add the --rest option too (just be sure that port is secured): the <host>:28017/_replSet diagnostics page is incredibly useful.
The server will allocate new local data files before starting back up. Consider pre-allocating those files if you need to minimize downtime.
Next we'll connect to the server from the shell and initiate the replica set:
$ ./mongo
MongoDB shell version: ...
connecting to: test
> rs.initiate();
{
"info2" : "no configuration explicitly specified -- making one",
"info" : "Config now saved locally. Should come online in about a minute.",
"ok" : 1
}
The server should now be operational again, this time as the primary in a replica set consisting of just a single node. The next step is to add some
additional nodes to the set.
Version 1.6.1 will have more seamless support for upgrading, track this case for details: http://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SERVER-1553.
With 1.6.0 the best way to upgrade is to simply restart the current master as a single server replica set, and then add any slaves after wiping their
data directory. To find the master in a replica pair, use the ismaster command.
Once you know the master, the process will look like this:
s$ # we start empty on the slave. so let's save the old data (assuming drive large enough)
s$ mv /data/db /data/old_slave_data
s$ mkdir /data/db
s$ # /data/db is now empty
There are new versions of most MongoDB Drivers which support replica sets elegantly. See the documentation pages for the specific driver of
interest.
To use, first enable --rest from the mongod command line. The rest port is the db port plus 1000 (thus, the default is 28017). Be sure this port
is secure before enabling this.
Then you can navigate to http://<hostname>:28017/ in your web browser. Once there, click Replica Set Status (/_replSet) to move to the
Replica Set Status page.
See Also
Http Interface
Shell Helpers
{ isMaster : 1 }
Checks if the node to which we are connecting is currently primary. Most drivers do this check automatically and then send requires to the current
primary.
{
"ismaster" : false,
"secondary" : true,
"hosts" : [
"sf1.example.com",
"sf4.example.com",
"ny3.example.com"
],
"passives" : [
"sf3.example.com",
"sf2.example.com",
"ny2.example.com",
],
"arbiters" : [
"ny1.example.com",
]
"primary" : "sf4.example.com",
"ok" : 1
}
The hosts array lists primary and secondary servers, the passives array lists passive servers, and the arbiters array lists arbiters.
If the "ismaster" field is false, there will be a "primary" field that indicates which server is primary.
{ replSetGetStatus : 1 }
Status information on the replica set from this node's point of view.
{
"set" : "florble",
"date" : "Wed Jul 28 2010 15:01:01 GMT-0400 (EST)",
"myState" : 1,
"members" : [
{
"name" : "dev1.example.com",
"self" : true,
"errmsg" : ""
},
{
"name" : "dev2.example.com",
"health" : 1,
"uptime" : 13777,
"lastHeartbeat" : "Wed Jul 28 2010 15:01:01 GMT-0400 (EST)",
"errmsg" : "initial sync done"
}
],
"ok" : 1
}
The myState field indicates the state of this server. Valid states are:
2 Secondary
3 Recovering
4 Fatal error
6 Unknown state
7 Arbiter
8 Down
{ replSetInitiate : <config> }
Initiate a replica set. Run this command at one node only, to initiate the set. Whatever data is on the initiating node becomes the initial data for the
set. This is a one time operation done at cluster creation. See also Configuration.
{ replSetStepDown : true }
Step down as primary. Node will become eligible to be primary again after 1 minute. (Presumably, another node will take over by then if it were
eligible.)
This command will be enhanced later to allow specification of a min duration of the step-down.
{ replSetFreeze : <bool> }
Freezing a replica set prevents failovers from occurring. This can be useful during maintenance.
{ replSetReconfig: <config> }
db._adminCommand({replSetReconfig: cfg })
Failover thresholds are configurable. With the defaults, it may take 20-30 seconds for the primary to be declared down by the other members and
a new primary elected. During this window of time, the cluster is down for "primary" operations – that is, writes and strong consistent reads.
However, you may execute eventually consistent queries to secondaries at any time, including during this window.
Instead of taking a pair of hostnames, the drivers will typically take a comma separated list of host[:port] names. This is a seed host list; it need
not be every member of the set. The driver then looks for the primary from the seeds. The seed members will report back other members of the
set that the client is not aware of yet. Thus we can add members to a replica set without changing client code.
With Sharding
With sharding, the client connects to a mongos process. The mongos process will then automatically find the right member(s) of the set.
See Also
v1.6
Error RS102
MongoDB writes operations to an oplog. For replica sets this data is stored in collection local.oplog.rs. This is a capped collection and wraps
when full "RRD"-style. Thus, it is important that the oplog collection is large enough to buffer a good amount of writes when some members of a
replica set are down. If too many writes occur, the down nodes, when they resume, cannot catch up. In that case, a full resync would be
required.
The command line --oplogSize parameter sets the oplog size. A good rule of thumb is 5 to 10% of total disk space. On 64 bit builds, the
default is large and similar to this percentage. You can check your existing oplog sizes from the mongo shell :
If one of your members has been offline and is now too far behind to catch up, you will need to resync. There are a number of ways to do this.
1. Delete all data. If you stop the failed mongod, delete all data, and restart it, it will automatically resynchronize itself. Of course this may be slow
if the database is huge or the network slow.
2. Copy data from another member. You can copy all the data files from another member of the set IF you have a snapshot of that member's data
file's. This can be done in a number of ways. The simplest is to stop mongod on the source member, copy all its files, and then restart mongod on
both nodes. The Mongo fsync and lock feature is another way to achieve this. On a slow network, snapshotting all the datafiles from another
(inactive) member to a gziped tarball is a good solution. Also similar strategies work well when using SANs and services such as Amazon Elastic
Block Service snapshots.
3. Find a member with older data. Each member of the replica set has an oplog. It is possible that a member has a larger oplog than the current
primary.
Design Concepts
Check out the Replica Set Design Concepts for some of the core concepts underlying MongoDB Replica Sets.
Configuration
Command Line
We specify --replSet set_name/seed_hostname_list on the command line. seed_hostname_list is a (partial) list of some members of the set. The
system then fetches full configuration information from the collection local.system.replset. set_name is specified to help the system catch
misconfigurations.
Node Types
Standard - a standard node as described above. Can transition to and from being a primary or a secondary over time. There is only one
primary (master) server at any point in time.
Passive - a server can participate as if it were a member of the replica set, but be specified to never be Primary.
Arbiter - member of the cluster for consensus purposes, but receives no data. Arbiters cannot be seed hosts.
Each node in the set has a priority setting. On a resync (see below), the rule is: choose as master the node with highest priority that is healthy. If
multiple nodes have the same priority, pick the node with the freshest data. For example, we might use 1.0 priority for Normal members, 0.0 for
passive (0 indicates cannot be primary no matter what), and 0.5 for a server in a less desirable data center.
local.system.replset
This collection has one document storing the replica set's configuration. See the configuration page for details.
For a new cluster, on negotiation the max OpOrdinal is zero everywhere. We then know we have a new replica set with no data yet. A special
command
{replSetInitiate:1}
Design
Server States
Primary - Can be thought of as "master" although which server is primary can vary over time. Only 1 server is primary at a given point in
time.
Secondary - Can be thought of as a slave in the cluster; varies over time.
Recovering - getting back in sync before entering Secondary mode.
Applying Operations
Secondaries apply operations from the Primary. Each applied operation is also written to the secondary's local oplog. We need only apply from
the current primary (and be prepared to switch if that changes).
OpOrdinal
These values appear in the oplog (local.oplog.$main). maxLocalOpOrdinal() returns the largest value logged. This value represents how
up-to-date we are. The first operation is logged with ordinal 1.
Note two servers in the set could in theory generate different operations with the same ordinal under some race conditions. Thus for full
uniqueness we must look at the combination of server id and op ordinal.
Picking Primary
We use a consensus protocol to pick a primary. Exact details will be spared here but that basic process is:
1. get maxLocalOpOrdinal from each server.
2. if a majority of servers are not up (from this server's POV), remain in Secondary mode and stop.
3. if the last op time seems very old, stop and await human intervention.
4. else, using a consensus protocol, pick the server with the highest maxLocalOpOrdinal as the Primary.
Any server in the replica set, when it fails to reach master, attempts a new election process.
Heartbeat Monitoring
All nodes monitor all other nodes in the set via heartbeats. If the current primary cannot see half of the nodes in the set (including itself), it will fall
back to secondary mode. This monitoring is a way to check for network partitions. Otherwise in a network partition, a server might think it is still
primary when it is not.
Assumption of Primary
When a server becomes primary, we assume it has the latest data. Any data newer than the new primary's will be discarded. Any discarded data
is backed up to a flat file as raw BSON, to allow for the possibility of manual recovery (see this case for some details). In general, manual
recovery will not be needed - if data must be guaranteed to be committed it should be written to a majority of the nodes in the set.
Failover
When a secondary connects to a new primary, it must resynchronize its position. It is possible the secondary has operations that were never
committed at the primary. In this case, we roll those operations back. Additionally we may have new operations from a previous primary that never
replicated elsewhere. The method is basically:
for each operation in our oplog that DNE at the primary, (1) remove from oplog and (2) resync the document in question by a query to the
primary for that object. update the object, deleting if it does not exist at the primary.
We can work our way back in time until we find a few operations that are consistent with the new primary, and then stop.
Any data that is removed during the rollback is stored offline (see Assumption of Primary, so one can manually recover it. It can't be done
automatically because there may be conflicts.
Reminder: you can use w= to ensure writes make it to a majority of slaves before returning to the user, to ensure no writes need to be rolled back.
Consensus
Fancier methods would converge faster but the current method is a good baseline. Typically only ~2 nodes will be jockeying for primary status at
any given time so there isn't be much contention:
Increasing Durability
We can trade off durability versus availability in a replica set. When a primary fails, a secondary will assume primary status with whatever data it
has. Thus, we have some desire to see that things replicate quickly. Durability is guaranteed once a majority of servers in the replica set have an
operation.
To improve durability clients can call getlasterror and wait for acknowledgement until replication of a an operation has occurred. The client can
then selectively call for a blocking, somewhat more synchronous operation.
Secondaries can report via a command how far behind the primary they are. Then, a read-only client can decide if the server's data is too stale or
close enough for usage.
Example
In the above example, server-c becomes primary after server-a fails. Operations (a4,a5) are lost. c4 and c5 are new operations with the same
ordinals.
Administration
Commands:
{ replSetFreeze : <bool> } "freeze" or unfreeze a set. When frozen, new nodes cannot be elected master. Used when doing
administration. Details TBD.
{ replSetGetStatus : 1 } get status of the set, from this node's POV
{ replSetInitiate : 1 }
{ ismaster : 1 } check if this node is master
Future Versions
Master Slave
Configuration and Setup
Command Line Options
Master
Slave
--slavedelay
Diagnostics
Security
Administrative Tasks
Failing over to a Slave (Promotion)
Inverting Master and Slave
Creating a slave from an existing master's disk image
Creating a slave from an existing slave's disk image
Resyncing a slave that is too stale to recover
See Also
To configure an instance of Mongo to be a master database in a master-slave configuration, you'll need to start two instances of the database,
one in master mode, and the other in slave mode.
Data Storage
The following examples explicitly specify the location of the data files on the command line. This is unnecessary if you are
running the master and slave on separate machines, but in the interest of the readers who are going try this setup on a single
node, they are supplied in the interest of safety.
As a result, the master server process will create a local.oplog.$main collection. This is the "transaction log" which queues operations which
will be applied at the slave.
Details of the source server are then stored in the slave's local.sources collection. Instead of specifying the --source parameter, one can
add an object to local.sources which specifies information about the master server:
$ bin/mongo <slavehostname>/local
> db.sources.find(); // confirms the collection is empty. then:
> db.sources.insert( { host: <masterhostname> } );
host: masterhostname is the IP address or FQDN of the master database machine. Append :port to the server hostname if you
wish to run on a nonstandard port number.
only: databasename (optional) if specified, indicates that only the specified database should replicate. NOTE: A bug with only is
fixed in v1.2.4+.
A slave can pull from multiple upstream masters. In such a situation add multiple configuration objects to the local.sources collection. See the
One Slave Two Masters doc page.
A slave may become out of sync with a master if it falls far behind the data updates available from that master, or if the slave is terminated and
then restarted some time later when relevant updates are no longer available from the master. If a slave becomes out of sync, replication will
terminate and operator intervention is required by default if replication is to be restarted. An operator may restart replication using the {resync:1}
command. Alternatively, the command line option --autoresync causes a slave to restart replication automatically (after ten second pause) if it
becomes out of sync. If the --autoresync option is specified, the slave will not attempt an automatic resync more than once in a ten minute
periond.
The --oplogSize command line option may be specified (along with --master) to configure the amount of disk space in megabytes which will
be allocated for storing updates to be made available to slave nodes. If the --oplogSize option is not specified, the amount of disk space for
storing updates will be 5% of available disk space (with a minimum of 1GB) for 64bit machines, or 50MB for 32bit machines.
Master
Slave
--slave slave mode
--source arg arg specifies master as <server:port>
--only arg arg specifies a single database to replicate
--slavedelay arg arg specifies delay (in seconds) to be used
when applying master ops to slave
--autoresync automatically resync if slave data is stale
--slavedelay
Sometimes its beneficial to have a slave that is purposefully many hours behind to prevent human error. In MongoDB 1.3.3+, you can specify this
with the --slavedelay mongod command line option. Specify the delay in seconds to be used when applying master operations to the slave.
Diagnostics
(Note you can evaluate the above functions without the parenthesis above to see their javascript source and a bit on the internals.)
N is the level of diagnostic information and can have the following values:
0 - none
1 - local (doesn't have to connect to other server)
2 - remote (has to check with the master)
Security
When security is enabled, one must configure a user account for the local database that exists on both servers.
The slave-side of a replication connection first looks for a user repl in local.system.users. If present, that user is used to authenticate against the
local database on the source side of the connection. If repl user does not exist, the first user object in local.system.users is tried.
The local database works like the admin database: an account for local has access to the entire server.
Administrative Tasks
Failing over to a Slave (Promotion)
shut down A
stop mongod on B
backup or delete local.* datafiles on B
restart mongod on B with the --master option
Note that is a one time cutover and the "mirror" is broken. A cannot be brought back in sync with B without a full resync.
If you have a master (A) and a slave (B) and you would like to reverse their roles, this is the recommended sequence of steps. Note the following
assumes A is healthy and up.
If A is not healthy but the hardware is okay (power outage, server crash, etc.):
If the hardware is not okay, replace A with a new machine and then follow the instructions in the previous paragraph.
--fastsync is a way to start a slave starting with an existing master disk image/backup. This option declares that the adminstrator guarantees
the image is correct and completely up to date with that of the master. If you have a full and complete copy of data from a master (and the master
is not accepting new writes concurrently!) you can use this option to avoid a full synchronization upon starting the slave.
You can just copy the other slave's data file snapshot without any special options. Note data snapshots should only be taken when a mongod
process is down or in fsync-and-lock state.
Slaves asynchronously apply write operations from the master. These operations are stored in the master's oplog. The oplog is finite in length. If a
slave is too far behind, a full resync will be necessary. See the Halted Replication page.
See Also
Replica Sets
Despite the example shown here, it is better, simpler, and generally recommended to have multiple mongod --slave
processes on a single box than to have one process pull from multiple masters.
A few notes:
$ # configure slave
$ ./mongo localhost:27022
> use local
> db.sources.insert({host:"localhost:27020"})
> db.sources.insert({host:"localhost:27021"})
> db.sources.find()
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b8ecfac0cb095ca52b62949"), "host" : "localhost:27020" }
{ "_id" : ObjectId("4b8ecfc30cb095ca52b6294a"), "host" : "localhost:27021" }
Replica Pairs
Setup of Replica Pairs
Consistency
Security
Replacing a Replica Pair Server
Querying the slave
What is and when should you use an arbiter?
Working with an existing (non-paired) database
See Also
Replica Sets will soon replace replica pairs. If you are just now setting up an instance, you may want to wait for that and use
master/slave replication in the meantime.
Mongo supports a concept of replica pairs. These databases automatically coordinate which is the master and which is the slave at a given point
in time.
At startup, the databases will negotiate which is master and which is slave. Upon an outage of one database server, the other will automatically
take over and become master from that point on. In the event of another failure in the future, master status would transfer back to the other
server. The databases manage this themselves internally.
Note: Generally, start with empty /data/db directories for each pair member when creating and running the pair for the first time. See section on
Existing Databases below for more information.
where
remoteserver is the hostname of the other server in the pair. Append :port to the server hostname if you wish to run on a
nonstandard port number.
arbiterserver is the hostname (and optional port number) of an arbiter. An arbiter is a Mongo database server that helps negotiate
which member of the pair is master at a given point in time. Run the arbiter on a third machine; it is a "tie-breaker" effectively in
determining which server is master when the members of the pair cannot contact each other. You may also run with no arbiter by not
including the --arbiter option. In that case, both servers will assume master status if the network partitions.
$ ./mongo
> db.$cmd.findOne({ismaster:1});
{ "ismaster" : 0.0 , "remote" : "192.168.58.1:30001" , "ok" : 1.0 }
(Note: When security is on, remote is only returned if the connection is authenticated for the admin database.)
However, Mongo drivers with replica pair support normally manage this process for you.
Consistency
Members of a pair are only eventually consistent on a failover. If machine L of the pair was master and fails, its last couple seconds of operations
may not have made it to R - R will not have those operations applied to its dataset until L recovers later.
Security
When one of the servers in a Mongo replica pair set fails, should it come back online, the system recovers automatically. However, should a
machine completely fail, it will need to be replaced, and its replacement will begin with no data. The following procedure explains how to replace
one of the machines in a pair.
Let's assume nodes (n1, n2) is the old pair and that n2 dies. We want to switch to (n1,n3).
1. If possible, assure the dead n2 is offline and will not come back online: otherwise it may try communicating with its old pair partner.
2. We need to tell n1 to pair with n3 instead of n2. We do this with a replacepeer command. Be sure to check for a successful return
value from this operation.
Note that n3 will not accept any operations as "master" until fully synced with n1, and that this may take some time if there is a
substantial amount of data on n1.
You can query the slave if you set the slave ok flag. In the shell:
db.getMongo().setSlaveOk()
The arbiter is used in some situations to determine which side of a pair is master. In the event of a network partition (left and right are both up, but
can't communicate) whoever can talk to the arbiter becomes master.
If your left and right server are on the same switch, an arbiter isn't necessary. If you're running on the same ec2 availability zone, probably not
needed as well. But if you've got left and right on different ec2 availability zones, then an arbiter should be used.
Care must be taken when enabling a pair for the first time if you have existing datafiles you wish to use that were created from a singleton
database. Follow the following procedure to start the pair. Below, we call the two servers "left" and "right".
If both left and right servers have datafiles in their dbpath directories at pair initiation, errors will occur. Further, you do not want a local database
(which contains replication metadata) during initiation of a new pair.
See Also
To configure master-master, simply run both databases with both the --master and --slave parameters. For example, to set up this configuration
on a single machine as a test one might run:
$ nohup mongod --dbpath /data1/db --port 27017 --master --slave --source localhost:27018 > /tmp/dblog1
&
$ nohup mongod --dbpath /data2/db --port 27018 --master --slave --source localhost:27017 > /tmp/dblog2
&
concurrent updates of single object may occur (including $inc and other updates)
> db.foo.insert({x:7});
> z.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab917d7c50e4c10591ce3b6") , "x" : 7}
> db.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab917d7c50e4c10591ce3b6") , "x" : 7}
> db.foo.insert({x:8})
> db.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab917d7c50e4c10591ce3b6") , "x" : 7}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab9182a938798896fd8a906") , "x" : 8}
> z.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab917d7c50e4c10591ce3b6") , "x" : 7}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab9182a938798896fd8a906") , "x" : 8}
> z.foo.save({x:9})
> z.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab917d7c50e4c10591ce3b6") , "x" : 7}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab9182a938798896fd8a906") , "x" : 8}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab9188ac50e4c10591ce3b7") , "x" : 9}
> db.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab917d7c50e4c10591ce3b6") , "x" : 7}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab9182a938798896fd8a906") , "x" : 8}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab9188ac50e4c10591ce3b7") , "x" : 9}
> z.foo.remove({x:8})
> db.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab917d7c50e4c10591ce3b6") , "x" : 7}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab9188ac50e4c10591ce3b7") , "x" : 9}
> z.foo.find()
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab917d7c50e4c10591ce3b6") , "x" : 7}
{"_id" : ObjectId( "4ab9188ac50e4c10591ce3b7") , "x" : 9}
> db.foo.drop()
{"nIndexesWas" : 1 , "msg" : "all indexes deleted for collection" , "ns" : "test.foo" , "ok" : 1}
> db.foo.find()
> z.foo.find()
>
The length of the oplog is important if a secondary is down. The larger the log, the longer the secondary can be down and still recover. Once the
oplog has exceeded the downtime of the secondary, there is no way for the secondary to apply the operations; it will then have to do a full
synchronization of the data from the primary.
By default, on 64 bit builds, oplogs are quite large - perhaps 5% of disk space. Generally this is a reasonable setting.
The mongod --oplogSize command line parameter sets the size of the oplog.
See also
Halted Replication
These instructions are for master/slave replication. For replica sets, see Resyncing a Very Stale Replica Set Member instead.
If you're running mongod with master-slave replication, there are certain scenarios where the slave will halt replication because it hasn't kept up
with the master's oplog.
The first is when a slave is prevented from replicating for an extended period of time, due perhaps to a network partition or the killing of the slave
process itself. The best solution in this case is to resyc the slave. To do this, open the mongo shell and point it at the slave:
$ mongo <slave_host_and_port>
This will force a full resync of all data (which will be very slow on a large database). The same effect can be achieve dby stopping mongod on the
slave, delete all slave datafiles, and restarting it.
Since the oplog is a capped collection, it's allocated to a fixed size; this means that as more data is entered, the collection will loop around and
overwrite itself instead of growing beyond its pre-allocated size. If the slave can't keep up with this process, then replication will be halted. The
solution is to increase the size of the master's oplog. There are a couple of ways to do this, depending on how big your oplog will be and how
much downtime you can stand. But first you need to figure out how big an oplog you need.
If the current oplog size is wrong, how do you figure out what's right? The goal is not to let the oplog age out in the time it takes to clone the
database. The first step is to print the replication info. On the master node, run this command:
> db.printReplicationInfo();
This indicates that you're adding data to the database at a rate of 524MB/hr. If an initial clone takes 10 hours, then the oplog should be at least
5240MB, so something closer to 8GB would make for a safe bet.
The standard way of changing the oplog size involves stopping the mongod master, deleting the local.* oplog datafiles, and then restarting with
the oplog size you need, measured in MB:
$ # Stop mongod - killall mongod or kill -2 or ctrl-c) - then:
$ rm /data/db/local.*
$ mongod --oplog=8038 --master
Once you've changed the oplog size, restart with slave with --autoresync:
This method of oplog creation might pose a problem if you need a large oplog (say, > 10GB), since the time it takes mongod to pre-allocate the
oplog files may mean too much downtime. If this is the case, read on.
An alternative approach is to create the oplog files manually before shutting down mongod. Suppose you need an 20GB oplog; here's how you'd
go about creating the files:
cd /tmp/local
for i in {0..9}
do
echo $i
head -c 2146435072 /dev/zero > local.$i
done
Note that the datafiles aren't exactly 2GB due MongoDB's max int size.
3. Shut down the mongod master (kill -2) and then replace the oplog files:
$ mv /data/db/local.* /safe/place
$ mv /tmp/local/* /data/db/
5. Finally, resync the slave. This can be done by shutting down the slave, deleting all its datafiles, and restarting it.
Sharding
MongoDB scales horizontally via an auto-sharding architecture.
Sharding offers:
*Sharding will be production-ready in MongoDB v1.6, estimated to be released in Aug 6th, 2010. * Please see the limitations page for progress
updates and current restrictions.
Documentation
1. What Is Sharding?
Here we provide an introduction to MongoDB's auto-sharding, highlighting its philosophy, use cases, and its core components.
3. Sharding Internals
Auto-Sharding implementation details.
5. FAQ
Common questions.
Sharding Introduction
MongoDB supports an automated sharding architecture, enabling horizontal scaling across multiple nodes. For applications that outgrow the
resources of a single database server, MongoDB can convert to a sharded cluster, automatically managing failover and balancing of nodes, with
few or no changes to the original application code.
This document explains MongoDB's auto-sharding approach to scalability in detail and provides an architectural overview of the various
components that enable it.
Since auto-sharding as of the 1.5.x branch is still alpha, be sure to acquaint yourself with the current limitations.
MongoDB's Auto-Sharding
Sharding in a Nutshell
Balancing and Failover
Scaling Model
Architectural Overview
Shards
Shard Keys
Chunks
Config Servers
Routing Processes
Operation Types
Server Layout
Configuration
MongoDB's Auto-Sharding
Sharding in a Nutshell
Sharding is the partitioning of data among multiple machines in an order-preserving manner. To take an example, let's imagine sharding a
collection of users by their state of residence. If we designate three machines as our shard servers, the first of those machines might contain
users from Alaska to Kansas, the second from Kentucky to New York, and the third from North Carolina to Wyoming.
Our application connects to the sharded cluster through a mongos process, which routes operations to the appropriate shard(s). In this way, the
sharded MongoDB cluster continues to look like a single-node database system to our application. But the system's capacity is greatly enhanced.
If our users collection receives heavy writes, those writes are now distributed across three shard servers. Queries continue to be efficient, as
well, because they too are distributed. And since the documents are organized in an order-preserving manner, any operations specifying the state
of residence will be routed only to those nodes containing that state.
Sharding occurs on a per-collection basis, not on the database as a whole. This makes sense since, as our application grows, certain collections
will grow much larger than others. For instance, if we were building a service like Twitter, our collection of tweets would likely be several orders of
magnitude larger than the next biggest collection. The size and throughput demands of such a collection would be prime for sharding, whereas
smaller collections would still live on a single server. In the context on MongoDB's sharded architecture, non-sharded collections will reside on just
one of the sharded nodes.
A sharded architecture needs to handle balancing and failover. Balancing is necessary when the load on any one shard node grows out of
proportion with the remaining nodes. In this situation, the data must be redistributed to equalize load across shards. A good portion of the work
being applied to the 1.5.x branch is devoted to auto-balancing.
Automated failover is also quite important since proper system functioning requires that each shard node be always online. In practice, this means
that each shard consists of more than one machine in a configuration known as a replica set. A replica set is a set of n servers, frequently three or
more, each of which contains a replica of the entire data set for the given shard. One of the n servers in a replica set will always be master. If the
master replica fails, the remaining replicas are capable of electing a new master. Thus is automated failover provided for the individual shard.
Replica sets are another focus of development in 1.5.x. See the documentation on replica sets for more details.
Scaling Model
MongoDB's auto-sharding scaling model shares many similarities with Yahoo's PNUTS and Google's BigTable. Readers interested in detailed
discussions of distributed databases using order-preserving partitioning are encouraged to look at the PNUTS and BigTable white papers.
Architectural Overview
A MongoDB shard cluster consists of two or more shards, one or more config servers, and any number of routing processes to which the
application servers connect. Each of these components is described below in detail.
Shards
Each shard consists of one or more servers and stores data using mongod processes (mongod being the core MongoDB database process). In a
production situation, each shard will consist of multiple replicated servers per shard to ensure availability and automated failover. The set of
servers/mongod process within the shard comprise a replica set.
Replica sets, as discussed earlier, represent an improved version of MongoDB's replication (SERVER-557).
For testing, you can use sharding with a single mongod instance per shard. If you need redundancy, use one or more slaves for each shard's
mongod master. This configuration will require manual failover until replica sets become available.
Shard Keys
To partition a collection, we specify a shard key pattern. This pattern is similar to the key pattern used to define an index; it names one or more
fields to define the key upon which we distribute data. Some example shard key patterns include the following:
{ state : 1 }
{ name : 1 }
{ _id : 1 }
{ lastname : 1, firstname : 1 }
{ tag : 1, timestamp : -1 }
MongoDB's sharding is order-preserving; adjacent data by shard key tends to be on the same server. The config database stores all the metadata
indicating the location of data by range:
Chunks
A chunk is a contiguous range of data from a particular collection. Chunks are described as a triple of collection, minKey, and maxKey.
Thus, the shard key K of a given document assigns that document to the chunk where minKey <= K < maxKey.
Chunks grow to a maximum size, usually 200MB. Once a chunk has reached that approximate size, the chunk splits into two new chunks. When
a particular shard has excess data, chunks will then migrate to other shards in the system. The addition of a new shard will also influence the
migration of chunks.
When choosing a shard key, keep in mind that these values should be granular enough to ensure an even distribution of data. For instance, in the
above example, where we're sharding on name, we have to be careful that we don't have a disproportionate number of users with the same
name. In that case, the individual chunk can become too large and find itself unable to split, e.g., where the entire range comprises just a single
key.
Thus, if it's possible that a single value within the shard key range might grow exceptionally large, it's best to use a compound shard key instead
so that further discrimination of the values will be possible.
Config Servers
The config servers store the cluster's metadata, which includes basic information on each shard server and the chunks contained therein.
Chunk information is the main data stored by the config servers. Each config server has a complete copy of all chunk information. A two-phase
commit is used to ensure the consistency of the configuration data among the config servers.
If any of the config servers is down, the cluster's meta-data goes read only. However, even in such a failure state, the MongoDB cluster can still
be read from and written to.
Routing Processes
The mongos process can be thought of as a routing and coordination process that makes the various components of the cluster look like a single
system. When receiving client requests, the mongos process routes the request to the appropriate server(s) and merges any results to be sent
back to the client.
mongos processes have no persistent state; rather, they pull their state from the config server on startup. Any changes that occur on the the
config servers are propagated to each mongos process.
mongos processes can run on any server desired. They may be run on the shard servers themselves, but are lightweight enough to exist on each
application server. There are no limits on the number of mongos processes that can be run simultaneously since these processes do not
coordinate between one another.
Operation Types
Operations on a sharded system fall into one of two categories: global and targeted.
For targeted operations, mongos communicates with a very small number of shards -- often a single shard. Such targeted operations are quite
efficient.
Global operations involve the mongos process reaching out to all (or most) shards in the system.
The following table shows various operations and their type. For the examples below, assume a shard key of { x : 1 }.
db.foo.remove( { age : 40 } )
db.getLastError()
db.foo.ensureIndex(...) Global
Server Layout
Machines may be organized in a variety of fashions. For instance, it's possible to have separate machines for each config server process,
mongos process, and mongod process. However, this can be overkill since the load is almost certainly low on the config servers. Here, then, is
an example where some sharing of physical machines is used to lay out a cluster.
Yet more configurations are imaginable, especially when it comes to mongos. For example, it's possible to run mongos processes on all of
servers 1-6. Alternatively, as suggested earlier, the mongos processes can exists on each application server (server 7). There is some potential
benefit to this configuration, as the communications between app server and mongos then can occur over the localhost interface.
Configuration
Sharding becomes a bit easier to understand one you've set it up. It's even possible to set up a sharded cluster on a single machine. To try it for
yourself, see the configuration docs.
Configuring Sharding
Introduction
This document describes the steps involved in setting up a basic sharding cluster. A sharding cluster requires, at minimum, three components:
For testing purposes, it's possible to start all the required processes on a single server, whereas in a production situation, a number of server
configurations are possible.
Once the shards, config servers, and mongos processes are running, configuration is simply a matter of issuing a series of commands to
establish the various shards as being part of the cluster. Once the cluster has been established, you can begin sharding individual collections.
This document is fairly detailed; if you're the kind of person who prefers a terse, code-only explanation, see the sample shard configuration. If
you'd like a quick script to set up a test cluster on a single machine, we have a python sharding script that can do the trick.
Introduction
1. Sharding Components
Shard Servers
Config Servers
mongos Router
2. Configuring the Shard Cluster
Adding shards
Optional Parameters
Listing shards
Removing a shard
Enabling Sharding on a Database
3. Sharding a Collection
Relevant Examples and Docs
1. Sharding Components
First, start the individual shards, config servers, and mongos processes.
Shard Servers
Run mongod on the shard servers. Use the --shardsvr command line parameter to indicate this mongod is a shard. For auto failover support,
replica sets will be required. See replica sets for more info.
To get started with a simple test, we recommend running a single mongod process per shard, as a test configuration doesn't demand automated
failover.
Config Servers
Run mongod on the config server(s) with the --configsvr command line parameter. If the config servers are running on a shared machine, be sure
to provide a separate dbpath for the config data (--dbpath command line parameter).
mongos Router
Run mongos on the servers of your choice. Specify the --configdb parameter to indicate location of the config database(s).
Once the shard components are running, issue the sharding commands. You may want to automate or record your steps below in a .js file for
replay in the shell when needed.
Start by connecting to one of the mongos processes, and then switch to the admin database before issuing any commands.
Keep in mind that once these commands are run, the configuration data will be persisted to the config servers. So, regardless of the number of
mongos processes you've launched, you'll only need run these commands on one of those processes.
You can connect to the admin database via mongos like so:
./mongo <mongos-hostname>:<mongos-port>/admin
> db
admin
Adding shards
Each shard can consist of more than one server (see replica sets); however, for testing, only a single server with one mongod instance need be
used.
You must explicitly add each shard to the cluster's configuration using the addshard command:
If the individual shards consist of replica sets, they can be added by specifying replicaSetName
/<serverhostname>[:port][,serverhostname2[:port],...], where at least one server in the replica set is given.
Optional Parameters
name
Each shard has a name, which can be specified using the name option. If no name is given, one will be assigned automatically.
maxSize
The addshard command accepts an optional maxSize parameter. This parameter lets you tell the system a maximum amount of disk space in
megabytes to use on the specified shard. If unspecified, the system will use the entire disk. maxSize is useful when you have machines with
different disk capacities or when you want to prevent storage of too much data on a particular shard.
As an example:
Listing shards
This way, you can verify that all the shard have been committed to the system.
Removing a shard
Before a shard can be removed, we have to make sure that all the chunks and databases that once lived there were relocated to other shards.
The 'removeshard' command takes care of "draining" the chunks out of a shard for us. To start the shard removal, you can issue the command
That will put the shard in "draining mode". Its chunks are going to be moved away slowly over time, so not to cause any disturbance to a running
system. The command will return right away but the draining task will continue on the background. If you issue the command again during it, you'll
get a progress report instead:
Whereas the chunks will be removed automatically from that shard, the databases hosted there will need to be moved manually. (This has to do
with a current limitation that will go away eventually):
When the shard is empty, you could issue the 'removeshard' command again and that will clean up all metadata information:
After the 'removeshard' command reported being done with that shard, you can take that process down.
Once you've added the various shards, you can enable sharding on a database. This is an important step; without it, all collection in the database
will be stored on the same shard.
Once enabled, mongos will place different collections for the database on different shards, with the caveat that each collection will still exists on
one shard only. To enable real partitioning of data, we have to shard an individual collection.
3. Sharding a Collection
Use the shardcollection command to shard a collection. When you shard a collection, you must specify the shard key. If there is data in the
collection, mongo will require an index to be create upfront (it speeds up the chunking process) otherwise an index will be automatically created
for you.
For example, let's assume we want to shard a GridFS chunks collection stored in the test database. We'd want to shard on the files_id key,
so we'd invoke the shardcollection command like so:
One note: a sharded collection can have only one unique index, which must exist on the shard key. No other unique indexes can exist on the
collection.
Of course, a unique shard key wouldn't make sense on the GridFS chunks collection. But it'd be practically a necessity for a users collection
sharded on email address:
Examples
Docs
Sharding Administration
Notes on TCP Port Numbers
$ mkdir /data/db/config
$ ./mongod --configsvr --dbpath /data/db/config --port 20000 > /tmp/configdb.log &
$ cat /tmp/configdb.log
$ ./mongos --configdb localhost:20000 > /tmp/mongos.log &
$ cat /tmp/mongos.log
mongos does not require a data directory, it gets its information from the config server.
In a real production setup, mongod's, mongos's and configs would live on different machines. The use of hostnames or IP
addresses is mandatory in that case. 'localhost' appearance here is merely illustrative – but fully functional – and should be
confined to single-machine, testing scenarios only.
You can toy with sharding by using a small --chunkSize, e.g. 1MB. This is more satisfying when you're playing around, as you won't have to
insert 200MB of documents before you start seeing them moving around. It should not be used in production.
We need to run a few commands on the shell to hook everything up. Start the shell, connecting to the mongos process (at localhost:27017 if you
followed the steps above).
To set up our cluster, we'll add the two shards (a and b).
$ ./mongo
MongoDB shell version: 1.6.0
connecting to: test
> use admin
switched to db admin
> db.runCommand( { addshard : "localhost:10000" } )
{ "shardadded" : "shard0000", "ok" : 1 }
> db.runCommand( { addshard : "localhost:10001" } )
{ "shardadded" : "shard0001", "ok" : 1 }
Now you need to tell the database that you want to spread out your data at a database and collection level. You have to give the collection a key
(or keys) to partition by.
This is similar to creating an index on a collection.
Administration
To see what's going on in the cluster, use the config database.
Sharding is a new feature introduced at the 1.6.0 release. This page assumes your non-sharded mongod is on that release.
If you haven't changed the mongod default port, it would be using port 27017. You care about this now because a mongo shell will always try to
connect to it by default. But in a sharded environment, you want your shell to connect to a mongos instead.
If the port 27017 is taken by a mongod process, you'd need to bring up the mongos in a different port. Assuming that port is 30000 you can
connect your shell to it by issuing:
$ mongo <mongos-host-address>:30000/admin
We're switching directly to the admin database on the mongos process. That's where we will be able to issue the following command
The host address and port you see on the command are the original mongod's. All the databases of that process were added to the cluster and
are accessible now through mongos.
You should stop accessing the former stand-alone mongod directly and should have all the clients connect to a mongos process, just as we've
been doing here.
Sharding a collection
All the databases of your mongod-process-turned-shard can be chunked and balanced among the cluster's shards. The commands and examples
to do so are listed at the
Configuring Sharding page. Note that a chunk size defaults to 200MB in version 1.6.0, so if you want to change that – for testing purposes, say –
you would do so by starting the mongos process with the additional --chunkSize parameter.
You should pay attention to the host addresses and ports when upgrading, is all.
Again, if you haven't changed the default ports of your mongod process, it would be listening on 27017, which is the port that mongos would try to
bind by default, too.
Sharding Administration
Here we present a list of useful commands for obtaining information about a sharding cluster.
Here we query the config database, albeit through mongos. The getSisterDB command is used to return the config database.
databases:
{ "name" : "admin", "partitioned" : false,
"primary" : "localhost:20001",
"_id" : ObjectId("4bd9add2c0302e394c6844b6") }
my chunks
Notice the output to the printShardingStatus command. First, we see the locations the the three shards comprising the cluster. Next, the
various databases living on the cluster are displayed.
The first database shown is the admin database, which has not bee partitioned. The primary field indicates the location of the database, which, in
the case of the admin database, is on the config server running on port 20001.
The second database is partitioned, and it's easy to see the shard key and the location and ranges of chunks comprising the partition. Since
there's no data in the foo database, only a single chunk exists. That single chunk includes the entire range of possible shard keys.
Chunk Operations
MongoDB v1.6 will managing the arrangement chunks automatically. However, it may be desirable to move a chunk manually; here's the
command to do that:
Parameters:
This document describes the various potential failure scenarios of components within a shard cluster, and how failure is handled in each situation.
One mongos routing process will be run on each application server, and that server will communicate to the cluster exclusively through the
mongos process. mongos process aren't persistent; rather, they gather all necessary config data on startup from the config server.
This means that the failure of any one application server will have no effect on the shard cluster as a whole, and all other application servers will
continue to function normally. Recovery is simply a matter starting up a new app server and mongos process.
Replica sets will be available as of MongoDB v1.6. Read more about replica set internals or follow the jira issue.
If all replicas within a shard are down, the data within that shard will be unavailable. However, operations that can be resolved at other shards will
continue to work properly. See the documentation on global and targeted operations to see why this is so.
If the shard is configured as a replica set, with at least one member of the set in another data center, then an outage of an ensure shard is
extremely unlikely. This will be the recommended configuration for maximum redundancy.
A production shard cluster will have three config server processes, each existing on a separate machine. Writes to config servers use a
two-phase commit to ensure an atomic and replicated transaction of the shard cluster's metadata.
On the failure of any one config server, the system's metadata becomes read-only. The system will continue to function, but chunks will be unable
to split within a single shard or migrate across shards. For most use cases, this will present few problems, since changes to the chunk metadata
will be infrequent.
That said, it will be important that the down config server be restored in a reasonable time period (say, a day) so that shards do not become
unbalanced due to lack of migrates (again, for many production situations, this may not be an urgent matter).
Sharding Limits
$where
$where works with sharding. However do not reference the db object from the $where function (one normally does not do this anyway).
db.eval
db.eval() may not be used with sharded collections. However, you may use db.eval() if the evaluation function accesses unsharded collections
within your database. Use map/reduce in sharded environments.
getPrevError
getPrevError is unsupported for sharded databases, and may remain so in future releases (TBD). Let us know if this causes a problem for you.
Unique Indexes
For a sharded collection, you may only (optionally) specify a unique constraint on the shard key. Other secondary indexes work (via a global
operation) as long as no unique constraint is specified.
Counts
Count is supported with sharding; however, a "count all in collection" will not be instantaneous for a sharded collection as it is for an unsharded
collection.
Scale Limits
Goal is support of systems of up to 1,000 shards. Testing so far has been limited to clusters with a modest number of shards (e.g., 20). More
information will be reported here later on any scaling limitations which are encountered.
MongoDB sharding supports two styles of operations -- targeted and global. On giant systems, global operations will be of less applicability.
Sharding Internals
This section includes internal implementation details for MongoDB auto sharding. See also the main sharding documentation.
Note: some internals docs could be out of date -- if you see that let us know so we can fix.
Internals
Moving Chunks
Sharding Config Schema
Sharding Design
Sharding Use Cases
Shard Ownership
Splitting Chunks
Unit Tests
Moving Chunks
inc version
try to set on from
if set is successful, have it "locked"
start transfer
finish transfer
commit result
Collections
version
> db.getCollection("version").findOne()
{ "_id" : 1, "version" : 2 }
settings
> db.settings.find()
{ "_id" : "chunksize", "value" : 200 }
{ "_id" : "balancer", "who" : "ubuntu:27017", "x" : ObjectId("4bd0cb39503139ae28630ee9") }
shards
> db.shards.findOne()
{ "_id" : "shard0", "host" : "localhost:30001" }
databases
{
"_id" : "admin",
"partitioned" : false,
"primary" : "localhost:20001"
}
chunks
{
"_id" : "test.foo-x_MinKey",
"lastmod" : {
"t" : 1271946858000,
"i" : 1
},
"ns" : "test.foo",
"min" : {
"x" : { $minKey : 1 }
},
"max" : {
"x" : { $maxKey : 1 }
},
"shard" : "localhost:30002"
}
mongos
Record of all mongos affiliated with this cluster. mongos will ping every 30 seconds so we know who is alive.
> db.mongos.findOne()
{
"_id" : "erh-wd1:27017",
"ping" : "Fri Apr 23 2010 11:08:39 GMT-0400 (EST)",
"up" : 30
}
changelog
Human readable log of all meta-data changes. Capped collection that defaults to 10mb.
> db.changelog.findOne()
{
"_id" : "erh-wd1-2010-3-21-17-24-0",
"server" : "erh-wd1",
"time" : "Wed Apr 21 2010 13:24:24 GMT-0400 (EST)",
"what" : "split",
"ns" : "test.foo",
"details" : {
"before" : {
"min" : {
"x" : { $minKey : 1 }
},
"max" : {
"x" : { $maxKey : 1 }
}
},
"left" : {
"min" : {
"x" : { $minKey : 1 }
},
"max" : {
"x" : 5
}
},
"right" : {
"min" : {
"x" : 5
},
"max" : {
"x" : { $maxKey : 1 }
}
}
}
}
Changes
Sharding Design
concepts
config database - the top level database that stores information about servers and where things live.
chunk - a region of data from a particular collection. A chunk can be though of as ( collectionname,fieldname,lowvalue,highvalue). The
range is inclusive on the low end and exclusive on the high end, i.e., [lowvalue,highvalue).
config database
config.servers - this contains all of the servers that the system has. These are logical servers. So for a replica pair, the entry would be
192.168.0.10,192.168.0.11
config.databases - all of the databases known to the system. This contains the primary server for a database, and information about
whether its partitioned or not.
config.shards - a list of all database shards. Each shard is a db pair, each of which runs a db process.
config.homes - specifies which shard is home for a given client db.
shard databases
client.system.chunklocations - the home shard for a given client db contains a client.system.chunklocations collection. this
collection lists where to find particular chunks; that is, it maps chunk->shard.
mongos process
"routes" request to proper db's, and performs merges. can have a couple per system, or can have 1 per client server.
gets chunk locations from the client db's home shard. load lazily to avoid using too much mem.
chunk information is cached by mongos. This information can be stale at a mongos (it is always up to date at the owning
shard; you cannot migrate an item if the owning shard is down). If so, the shard contacted will tell us so and we can then
retry to the proper location.
db operations
If a chunk is migrating and is 50MB, that might take 5-10 seconds which is too long for the chunk to be locked.
We could perform the migrate much like Cloner works,where we copy the objects and then apply all operations that happened during copying.
This way lock time is minimal.
Log Processing
massive sort
top N queries per day
compare data from two nonadjacent time periods
Shard Ownership
By shard ownership we mean which server owns a particular key range.
Contract
mongod
The mongod processes maintain a cache of shards the mongod instance owns:
map<ShardKey,state> ownership
missing - no element in the map means no information available. In such a situation we should query the config database to get the state.
1 - this instance owns the shard
0 - this instance does not own the shard (indicates we queried the config database and found another owner, and remembered that fact)
This is trivial: add the configuration to the config db. As the ShardKey is new, no nodes have any cached information.
The mongod instance A which owns the range R breaks it into R1,R2 which are still owned by it. It updates the config db. We take care to handle
the config db crashing or being unreachable on the split:
lock(R) on A
update the config db -- ideally atomically perhaps with eval(). await return code.
ownership[R].erase
unlock(R) on A
After the above the cache has no information on the R,R1,R2 ownerships, and will requery configdb on the next request. If the config db crashed
and failed to apply the operation, we are still consistent.
Migrate ownership of keyrange R from server A->B. We assume here that B is the coordinator of the job:
We clear the ownership maps first. That way, if the config db update fails, nothing bad happens, IF mongos filters data upon receipt for being in
the correct ranges (or in its query parameters).
R stays locked on A for the cleanup work, but as that shard no longer owns the range, this is not an issue even if slow. It stays locked for that
operation in case the shard were to quickly migrate back.
Typically we migrate a shard after a split. After certain split scenarios, a shard may be empty but we want to migrate it.
Splitting Chunks
Normally, splitting chunks is done automatically for you. Currently, the splits happen as a side effect of inserting (and are transparent). In the
future, there may be other cases where a chunk is automatically split.
A recently split chunk may be moved immediately to a new shard if the system finds that future insertions will benefit from that move. (Chunk
moves are transparent, too.)
Moreover, MongoDB has a sub-system called Balancer, which constantly monitors shards loads and, as you guessed, moves chunks around if it
finds an imbalance. Balancing chunks automatically helps incremental scalability. If you add a new shard to the system, some chunks will
eventually be moved to that shard to spread out the load.
That all being said, in certain circumstances one may need to force a split manually.
The Balancer will treat all chunks the same way, regardless if they were generated by a manual or an automatic split.
The following command splits the chunk where the _id 99 would reside using that key as the split point. Note that a key need not exist for a chunk
to use it in its range.
The following command splits the chunk where the _id 99 would reside in two. The key used as the middle key is computed internally to roughly
divide the chunk in equally sized parts.
Sharding FAQ
How does sharding work with replication?
Where do unsharded collections go if sharding is enabled for a database?
When will data be on more than one shard?
What happens if I try to update a document on a chunk that is being migrated?
What if a shard is down or slow and I do a query?
How do queries distribute across shards?
Now that I sharded my collection, how do I <...> (e.g. drop it)?
If I don't shard on _id how is it kept unique?
Why is all my data on one server?
Each shard is a logical collection of partitioned data. The shard could consist of a single server or a cluster of replicas. Typically in production one
would use a replica set for each shard.
In alpha 2 unsharded data goes to the "primary" for the database specified (query config.databases to see details). Future versions will parcel out
unsharded collections to different shards (that is, a collection could be on any shard, but will be on only a single shard if unsharded).
MongoDB sharding is range based. So all the objects in a collection get put into a chunk. Only when there is more than 1 chunk is there an option
for multiple shards to get data. Right now, the chunk size is 50mb, so you need at least 50mb for a migration to occur.
The update will go through immediately on the old shard, and then the change will be replicated to the new shard before ownership transfers.
If a shard is down, the query will return an error. If a shard is responding slowly, mongos will wait for it. You won't get partial results.
There are a few different cases to consider, depending on the query keys and the sort keys. Suppose 3 distinct attributes, X, Y, and Z, where X is
the shard key. A query that keys on X and sorts on X will translate straightforwardly to a series of queries against successive shards in X-order. A
query that keys on X and sorts on Y will execute in parallel on the appropriate shards, and perform a merge sort keyed on Y of the documents
found. A query that keys on Y must run on all shards: if the query sorts by X, the query will serialize over shards in X-order; if the query sorts by Z,
the query will parallelize over shards and perform a merge sort keyed on Z of the documents found.
Even if chunked, your data is still part of a collection and so all the collection commands apply.
If you don't use _id as the shard key then it is your responsibility to keep the _id unique. If you have duplicate _id values in your collection bad
things will happen (as mstearn says).
MongoDB sharding breaks data into chunks. By default, these chunks are 200mb. Sharding will keep chunks balanced across shards. This
means that you need many chunks to trigger balancing, typically 2gb of data or so. db.printShardingStatus() will tell you how many chunks you
have, typically need 10 to start balancing.
Hosting Center
Cloud-Style
MongoHQ provides cloud-style hosted MongoDB instances
Mongo Machine is currently in private beta
Dedicated Servers
ServerBeach offers preconfigured, dedicated MongoDB servers Blog
VPS
(mt) Media Temple's (ve) server platform is an excellent choice for easy MongoDB deployment.
Dreamhost offers instant configuration and deployment of MongoDB
LOCUM Hosting House is a project-oriented shared hosting and VDS. MongoDB is available for all customers as a part of their
subscription plan.
Amazon EC2
Instance Types
Linux
EC2 TCP Port Management
EBS Snapshotting
EBS vs. Local Drives
MongoDB runs well on Amazon EC2 . This page includes some notes in this regard.
Instance Types
MongoDB works on most EC2 types including Linux and Windows. We recommend you use a 64 bit instance as this is required for all MongoDB
databases of significant size. Additionally, we find that the larger instances tend to be on the freshest ec2 hardware.
Linux
One can download a binary or build from source. Generally it is easier to download a binary. We can download and run the binary without being
root. For example on 64 bit Linux:
Before running the database one should decide where to put datafiles. Run df -h to see volumes. On some images /mnt will be the many locally
attached storage volume. Alternatively you may want to use Elastic Block Store which will have a different mount point. Regardless, create a
directory in the desired location and then run the database:
mkdir /mnt/db
./mongod --fork --logpath ~/mongod.log --dbpath /mnt/db/
By default the database will now be listening on port 27017. The web administrative UI will be on port 28017.
EBS Snapshotting
v1.3.1+
If your datafiles are on an EBS volume, you can snapshot them for backups. Use the fsync lock command to lock the database to prevent writes.
Then, snapshot the volume. Then use the unlock command to allow writes to the database again. See the fsync documentation for more
information.
Local drives may be faster than EBS; however, they are impermanent. One strategy is to have a hot server which uses local drives and a slave
which uses EBS for storage.
We have seen sequential read rates by MongoDB from ebs (unstriped) of 400Mbps on an extra large instance box. (YMMV)
Joyent
The prebuilt MongoDB Solaris 64 binaries work with Joyent accelerators.
Some newer gcc libraries are required to run -- see sample setup session below.
$ # get mongodb
$ # note this is 'latest' you may want a different version
$ curl -O http://downloads.mongodb.org/sunos5/mongodb-sunos5-x86_64-latest.tgz
$ gzip -d mongodb-sunos5-x86_64-latest.tgz
$ tar -xf mongodb-sunos5-x86_64-latest.tar
$ mv "mongodb-sunos5-x86_64-2009-10-26" mongo
$ cd mongo
$ # get extra libraries we need (else you will get a libstdc++.so.6 dependency issue)
$ curl -O http://downloads.mongodb.org.s3.amazonaws.com/sunos5/mongo-extra-64.tgz
$ gzip -d mongo-extra-64.tgz
$ tar -xf mongo-extra-64.tar
$ # just as an example - you will really probably want to put these somewhere better:
$ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=mongo-extra-64
$ bin/mongod --help
Query Profiler
Http Console
db.serverStatus() from mongo shell
Trending/Monitoring Adaptors
Database Record/Replay
Admin UIs
Query Profiler
Http Console
The mongod process includes a simple diagnostic screen at http://localhost:28017/. See the Http Interface docs for more information.
> db.stats()
> db.serverStatus()
> db.foo.find().explain()
> help
> db.help()
> db.foo.help()
globalLock - totalTime & lockTime are total microsecs since startup that there has been a write lock
mem - current usage in megabytes
indexCounters - counters since startup, may rollover
opcounters - operation counters since startup
asserts - assert counters since startup
Trending/Monitoring Adaptors
Chris Lea from (mt) Media Temple has made an easy to install Ubuntu package for the munin plugin.
Database Record/Replay
Recording database operations, and replaying them later, is sometimes a good way to reproduce certain problems in a controlled environment.
To enable logging:
db._adminCommand( { diagLogging : 1 } )
To disable:
db._adminCommand( { diagLogging : 0 } )
> db.serverStatus()
mongod uses memory-mapped files; thus the memory stats in top are not that useful. On a large database, virtual bytes/VSIZE will tend to be the
size of the entire database, and if the server doesn't have other processes running, resident bytes/RSIZE will be the total memory of the machine
(as this counts file system cache contents).
Checking in Windows
Help, any Windows admin experts our there? What should be here?
(2 issues)
Key FixVersion Summary
SERVER-768 1.3.4 Memory leak and high memory usage from snapshots thread
SERVER-774 MessagingPorts are leaking
Database Profiler
Mongo includes a profiling tool to analyze the performance of database operations.
Enabling Profiling
> db.setProfilingLevel(2);
{"was" : 0 , "ok" : 1}
> db.getProfilingLevel()
2
0 - off
1 - log slow operations (>100ms)
2 - log all operations
Starting in 1.3.0, you can also enable on the command line, --profile=1
When profiling is enabling, there is continual writing to the system.profile table. This is very fast but does use a write lock which
has certain implications for concurrency.
Viewing
Profiling data is recorded in the database's system.profile collection. Query that collection to see the results.
> db.system.profile.find()
{"ts" : "Thu Jan 29 2009 15:19:32 GMT-0500 (EST)" , "info" : "query test.$cmd ntoreturn:1 reslen:66
nscanned:0 <br>query: { profile: 2 } nreturned:1 bytes:50" , "millis" : 0}
...
db.system.profile.find().sort({$natural:-1})
The mongo shell includes a helper to see the most recent 5 profiled events that took at least 1ms to execute. Type show profile at the command
prompt to use this feature.
reslen A large number of bytes returned (hundreds of kilobytes or more) causes slow performance. Consider passing
<code>find()</code> a second parameter of the member names you require.
Note: There is a cost for each index you create. The index causes disk writes on each insert and some updates to the collection. If a rare query,
it may be better to let the query be "slow" and not create an index. When a query is common relative to the number of saves to the collection, you
will want to create the index.
Examine the nscanned info field. If it is a very large value, the database is scanning a large number of objects to find the object to
update. Consider creating an index if updates are a high-frequency operation.
Use fast modify operations when possible (and usually with these, an index). See Updates.
Profiler Performance
Profile data is stored in the database's system.profile collection, which is a Capped Collection. By default it is set to a very small size and
thus only includes recent operations.
Configuring "Slow"
--slowms on the command line when starting mongod (or file config)
db.setProfilingLevel( level , slowms )
db.setProfilingLevel( 1 , 10 );
See Also
Optimization
explain()
Viewing and Terminating Current Operation
Http Interface
REST Interfaces
Sleepy Mongoose (Python)
MongoDB Rest (Node.js)
HTTP Console
HTTP Console Security
Simple REST Interface
JSON in the simple REST interface
See Also
REST Interfaces
Sleepy Mongoose is a full featured REST interface for MongoDB which is available as a separate project.
MongoDB Rest is an alpha REST interface to MongoDB, which uses the MongoDB Node Native driver.
HTTP Console
MongoDB provides a simple http interface listing information of interest to administrators. This interface may be accessed at the port with numeric
value 1000 more than the configured mongod port; the default port for the http interface is 28017. To access the http interface an administrator
may, for example, point a browser to http://localhost:28017 if mongod is running with the default port on the local machine.
Here is a description of the informational elements of the http interface:
element description
assertions any software assertions that have been raised by this mongod instance
# databases number of databases that have been accessed by this mongod instance
initialSyncCompleted whether this slave or repl pair node has completed an initial clone of the mongod instance it is replicating
DBTOP Displays the total time the mongod instance has devoted to each listed collection, as well as the percentage of available
time devoted to each listed collection recently and the number of reads, writes, and total calls made recently
If security is configured for a mongod instance, authentication is required for a client to access the http interface from another machine.
Simple REST Interface
The mongod process includes a simple read-only REST interface for convenience. For full REST capabilities we recommend using an external
tool such as Sleepy.Mongoose.
Note: in v1.3.4+ of MongoDB, this interface is disabled by default. Use --rest on the command line to enable.
http://127.0.0.1:28017/databaseName/collectionName/
To add a limit:
http://127.0.0.1:28017/databaseName/collectionName/?limit=-10
To skip:
http://127.0.0.1:28017/databaseName/collectionName/?skip=5
http://127.0.0.1:28017/databaseName/collectionName/?filter_a=1
http://127.0.0.1:28017/databaseName/collectionName/?filter_a=1&limit=-10
The simple ReST interface uses strict JSON (as opposed to the shell, which uses Dates, regular expressions, etc.). To display non-JSON types,
the web interface wraps them in objects and uses the key for the type. For example:
# dates
"date" : { "$date" : 1250609897802 }
# regular expressions
"match" : { "$regex" : "foo", "$options" : "ig" }
The code type has not been implemented yet and causes the DB to crash if you try to display it in the browser.
See Also
mongostat
Use the mongostat utility to quickly view statistics on a running mongod instance.
Fields:
inserts/s : # of inserts per second
query/s - # of queries per second
update/s - # of updates per second
delete/s - # of deletes per second
getmore/s - # of get mores (cursor batch) per second
command/s - # of commands per second
flushes/s - # of fsync flushes per second
mapped - amount of data mmaped (total data size) megabytes
visze - virtual size of process in megabytes
res - resident size of process in megabytes
faults/s - # of pages faults/sec (linux only)
locked - percent of time in global write lock
idx miss - percent of btree page misses (sampled)
q t|r|w - lock queue lengths (total|read|write)
conn - number of open connections
mongosniff
Unix releases of MongoDB include a utility called mongosniff. This utility is to MongoDB what tcpdump is to TCP/IP; that is, fairly low level and for
complex situations. The tool is quite useful for authors of driver tools.
$ ./mongosniff --help
Usage: mongosniff [--help] [--forward host:port] [--source (NET <interface> | FILE <filename>)]
[<port0> <port1> ...]
--forward Forward all parsed request messages to mongod instance at
specified host:port
--source Source of traffic to sniff, either a network interface or a
file containing perviously captured packets, in pcap format.
If no source is specified, mongosniff will attempt to sniff
from one of the machine's network interfaces.
<port0>... These parameters are used to filter sniffing. By default,
only port 27017 is sniffed.
--help Print this help message.
Building
mongosniff is including in the binaries for Unix distributions. The MongoDB SConstruct only builds mongosniff if libpcap is installed.
Example
To monitor localhost:27017, run ifconfig to find loopback's name (usually something like lo or lo0). Then run:
mongosniff --source NET lo
If you get the error message "error opening device: socket: Operation not permitted" or "error finding device: no suitable device found", try running
it as root.
Backups
Fsync, Write Lock and Backup
Shutdown and Backup
Exports
Slave Backup
Community Stuff
Several strategies exist for backing up MongoDB databases. A word of warning: it's not safe to back up the mongod data files (by default in
/data/db/) while the database is running and writes are occurring; such a backup may turn out to be corrupt. See the fsync option below for a way
around that.
MongoDB v1.3.1 and higher supports an fsync and lock command with which we can flush writes, lock the database to prevent writing, and then
backup the datafiles.
While in this locked mode, all writes will block. If this is a problem consider one of the other methods below.
For example, you could use LVM2 to create a snapshot after the fsync+lock, and then use that snapshot to do an offsite backup in the
background. This means that the server will only be locked while the snapshot is taken. Don't forget to unlock after the backup/snapshot is taken.
A simple approach is just to stop the database, back up the data files, and resume. This is safe but of course requires downtime.
Exports
The mongodump utility may be used to dump an entire database, even when the database is running and active. The dump can then be restored
later if needed.
Slave Backup
Another good technique for backups is replication to a slave database. The slave polls master continuously and thus always has a
nearly-up-to-date copy of master.
For methods 1 and 2, after the backup the slave will resume replication, applying any changes made to master in the meantime.
Using a slave is advantageous because we then always have backup database machine ready in case master fails (failover). But a slave also
gives us the chance to back up the full data set without affecting the performance of the master database.
Community Stuff
http://github.com/micahwedemeyer/automongobackup
This document refers to query snapshots. For backup snapshots of the database's datafiles, see the fsync lock page.
MongoDB does not support full point-in-time snapshotting. However, some functionality is available which is detailed below.
Cursors
A MongoDB query returns data as well as a cursor ID for additional lookups, should more data exist. Drivers lazily perform a "getMore" operation
as needed on the cursor to get more data. Cursors may have latent getMore accesses that occurs after an intervening write operation on the
database collection (i.e., an insert, update, or delete).
Conceptually, a cursor has a current position. If you delete the item at the current position, the cursor automatically skips its current position
forward to the next item.
Mongo DB cursors do not provide a snapshot: if other write operations occur during the life of your cursor, it is unspecified if your application will
see the results of those operations. In fact, it is even possible (although unlikely) to see the same object returned twice if the object were updated
and grew in size (and thus moved in the datafile). To assure no update duplications, use snapshot() mode (see below).
Snapshot Mode
snapshot() mode assures that objects which update during the lifetime of a query are returned once and only once. This is most important when
doing a find-and-update loop that changes the size of documents that are returned ($inc does not change size).
Even with snapshot mode, items inserted or deleted during the query may or may not be returned; that is, this mode is not a true point-in-time
snapshot.
Because snapshot mode traverses the _id index, it may not be used with sorting or explicit hints. It also cannot use any other index for the query.
You can get the same effect as snapshot by using any unique index on a field(s) that will not be modified (probably best to use explicit hint() too).
If you want to use a non-unique index (such as creation time), you can make it unique by appending _id to the index at creation time.
If you just want to do Clone Database from one server to another you don't need these tools.
These tool just work with the raw data (the documents in the collection); they do not save, or load, the metadata like the defined
indexes or (capped) collection properties. You will need to (re)create those yourself in a separate step, before loading that data.
Vote here to change this.
mongoimport
This utility takes a single file that contains 1 JSON/CSV/TSV string per line and inserts it. You have to specify a database and a collection.
options:
--help produce help message
-v [ --verbose ] be more verbose (include multiple times for more
verbosity e.g. -vvvvv)
-h [ --host ] arg mongo host to connect to ( "left,right" for pairs)
-d [ --db ] arg database to use
-c [ --collection ] arg collection to use (some commands)
-u [ --username ] arg username
-p [ --password ] arg password
--dbpath arg directly access mongod data files in the given path,
instead of connecting to a mongod instance - needs to
lock the data directory, so cannot be used if a
mongod is currently accessing the same path
--directoryperdb if dbpath specified, each db is in a separate
directory
-f [ --fields ] arg comma seperated list of field names e.g. -f name,age
--fieldFile arg file with fields names - 1 per line
--ignoreBlanks if given, empty fields in csv and tsv will be ignored
--type arg type of file to import. default: json (json,csv,tsv)
--file arg file to import from; if not specified stdin is used
--drop drop collection first
--headerline CSV,TSV only - use first line as headers
mongoexport
This utility takes a collection and exports to either JSON or CSV. You can specify a filter for the query, or a list of fields to output.
Neither JSON nor TSV/CSV can represent all data types. Please be careful not to lose or change data (types) when using this.
For full fidelity please use mongodump.
If you want to output CSV, you have to specify the fields in the order you want them.
Example
options:
--help produce help message
-v [ --verbose ] be more verbose (include multiple times for more
verbosity e.g. -vvvvv)
-h [ --host ] arg mongo host to connect to ( "left,right" for pairs)
-d [ --db ] arg database to use
-c [ --collection ] arg collection to use (some commands)
-u [ --username ] arg username
-p [ --password ] arg password
--dbpath arg directly access mongod data files in the given path,
instead of connecting to a mongod instance - needs to
lock the data directory, so cannot be used if a
mongod is currently accessing the same path
--directoryperdb if dbpath specified, each db is in a separate
directory
-q [ --query ] arg query filter, as a JSON string
-f [ --fields ] arg comma seperated list of field names e.g. -f name,age
--csv export to csv instead of json
-o [ --out ] arg output file; if not specified, stdout is used
mongodump
This takes a database and outputs it in a binary representation. This is mostly used for doing hot backups of a database.
If you're using sharding and try to migrate data this way, this will dump shard configuration information and overwrite
configurations upon restore.
options:
--help produce help message
-v [ --verbose ] be more verbose (include multiple times for more
verbosity e.g. -vvvvv)
-h [ --host ] arg mongo host to connect to ( "left,right" for pairs)
-d [ --db ] arg database to use
-c [ --collection ] arg collection to use (some commands)
-u [ --username ] arg username
-p [ --password ] arg password
--dbpath arg directly access mongod data files in the given path,
instead of connecting to a mongod instance - needs
to lock the data directory, so cannot be used if a
mongod is currently accessing the same path
--directoryperdb if dbpath specified, each db is in a separate
directory
-o [ --out ] arg (=dump) output directory
To dump all of the collections in all of the databases, run mongodump with just the --host:
If you're running mongod locally on the default port, you can just do:
$ ./mongodump
If we just want to dump a single collection, we can specify it and get a single .bson file.
In version 1.7.0+, you can use stdout instead of a file by specifying --out stdout:
mongorestore
bsondump
Added in 1.6
The v1.8 release of MongoDB will have single server durability. You can follow the Jira here : http://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SERVER-980.
We recommend using replication to keep copies of data for now – and likely forever – as a single server could fail catastrophically regardless.
Repair Command
There is a bug with repair and replica sets in MongoDB v1.6.0. Please see this Jira for information:
http://jira.mongodb.org/browse/SERVER-1614. Do NOT run repair without reading this first. This bug applies to 1.6.0 only. Will
be fixed in 1.6.1. In the meantime there are workarounds.
After a machine crash or or kill -9 termination, consider running the repairDatabase command. This command will check all data for
corruption, remove any corruption found, and compact data files a bit.
In the event of a hard crash, we recommend running a repair – analogous to running fsck. If a slave crashes, another option is just to restart the
slave from scratch.
mongod --repair
From the shell (you have to do for all dbs including local if you go this route):
> db.repairDatabase();
During a repair operation, mongod must store temporary files to disk. By default, mongod creates temporary directories under the dbpath for this
purpose. Alternatively, the --repairpath command line option can be used to specify a base directory for temporary repair files.
Note that repair is a slow operation which inspects the entire database.
If the databases exited uncleanly and you attempt to restart the database, mongod will print:
**************
old lock file: /data/db/mongod.lock. probably means unclean shutdown
recommend removing file and running --repair
see: http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/repair for more information
*************
Then it will exit. After running with --repair, mongod will start up normally.
Validate Command
Alternatively one could restart and run the validate command on select tables. The validate command checks if the contents of a collection are
valid.
> db.users.validate();
{
"ns" : "test.users",
"result" : " validate
details: 0x1243dbbdc ofs:740bdc
firstExtent:0:178b00 ns:test.users
lastExtent:0:178b00 ns:test.users
# extents:1
datasize?:44 nrecords?:1 lastExtentSize:8192
padding:1
first extent:
loc:0:178b00 xnext:null xprev:null
nsdiag:test.users
size:8192 firstRecord:0:178bb0 lastRecord:0:178bb0
1 objects found, nobj:1
60 bytes data w/headers
44 bytes data wout/headers
deletedList: 0000000010000000000
deleted: n: 1 size: 7956
nIndexes:2
test.users.$_id_ keys:1
test.users.$username_1 keys:1 ",
"ok" : 1,
"valid" : true,
"lastExtentSize" : 8192
}
Since 1.1.4, the --syncdelay option controls how often changes are flushed to disk (the default is 60 seconds). If replication is not being used, it
may be desirable to reduce this default.
See Also
One valid way to run the Mongo database is in a trusted environment, with no security and authentication (much like how one would use, say,
memcached). Of course, in such a configuration, one must be sure only trusted machines can access database TCP ports.
The current versions of sharding and replica sets requires trusted (nonsecure) mode.
Mongo Security
The current version of Mongo supports only very basic security. One authenticates a username and password in the context of a particular
database. Once authenticated, a normal user has full read and write access to the database in question while a read only user only has read
access.
The admin database is special. In addition to several commands that are administrative being possible only on admin, authentication on admin
gives one read and write access to all databases on the server. Effectively, admin access means root access to the server process.
Run the database (mongod process) with the --auth option to enable security. You must either have added a user to the admin db before
starting the server with --auth, or add the first user from the localhost interface.
We should first configure an administrator user for the entire db server process. This user is stored under the special admin database.
If no users are configured in admin.system.users, one may access the database from the localhost interface without authenticating. Thus,
from the server running the database (and thus on localhost), run the database shell and configure an administrative user:
$ ./mongo
> use admin
> db.addUser("theadmin", "anadminpassword")
We now have a user created for database admin. Note that if we have not previously authenticated, we now must if we wish to perform further
operations, as there is a user in admin.system.users.
We can view existing users for the database with the command:
> db.system.users.find()
Changing Passwords
The shell addUser command may also be used to update a password: if the user already exists, the password simply updates.
Many Mongo drivers provide a helper function equivalent to the db shell's addUser method.
Deleting Users
To delete a user:
Admin UIs
Several administrative user interfaces, or GUIs, are available for MongoDB. Tim Gourley's blog has a good summary of the tools.
Fang of Mongo
Futon4Mongo
Mongo3
MongoHub
MongoVUE
Mongui
Myngo
Opricot
PHPMoAdmin
RockMongo
Details
Fang of Mongo
A web-based user interface for MongoDB build with django and jquery.
It will allow you to explore content of mongodb with simple but (hopefully) pleasant user interface.
Features:
field name autocompletion in query builder
data loading indicator
human friendly collection stats
disabling collection windows when there is no collection selected
twitter stream plugin
many more minor usability fixes
works well on recent chrome and firefox
MongoHub
MongoVUE
Opricot is a hybrid GUI/CLI/Scripting web frontend implemented in PHP to manage your MongoDB servers and databases. Use as a
point-and-click adventure for basic tasks, utilize scripting for automated processing or repetitive things.
Opricot combines the following components to create a fully featured administration tool:
An interactive console that allows you to either work with the database through the UI, or by using custom Javascript.
A set of simple commands that wrap the Javascript driver, and provide an easy way to complete the most common tasks.
Javascript driver for Mongo that works on the browser and talks with the AJAX interface.
Simple server-side AJAX interface for communicating with the MongoDB server (currently available for PHP).
PHPMoAdmin
PHPMoAdmin is a MongoDB administration tool for PHP built on a stripped-down version of the Vork high-performance framework.
Nothing to configure - place the moadmin.php file anywhere on your web site and it just works!
Fast AJAX-based XHTML 1.1 interface operates consistently in every browser!
Self-contained in a single 95kb file!
Works on any version of PHP5 with the MongoDB NoSQL database installed & running.
Super flexible - search for exact-text, text with * wildcards, regex or JSON (with Mongo-operators enabled)
Option to enable password-protection for one or more users; to activate protection, just add the username-password(s) to the array at the
top of the file.
E_STRICT PHP code is formatted to the Zend Framework coding standards + fully-documented in the phpDocumentor DocBlock
standard.
Textareas can be resized by dragging/stretching the lower-right corner.
Free & open-source! Release under the GPLv3 FOSS license!
Option to query MongoDB using JSON or PHP-array syntax
Multiple design themes to choose from
Instructional error messages - phpMoAdmin can be used as a PHP-Mongo connection debugging tool
PHPMoAdmin can help you discover the source of connection issues between PHP and Mongo. Download phpMoAdmin, place the moadmin.php
file in your web site document directory and navigate to it in a browser. One of two things will happen:
You will see an error message explaining why PHP and Mongo cannot connect and what you need to do to fix it
You will see a bunch of Mongo-related options, including a selection of databases (by default, the "admin" and "local" databases always
exist) - if this is the case your installation was successful and your problem is within the PHP code that you are using to access
MongoDB, troubleshoot that from the Mongo docs on php.net
RockMongo
Main features:
MongoDB is run as a standard program from the command line. Please see Command Line Parameters for more information on those options.
The following examples assume that you are in the directory where the Mongo executable is, and the Mongo executable is called mongod.
Starting Mongo
To start Mongo in default mode, where data will be stored in the /data/db directory (or c:\data\db on Windows), and listening on port 27017,
just type
$ ./mongod
To specify a directory for Mongo to store files, use the --dbpath option:
Note that you must create the directory and set its permissions appropriately ahead of time -- Mongo will not create the directory if it doesn't exist.
Alternate Port
You can specify a different port for Mongo to listen on for connections from clients using the --port option
This is useful if you want to run more than one instance of Mongo on a machine (e.g., for running a master-slave pair).
Running as a Daemon
Note: these options are only available in MongoDB version 1.1 and later.
This will fork the Mongo server and redirect its output to a logfile. As with --dbpath, you must create the log path yourself, Mongo will not create
parent directories for you.
Stopping Mongo
Control-C
If you have Mongo running in the foreground in a terminal, you can simply "Ctrl-C" the process. This will cause Mongo to do a clean exit, flushing
and closing it's data files. Note that it will wait until all ongoing operations are complete.
$ ./mongo
> db.shutdownServer()
This command only works from localhost, or, if one is authenticated.
From a driver (where the helper function may not exist), one can run the command
{ "shutdown" : 1 }
You can cleanly stop mongod using a SIGINT or SIGTERM signal on Unix-like systems. Either ^C, "kill -2 PID," or kill -15 PID will work.
Sending a KILL signal kill -9 will probably cause damage as mongod will not be able to cleanly exit. (In such a scenario, run
the repairDatabase command.)
After a unclean shutdown, MongoDB will say it was not shutdown cleanly, and ask you to do a repair. This is absolutely not the
same as corruption, this is MongoDB saying it can't 100% verify what's going on, and to be paranoid, run a repair.
Memory Usage
Mongo uses memory mapped files to access data, which results in large numbers being displayed in tools like top for the mongod process. This is
not a concern, and is normal when using memory-mapped files. Basically, the size of mapped data is shown in the virtual size parameter, and
resident bytes shows how much data is being cached in RAM.
You can get a feel for the "inherent" memory footprint of Mongo by starting it fresh, with no connections, with an empty /data/db directory and
looking at the resident bytes.
Logging
MongoDB outputs some important information to stdout while its running. There are a number of things you can do to control this
> db.runCommand("logRotate");
$ ./mongod --help
Information on usage of these parameters can be found in Starting and Stopping Mongo.
The following list of options is not complete; for the complete list see the usage information as described above.
Basic Options
--port <portno> Specifies the port number on which Mongo will listen for client connections. Default is 27017
--dbpath <path> Specifies the directory for datafiles. Default is /data/db or c:\data\db
--directoryperdb Specify use of an alternative directory structure, in which files for each database are kept in a unique
directory. (since 1.3.2)
--logpath <file> File to write logs to (instead of stdout). You can rotate the logs by sending SIGUSR1 to the server.
--repairpath <path> Root path for temporary files created during database repair. Default is dbpath value.
--objcheck Inspect all client data for validity on receipt (useful for developing drivers)
--diaglog <n> Set oplogging level where n is 0=off (default) 1=W 2=R 3=both 7=W+some reads
--noscripting Turns off server-side scripting. This will result in greatly limited functionality
--notablescan Turns off table scans. Any query that would do a table scan fails
--replSet <setname> Use replica sets with the specified logical set name
dbpath = /var/lib/mongodb
bind_ip = 127.0.0.1
noauth = true # use 'true' for options that don't take an argument
verbose = true # to disable, comment out.
Notes
GridFS Tools
File Tools
mongofiles is a tool for manipulating GridFS from the command line.
Example:
$ ./mongofiles list
connected to: 127.0.0.1
$ ./mongofiles list
connected to: 127.0.0.1
libmongoclient.a 12000964
$ cd /tmp/
$ md5 libmongoclient.a
MD5 (libmongoclient.a) = 23a52d361cfa7bad98099c5bad50dc41
$ md5 ~/work/mongo/libmongoclient.a
MD5 (/Users/erh/work/mongo/libmongoclient.a) = 23a52d361cfa7bad98099c5bad50dc41
Note one may also create .js scripts to run in the shell for administrative purposes.
help show help
show dbs show database names
show collections show collections in current database
show users show users in current database
show profile show most recent system.profile entries with time >= 1ms
use <db name> set curent database to <db name>
db.cloneDatabase(fromhost)
db.copyDatabase(fromdb, todb, fromhost)
db.createCollection(name, { size : ..., capped : ..., max : ... } )
db.getName()
db.dropDatabase()
db.printCollectionStats()
db.getProfilingLevel()
db.setProfilingLevel(level) 0=off 1=slow 2=all
db.getReplicationInfo()
db.printReplicationInfo()
db.printSlaveReplicationInfo()
db.repairDatabase()
db.shutdownServer()
db.foo.count()
db.foo.group( { key : ..., initial: ..., reduce : ...[, cond: ...] } )
db.foo.stats()
db.foo.dataSize()
db.foo.storageSize() - includes free space allocated to this collection
db.foo.totalIndexSize() - size in bytes of all the indexes
db.foo.totalSize() - storage allocated for all data and indexes
db.foo.validate() (slow)
db.foo.insert(obj)
db.foo.update(query, object[, upsert_bool])
db.foo.save(obj)
db.foo.remove(query) - remove objects matching query
remove({}) will remove all
Another MongoDB process, mongos, facilitates auto-sharding. mongos can be thought of as a "database router" to make a cluster of mongod
processes appear as a single database. See the sharding documentation for more information.
Database Caching
With relational databases, object caching is usually a separate facility (such as memcached), which makes sense as even a RAM page cache hit
is a fairly expensive operation with a relational database (joins may be required, and the data must be transformed into an object representation).
Further, memcached type solutions are more scaleable than a relational database.
Mongo eliminates the need (in some cases) for a separate object caching layer. Queries that result in file system RAM cache hits are very fast as
the object's representation in the database is very close to its representation in application memory. Also, the MongoDB can scale to any level
and provides an object cache and database integrated together, which is very helpful as there is no risk of retrieving stale data from the cache. In
addition, the complex queries a full DBMS provides are also possible.
Troubleshooting
Excessive Disk Space
Too Many Open Files
mongod process "disappeared"
See Also
See Also
Diagnostic Tools
Preallocation
Each datafile is preallocated to a given size. (This is done to prevent file system fragmentation, among other reasons.) The first file for a
database is <dbname>.0, then <dbname>.1, etc. <dbname>.0 will be 64MB, <dbname>.1 128MB, etc., up to 2GB. Once the files reach 2GB in
size, each successive file is also 2GB.
Thus if the last datafile present is say, 1GB, that file might be 90% empty if it was recently reached.
Additionally, on Unix, mongod will preallocate an additional datafile in the background and do background initialization of this file. These files are
prefilled with zero bytes. This inititialization can take up to a minute (less on a fast disk subsystem) for larger datafiles; without prefilling in the
background this could result in significant delays when a new file must be prepopulated.
You can disable preallocation with the --noprealloc option to the server. This flag is nice for tests with small datasets where you drop the db after
each test. It shouldn't be used on production servers.
For large databases (hundreds of GB or more) this is of no signficant consequence as the unallocated space is small.
Deleted Space
MongoDB maintains deleted lists of space within the datafiles when objects or collections are deleted. This space is reused but never freed to the
operating system.
To compact this space, run db.repairDatabase() from the mongo shell (note this operation will block and is slow).
When testing and investigating the size of datafiles, if your data is just test data, use db.dropDatabase() to clear all datafiles and start fresh.
Use the validate command to check the size of a collection -- that is from the shell run:
> db.<collectionname>.validate();
This command returns info on the collection data but note there is also data allocated for associated indexes. These can be checked with validate
too, if one looks up the index's namespace name in the system.namespaces collection. For example:
> db.system.namespaces.find()
{"name" : "test.foo"}
{"name" : "test.system.indexes"}
{"name" : "test.foo.$_id_"}
> > db.foo.$_id_.validate()
{"ns" : "test.foo.$_id_" , "result" : "
validate
details: 0xb3590b68 ofs:83fb68
firstExtent:0:8100 ns:test.foo.$_id_
lastExtent:0:8100 ns:test.foo.$_id_
# extents:1
datasize?:8192 nrecords?:1 lastExtentSize:131072
padding:1
first extent:
loc:0:8100 xnext:null xprev:null
ns:test.foo.$_id_
size:131072 firstRecord:0:81b0 lastRecord:0:81b0
1 objects found, nobj:1
8208 bytes data w/headers
8192 bytes data wout/headers
deletedList: 0000000000001000000
deleted: n: 1 size: 122688
nIndexes:0
" , "ok" : 1 , "valid" : true , "lastExtentSize" : 131072}
First, to check what file descriptors are in use, run lsof (some variations shown below):
If most lines include "TCP", there are many open connections from client sockets. If most lines include the name of your data directory, the open
files are mostly datafiles.
ulimit
If the numbers from lsof look reasonable, check your ulimit settings. The default for file handles (often 1024) might be too low for production
usage. Run ulimit -a (or limit -a depending on shell) to check.
Use ulimit -n X to change the max number of file handles to X. If your OS is configured to not allow modifications to that setting you might need to
reconfigure first. On ubuntu you'll need to edit /etc/security/limits.conf and add a line something like the following (where user is the username and
X is the desired limit):
Upstart uses a different mechanism for setting file descriptor limits - add something like this to your job file:
limit nofile X
If lsof shows a large number of open TCP sockets, it could be that one or more clients is opening too many connections to the database. Check
that your client apps are using connection pooling.
Contributors
MongoDB kernel code development rules
Project Ideas
UI
Source Code
Building
Database Internals
Contributing to the Documentation
inheritance
No multiple inheritance.
Be very careful about adding the FIRST virtual function to a class as you then have a vtable entry for every object.
If anything is virtual, make your destructor virtual.
case
most varNames
--commandLineOptions
{ commandNames : 1 }
strings
See
utils/mongoutils/str.h
bson/stringdata.h
brackets
if ( 0 ) {
}
class members
class Foo {
int _bar;
};
templates
set<int> s;
namespaces
namespace foo {
int foo;
namespace bar {
int bar;
}
}
start of file
// @file <filename>
license
assertions
There are several different types of assertions used in the MongoDB code. In brief:
Both massert and uassert take error codes, so that all errors have codes associated with them. These error codes are assigned randomly, so
there aren't segments that have meaning. scons checks for duplicates, but if you want the next available code you can run:
python buildscripts/errorcodes.py
Several rules are listed below. Don't break them. If you think there is a real need let's have the group weigh in and get a concensus on the
exception.
mongoutils
MongoUtils has its own namespace. Its code has these basic properties:
str.h
mongoutils/str.h provides string helper fucntions for each manipulation. Add new functions here rather than lines and lines of code to your
app that are not generic.
Typically these fucntions return a string and take two as paramters : string f(string,string). Thus we wrap them all in a namespace called str.
Writing Tests
We have three general flavors of tests currently.
You can inherit from class UnitTest and make a test that runs at program startup. These tests run EVERY TIME the program starts. Thus, they
should be minimal: the test should ideally take 1ms or less to run. Why run the tests in the general program? This gives some validation at
program run time that the build is reasonable. For example, we test that pcre supports UTF8 regex in one of these tests at startup. If someone
had built the server with other settings, this would be flagged upon execution, even if the test suite has not been invoked.
dbtests
jstests
See Also
Smoke Tests
Project Ideas
If you're interested in getting involved in the MongoDB community (or the open source community in general) a great way to do so is by starting or
contributing to a MongoDB related project. Here we've listed some project ideas for you to get started on. For some of these ideas projects are
already underway, and for others nothing (that we know of) has been started yet.
A GUI
One feature that is often requested for MongoDB is a GUI, much like CouchDB's futon or phpMyAdmin. There are a couple of projects working on
this sort of thing that are worth checking out:
http://github.com/sbellity/futon4mongo
http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Http+Interface
http://www.mongohq.com
We've also started to spec out the features that a tool like this should provide.
Try Mongo!
It would be neat to have a web version of the MongoDB Shell that allowed users to interact with a real MongoDB instance (for doing the tutorial,
etc). A project that does something similar (using a basic MongoDB emulator) is here:
http://github.com/banker/mongulator
It would be interesting to try to nicely integrate a search backend like Xapian, Lucene or Sphinx with MongoDB. One idea would be to use
MongoDB's oplog (which is used for master-slave replication) to keep the search engine up to date.
GridFS FUSE
There is a project working towards creating a FUSE filesystem on top of GridFS - something like this would create a bunch of interesting potential
uses for MongoDB and GridFS:
http://github.com/mikejs/gridfs-fuse
There are a couple of modules for different web servers designed to allow serving content directly from GridFS:
Nginx: http://github.com/mdirolf/nginx-gridfs
Lighttpd: http://bitbucket.org/bwmcadams/lighttpd-gridfs
Framework Adaptors
Working towards adding MongoDB support to major web frameworks is a great project, and work has been started on this for a variety of different
frameworks (please use google to find out if work has already been started for your favorite framework).
MongoDB works great for storing logs and session information. There are a couple of projects working on supporting this use case directly.
Logging:
Zend: http://raphaelstolt.blogspot.com/2009/09/logging-to-mongodb-and-accessing-log.html
Python: http://github.com/andreisavu/mongodb-log
Rails: http://github.com/peburrows/mongo_db_logger
Sessions:
web.py: http://github.com/whilefalse/webpy-mongodb-sessions
Beaker: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mongodb_beaker
Package Managers
Add support for installing MongoDB with your favorite package manager and let us know!
MongoDB doesn't yet know how to sort query results in a locale-sensitive way. If you can think up a good way to do it and implement it, we'd like
to know!
Drivers
If you use an esoteric/new/awesome programming language write a driver to support MongoDB! Again, check google to see what people have
started for various languages.
UI
Spec/requirements for a future MongoDB admin UI.
list databases
repair, drop, clone?
collections
validate(), datasize, indexsize, clone/copy
indexes
queries - explain() output
security: view users, adjust
see replication status of slave and master
sharding
system.profile viewer ; enable disable profiling
curop / killop support
Source Code
All source for MongoDB, it's drivers, and tools is open source and hosted at Github .
(Additionally, community drivers and tools also exist and will be found in other places.)
See Also
Building
License
Building
This section provides instructions on setting up your environment to write Mongo drivers or other infrastructure code. For specific instructions, go
to the document that corresponds to your setup.
Building Boost
Building for FreeBSD
Building for Linux
Building for OS X
Building for Solaris
Building for Windows
Building Spider Monkey
scons
See Also
Building Boost
Windows
Windows
By default c:\boost\ is checked for the boost files. Include files should be under \boost\boost, and libraries in \boost\lib.
First download the boost source. Then use the 7 Zip utility to extra the files. Place the extracted files in C:\boost.
The packages that come by default on 7.2 and older are too old, you'll get weird errors when you try to run the database)
3. Install SpiderMonkey:
4. Install scons:
6. Install libexecinfo:
See Also
Building for Linux - many of the details there including how to clone from git apply here too.
General Instructions
3. build
scons all
4. install
Most pre-built spider monkey binaries don't have UTF8 compiled in. Additionally, ubuntu has a weird version of spider monkey that doesn't
support everything we use. If you get any warnings during compile time or runtime, we highly recommend building spider monkey from source.
See Building Spider Monkey for more information.
We currently support spider monkey 1.6 and 1.7, although there is some degredation with 1.6, so we recommend using 1.7. We have not yet
tested 1.8, but will once it is officially released.
Package Requirements
Fedora
Fedora 8 or 10
Ubuntu
Ubuntu 8.04
Ubuntu 10.04
See Also
The Building page for setup information for other operating systems
The main Database Internals page
Building for OS X
Upgrading to Snow Leopard
Setup
Package Manager Setup (32bit)
Manual Setup
Install Apple developer tools
Install libraries (32bit option)
Install libraries (64bit option)
Compiling
XCode
Troubleshooting
If you have installed Snow Leopard, the builds will be 64 bit -- so if moving from a previous OS release, a bit more setup may be required than
one might first expect.
Setup
1. Install git. If not already installed, download the source and run ./configure; make; sudo make install
Then: git clone git://github.com/mongodb/mongo.git (more info)
Then: git tag -l to see tagged version numbers
Switch to a stable branch (unless doing development) -- an even second number indicates "stable". (Although with stharding you
will want the latest if the latest is less than 1.6.0.) For example:
git checkout r1.4.1
If you do not wish to install git you can instead get the source code from the Downloads page.
1. Install gcc.
gcc version 4.0.1 (from XCode Tools install) works, but you will receive compiler warnings. The easiest way to upgrade gcc is to install
the iPhone SDK.
Manual Setup
Install Apple developer tools
BJAM=""
TOOLSET=""
-BJAM_CONFIG=""
+BJAM_CONFIG="--layout=system"
BUILD=""
PREFIX=/usr/local
EPREFIX=
diff -u -r a/tools/build/v2/tools/darwin.jam b/tools/build/v2/tools/darwin.jam
--- a/tools/build/v2/tools/darwin.jam 2009-01-26 14:22:08.000000000 -0500
+++ b/tools/build/v2/tools/darwin.jam 2009-01-26 10:22:08.000000000 -0500
@@ -367,5 +367,5 @@
then,
-CC = cc
+CC = cc -m64
CCC = g++
CFLAGS += -Wall -Wno-format
OS_CFLAGS = -DXP_UNIX -DSVR4 -DSYSV -D_BSD_SOURCE -DPOSIX_SOURCE -DDARWIN
@@ -56,9 +56,9 @@
#.c.o:
# $(CC) -c -MD $*.d $(CFLAGS) $<
+ifeq ($(CPU_ARCH),x86_64)
+# Use VA_COPY() standard macro on x86-64
+# FIXME: better use it everywhere
+OS_CFLAGS += -DHAVE_VA_COPY -DVA_COPY=va_copy
+endif
+
+ifeq ($(CPU_ARCH),x86_64)
+# We need PIC code for shared libraries
+# FIXME: better patch rules.mk & fdlibm/Makefile*
+OS_CFLAGS += -DPIC -fPIC
+endif
cd src
make -f Makefile.ref
sudo JS_DIST=/usr/64 make -f Makefile.ref export
sudo rm /usr/64/lib64/libjs.dylib
BJAM=""
TOOLSET=""
-BJAM_CONFIG=""
+BJAM_CONFIG="architecture=x86 address-model=64 --layout=system"
BUILD=""
-PREFIX=/usr/local
+PREFIX=/usr/64
EPREFIX=
LIBDIR=
INCLUDEDIR=
diff -u -r a/tools/build/v2/tools/darwin.jam b/tools/build/v2/tools/darwin.jam
--- a/tools/build/v2/tools/darwin.jam 2009-01-26 14:22:08.000000000 -0500
+++ b/tools/build/v2/tools/darwin.jam 2009-01-26 10:22:08.000000000 -0500
@@ -367,5 +367,5 @@
then,
CFLAGS="-m64" CXXFLAGS="-m64" LDFLAGS="-m64" ./configure --prefix /usr/64; make; sudo make install
Compiling
scons
scons --64
XCode
1. In the mongo project window, go to the Executables, right click and choose Add->NewCustomExecutable.
2. Name it db. Path is ./db/db.
It will appear under Executables".
3. Double-click on it.
4. Under general, set the working directory to the project directory.
5. Under arguments, add run.
6. Go to general prefs (cmd ,), go to debugging and turn off lazy load.
(Seems to be an issue that prevents breakpoints from working in debugger?)
Troubleshooting
Community: Help us make this rough page better please! (And help us add support for big endian please...)
Prerequisites:
See Also
Joyent
Building for Linux - many of the details there including how to clone from git apply here too
There are several dependencies exist which are listed below; you may find it easier to simply download a pre-built binary.
See Also
This is OLD and was for the VS2010 BETA. See the new Boost and Windows page instead.
The following is a prebuilt boost binary (libraries) for Visual Studio 2010 beta 2.
The MongoDB vcxproj files assume this package is unzipped under c:\Program Files\boost\boost_1_41_0\.
http://downloads.mongodb.org/misc/boost_1_41_0_binary_vs10beta2.zipx
Note: we're not boost build gurus please let us know if there are things wrong with the build.
Click here for a prebuilt boost library for Visual Studio 2010. 7zip format.
Building Yourself
Click here for a prebuilt boost library for Visual Studio 2008. 7zip format. This file has what you need to build MongoDB, but not some other boost
libs, so it's partial.
Or, you can download a complete prebuilt boost library for 32 bit VS2008 at http://www.boostpro.com/products/free. Install the prebuilt libraries for
Boost version 1.35.0 (or higher - generally newer is better). During installation, for release builds choose static multithread libraries
for installation. The Debug version of the project uses the DLL libraries; choose all multithread libraries if you plan to do development.
From the BoostPro installer, be sure to select all relevant libraries that mongodb uses -- for example, you need Filesystem, Regex, Threads, and
ProgramOptions (and perhaps others).
Building Yourself
Additional Notes
Scons
scons mongo
A VS2010 vcxproj file is availabe for building the shell. From the mongo directory open shell/msvc/mongo.vcxproj.
The project file assumes that GNU readline is installed in ../readline/ relative to the mongo project. If you would prefer to build without having to
install readline, remove the definition of USE_READLINE in the preprocessor definitions section of the project file, and exclude readline.lib from
the project.
The project file currently only supports 32 bit builds of the shell (scons can do 32 and 64 bit). However this seems sufficient given there is no real
need for a 64 bit version of the shell.
Readline Library
The shell uses the GNU readline library to facilitate command line editing and history. You can build the shell without readline but would then lose
that functionality. USE_READLINE is defined when building with readline. SCons will look for readline and if not found build without it.
See Also
MongoDB can be compiled for Windows (32 and 64 bit) using Visual C++. SCons is the make mechanism, although a solution file is also included
in the project for convenience when using the Visual Studio IDE.
There are several dependencies exist which are listed below; you may find it easier to simply download a pre-built binary.
Click here for a prebuilt boost library for Visual Studio. 7zip format. This file has what you need to build MongoDB, but not some other
boost libs, so it's partial.
See the Boost and Windows page for other options.
The Visual Studio project files are setup to look for boost in the following locations:
c:\program files\boost\latest
c:\boost
\boost
You can unzip boost to c:\boost, or use an NTFS junction point to create a junction point to one of the above locations. Some versions of windows
come with linkd.exe, but others require you to download Sysinternal's junction.exe to accomplish this task. For example, if you installed boost 1.42
via the installer to the default location of c:\Program Files\boost\boost_1_42, You can create a junction point with the following command:
junction "c:\Program Files\boost\latest" "c:\Program Files\boost\boost_1_42"
Get SpiderMonkey
Note: currently the mongo shell and C++ client libraries must be built from scons. Also, for the VS2008 project files, 64 bit must be built from
scons (although you can do 64 bit with db_10.sln in vs2010).
Install SCons
The SConstruct file from the MongoDB project is the preferred way to perform production builds. Run scons in the mongo project directory to
build.
If scons does not automatically find Visual Studio, preset your path for it by running the VS2010 vcvars*.bat file.
To build:
Troubleshooting
If you are using scons, check the file config.log which is generated.
Can't find jstypes.h when compiling. This file is generated when building SpiderMonkey. See the Building SpiderMonkey page for
more info.
Can't find / run cl.exe when building with scons. See troubleshooting note on the Building SpiderMonkey page.
Error building program database. (VS2008.) Try installing the Visual Studio 2008 Service Pack 1.
MongoDB can be compiled for Windows (32 and 64 bit) using Visual C++. SCons is the make mechanism, although a solution file is also included
in the project for convenience when using the Visual Studio IDE.
There are several dependencies exist which are listed below; you may find it easier to simply download a pre-built binary.
Click here for a prebuilt boost library for Visual Studio. 7zip format. This file has what you need to build MongoDB, but not some other
boost libs, so it's partial.
See the Boost and Windows page for other options. Use v1.42 or higher with VS2010.
Get SpiderMonkey
Download prebuilt libraries and headers here for VS2010. Place these files in ../js/ relative to your mongo project directory.
Or (more work) build SpiderMonkey js.lib yourself – details here.
Note: a separate project file exists for the mongo shell. Currently the C++ client libraries must be built from scons (this obviously needs to be
fixed...)
Install SCons
The SConstruct file from the MongoDB project is the preferred way to perform production builds. Run scons in the mongo project directory to
build.
If scons does not automatically find Visual Studio, preset your path for it by running the VS2010 vcvars*.bat file.
To build:
Troubleshooting
If you are using scons, check the file config.log which is generated.
MongoDB uses SpiderMonkey for server-side Javascript execution. The mongod project requires a file js.lib when linking. This page details how
to build js.lib.
Download
curl -O ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/js/js-1.7.0.tar.gz
tar zxvf js-1.7.0.tar.gz
Build
cd js/src
export CFLAGS="-DJS_C_STRINGS_ARE_UTF8"
make -f Makefile.ref
Install
Prebuilt
VS2008: a prebuilt SpiderMonkey library and headers for Win32 is attached to this document (this file may or may not work depending on
your compile settings and compiler version).
VS2010 prebuilt libraries
Download
curl -O ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/js/js-1.7.0.tar.gz
tar zxvf js-1.7.0.tar.gz
Build
cd js/src
export CFLAGS="-DJS_C_STRINGS_ARE_UTF8"
make -f Makefile.ref
If cl.exe is not found, launch Tools...Visual Studio Command Prompt from inside Visual Studio -- your path should then be correct for make.
If you do not have a suitable make utility installed, you may prefer to build using scons. An experimental SConstruct file to build the js.lib is
available in the mongodb/snippets project. For example:
cd
git clone git://github.com/mongodb/mongo-snippets.git
cp mongo-snippets/jslib-sconstruct js/src/SConstruct
cd js/src
scons
Troubleshooting scons
Note that scons does not use your PATH to find Visual Studio. If you get an error running cl.exe, try changing the following line in the msvc.py
scons source file from:
to
See Also
Building MongoDB
scons
Use scons to build MongoDB, and related utilities and libraries. See the SConstruct file for details.
Targets
scons .
scons all
scons mongod build mongod
scons mongo build the shell
scons shell build just the generated shell .cpp files
scons mongoclient build just the client lib
Options
Troubleshooting
scons generates a config.log file. See this file when there are problems building.
See Also
Smoke Tests
Database Internals
This section provides information for developers who want to write drivers or tools for MongoDB, \ contribute code to the MongoDB codebase
itself, and for those who are just curious how it works internally.
Caching
Cursors
Error Codes
Internal Commands
Replication Internals
Smoke Tests
Pairing Internals
Caching
Memory Mapped Storage Engine
This is the current storage engine for MongoDB, and it uses memory-mapped files for all disk I/O. Using this strategy, the operating system's
virtual memory manager is in charge of caching. This has several implications:
There is no redundancy between file system cache and database cache: they are one and the same.
MongoDB can use all free memory on the server for cache space automatically without any configuration of a cache size.
Virtual memory size and resident size will appear to be very large for the mongod process. This is benign: virtual memory space will be
just larger than the size of the datafiles open and mapped; resident size will vary depending on the amount of memory not used by other
processes on the machine.
Caching behavior (such as LRU'ing out of pages, and laziness of page writes) is controlled by the operating system: quality of the VMM
implementation will vary by OS.
Cursors
Redirection Notice
This page should redirect to Internals.
Error Codes
Error Code Description Comments
12001 can't sort with $snapshot the $snapshot feature does not support sorting yet
Internal Commands
Most commands have helper functions and do not require the $cmd.findOne() syntax. These are primarily internal and administrative.
> db.$cmd.findOne({assertinfo:1})
{
"dbasserted" : false , // boolean: db asserted
"asserted" : false , // boolean: db asserted or a user assert have happend
"assert" : "" , // regular assert
"assertw" : "" , // "warning" assert
"assertmsg" : "" , // assert with a message in the db log
"assertuser" : "" , // user assert - benign, generally a request that was not meaningful
"ok" : 1.0
}
> db.$cmd.findOne({serverStatus:1})
{
"uptime" : 6 ,
"globalLock" : {
"totalTime" : 6765166 ,
"lockTime" : 2131 ,
"ratio" : 0.00031499596610046226
} ,
"mem" : {
"resident" : 3 ,
"virtual" : 111 ,
"mapped" : 32
} ,
"ok" : 1
}
> admindb.$cmd.findOne({replacepeer:1})
{
"info" : "adjust local.sources hostname; db restart now required" ,
"ok" : 1.0
}
Replication Internals
On the master mongod instance, the local database will contain a collection, oplog.$main, which stores a high-level transaction log. The
transaction log essentially describes all actions performed by the user, such as "insert this object into this collection." Note that the oplog is not a
low-level redo log, so it does not record operations on the byte/disk level.
The slave mongod instance polls the oplog.$main collection from master. The actual query looks like this:
where 'local' is the master instance's local database. oplog.$main collection is a capped collection, allowing the oldest data to be aged out
automatically.
See the Replication section of the Mongo Developers' Guide for more information.
OpTime
An OpTime is a 64-bit timestamp that we use to timestamp operations. These are stored as Javascript Date datatypes but are not JavaScript
Date objects. Implementation details can be found in the OpTime class in repl.h.
Operations from the oplog are applied on the slave by reexecuting the operation. Naturally, the log includes write operations only.
Note that inserts are transformed into upserts to ensure consistency on repeated operations. For example, if the slave crashes, we won't know
exactly which operations have been applied. So if we're left with operations 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, and if we then apply 1, 2, 3, 2, 3, 4, 5, we should
achieve the same results. This repeatability property is also used for the initial cloning of the replica.
Tailing
After applying operations, we want to wait a moment and then poll again for new data with our $gteoperation. We want this operation to be fast,
quickly skipping past old data we have already processed. However, we do not want to build an index on ts, as indexing can be somewhat
expensive, and the oplog is write-heavy. Instead, we use a table scan in [natural] order, but use a tailable cursor to "remember" our position.
Thus, we only scan once, and then when we poll again, we know where to begin.
Initiation
t = now();
cloneDatabase();
end = now();
applyOperations(t..end);
cloneDatabaseeffectively exports/imports all the data in the database. Note the actual "image" we will get may or may not include data
modifications in the time range (t..end). Thus, we apply all logged operations from that range when the cloning is complete. Because of our
repeatability property, this is safe.
Smoke Tests
smoke.py lets you run a subsets of the tests in jstests. When it is running tests, it starts up an instance of mongod, runs the tests, and then shuts
it down again. For the moment, smoke.py must be run from the top-level directory of a mongo source repository.
Options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--mode=MODE If "files", ARGS are filenames; if "suite", ARGS are
sets of tests. ( default "suite")
--mongod=MONGODEXECUTABLE
Path to mongod to run ( default "./mongod")
--port=MONGODPORT Port the mongod will bind to (default 32000)
--mongo=SHELLEXECUTABLE
Path to mongo, for .js test files (default "./mongo")
--continue-on-failure
If supplied, continue testing even after a test fails
--one-mongod-per-test
If supplied, run each test in a fresh mongod
--from-file=FILE Run tests/suites named in FILE, one test per line, '-'
means stdin
--smoke-db-prefix=SMOKEDBPREFIX
Prefix to use for the mongods' dbpaths.
--small-oplog Run tests with master/slave replication & use a small
oplog
You can also run a suite of tests. Suites are predefined and include:
smoke
smokeAll
smokePerf
smokeJs
smokeQuota
smokeJsPerf
smokeDisk
smokeJsSlowNightly
smokeJsSlowWeekly
smokeParallel
smokeClone
smokeRepl
smokeAuth
smokeSharding
smokeTool
smokeClient
mongosTest
The old way to run tests is using scons, then the suite name:
Full list of scons targets for running smoke tests: smoke, smokePerf, smokeClient, mongosTest, smokeJs, smokeClone, smokeRepl, smokeDisk,
smokeSharding, smokeJsPerf, smokeQuota, smokeTool.
Pairing Internals
In a paired environment, a situation may arise in which each member of a pair has logged operations as master that have not been applied to the
other server. In such a situation, the following procedure will be used to ensure consistency between the two servers:
1. The new master will scan through its own oplog from the point at which it last applied an operation from it's peer's oplog to the end. It will
create a set C of object ids for which changes were made. It will create a set M of object ids for which only modifier changes were made.
The values of C and M will be updated as client operations are applied to the new master.
2. The new master will iterate through its peer's oplog, applying only operations that will not affect an object having an id in C.
3. For any operation in the peer's oplog that may not be applied due to the constraint in the previous step, if the id of the of the object in
question is in M, the value of the whole object on the new master is logged to the new master's oplog.
4. The new slave applies all operations from the new master's oplog.
Might also want to change the default space to DOCS or DOCS-ES or whatever space you edit the most.
etags setup (suggested by mstearn)
First, install "exuberant ctags", which has nicer features than GNU etags.
http://ctags.sourceforge.net/
Then, run something like this in the top-level mongo directory to make an emacs-style TAGS file:
Voice
To make this work, however, you may find yourself anthropromorphizing components of the system - that is, treating the driver or the database as
an agent that actually does something. ("The dbms writes the new record to the collection" is better than "the new record is written to the
database", but some purists may argue that the dbms doesn't do anything - it's just code that directs the actions of the processor - but then
someone else says "yes, but does the processor really do anything?" and so on and on.) It is simpler and more economical to write as if these
components are actually doing things, although you as the infrastructure developers might have to stop and think about which component is
actually performing the action you are describing.
Tense
Technical writers in general prefer to keep descriptions of processes in the present tense: "The dbms writes the new collection to disk" rather than
"the dbms will write the new collection to disk." You save a few words that way.
MongoDB Terminology
It would be good to spell out precise definitions of technical words and phrases you are likely to use often, like the following:
Mongo
database (do you want "a Mongo database"? Or a Mongo database instance?)
dbms (I have't seen this term often - is it correct to talk about "the Mongo DBMS"?)
Document
Record
Transaction (I stopped myself from using this term because my understanding is the Mongo doesn't support "transactions" in the sense of
operations that are logged and can be rolled back - is this right?)
These are just a few I noted while I was editing. More should be added. It would be good to define these terms clearly among yourselves, and
then post the definitions for outsiders.
It's important to be consistent in the way you treat words that refer to certain types of objects. The following table lists the types you will deal with
most often, describes how they should look, and (to cut to the chase) gives you the Confluence markup that will achieve that appearance.
Object name (the type of "object" that "object-oriented programming" deals with) monospace {{ term }}
Placeholders in paths, directories, or other text that would be italic anyway angle brackets around <item> <item>
{code}
In specifying these, I have relied on the O'Reilly Style Guide, which is at:
http://oreilly.com/oreilly/author/stylesheet.html
I should mention that for the names of GUI objects I followed the specification in the Microsoft Guide to Technical Publications.
If you are editing a page using Confluence's RTF editor, you don't have to worry about markup. Even if you are editing markup directly,
Confluence displays a guide on the right that shows you most of the markup you will need.
Confluence also provides you with a nice little utility that allows you to insert a link to another Confluence page by searching for the page by title
or by text and choosing it from a list. Confluence handles the linking markup. You can even use it for external URLs.
The one thing this mechanism does NOT handle is links to specific locations within a wiki page. Here is what you have to know if you want to
insert these kinds of links:
Every heading you put in a Confluence page ("h2.Title", "h3.OtherTitle", etc.) becomes an accessible "anchor" for linking.
You can also insert an anchor anywhere else in the page by inserting "{anchor\:anchorname}" where _anchorname is the unique name
you will use in the link.
To insert a link to one of these anchors, you must go into wiki markup and add the anchor name preceded by a "#". Example: if the page
MyPage contains a heading or an ad-hoc anchor named GoHere, the link to that anchor from within the same page would look like
[#GoHere], and a link to that anchor from a different page would look like [MyPage#GoHere]. (See the sidebar for information about
adding other text to the body of the link.)
Special Characters
You will often need to insert code samples that contain curly braces. As Dwight has pointed out, Confluence gets confused by this unless
you "escape" them by preceding them with a backslash, thusly:
\{ \}
You must do the same for "[", "]", "_" and some others.
Within a {code} block you don't have to worry about this. If you are inserting code fragments inline using {{ and }}, however, you still need
to escape these characters. Further notes about this:
If you are enclosing a complex code expression with {{ and }}, do NOT leave a space between the last character of the
expression and the }}. This confuses Confluence.
Confluence also gets confused (at least sometimes) if you use {{ and }}, to enclose a code sample that includes escaped curly
brackets.
Confluence has this idea of "spaces". Each person has a private space, and there are also group spaces as well.
The MongoDB Confluence wiki has three group spaces defined currently:
Mongo Documentation - The publicly accessible area for most Mongo documentation
Contributor - Looks like, the publicly accessible space for information for "Contributors"
Private - a space open to MongoDB developers, but not to the public at large.
As I said in my email on Friday, all of the (relevant) info from the old wiki now lives in the "Mongo Documentation"
Standard elements of Wiki pages
You shouldn't have to spend a lot of time worrying about this kind of thing, but I do have just a few suggestions:
Since these wiki pages are (or can be) arranged hierarchically, you may have "landing pages" that do little more than list their child
pages. I think Confluence actually adds a list of children automatically, but it only goes down to the next hierarchical level. To insert a
hierarchical list of a page's children, all you have to do is insert the following Confluence "macro":
{children:all=true}
See the Confluence documentation for more options and switches for this macro.
Community
The user list is for general questions about using, configuring, and running MongoDB and the associated tools and drivers. The list is
open to everyone
IRC chat
irc://irc.freenode.net/#mongodb
Blog
http://blog.mongodb.org/
Bugtracker
File, track, and vote on bugs and feature requests. There is issue tracking for MongoDB and all supported drivers
Store
Developer List
This mongodb-dev mailing list is for people developing drivers and tools, or who are contributing to the MongoDB codebase itself.
Source
The source code for the database and drivers is available at the http://github.com/mongodb.
Job Board
Click Here to access the Job Board. The Board is a community resource for all employers to post MongoDB-related jobs. Please feel free
to post/investigate positions!
MongoDB Commercial Services Providers
Note: if you provide consultative or support services for MongoDB and wish to be listed here, just let us know.
Support
10gen
Training
Hosting
Consulting
10gen
Hashrocket
LightCube Solutions
Squeejee
Mijix
Support
10gen
10gen began the MongoDB project, and offers commercial MongoDB support services.
Training
Hosting
Consulting
10gen
10gen offers consulting services for MongoDB application design, development, and production operation. These services are typically advisory in
nature with the goal of building higher in-house expertise on MongoDB for the client.
Hashrocket
Hashrocket is a full-service design and development firm that builds successful web businesses. Hashrocket continually creates and follows best
practices and surround themselves with passionate and talented craftsmen to ensure the best results for you and your business.
LightCube Solutions
LightCube Solutions provides PHP development and consulting services, as well as a lightweight PHP framework designed for MongoDB called
'photon'
Squeejee
{partnerlink:Squeejee|http://squeejee.com/|squeejee] builds web applications on top of MongoDB with multiple sites already in production.
Mijix
MijiX, a software development studio based on Indonesia, provides consulting for MongoDB in Asia-Pacific area.
User Feedback
"I just have to get my head around that mongodb is really _this_ good"
-muckster, #mongodb
"Guys at Redmond should get a long course from you about what is the software development and support "
[email protected], mongodb-user list
"#mongoDB keep me up all night. I think I have found the 'perfect' storage for my app "
-elpargo, Twitter
"Maybe we can relax with couchdb but with mongodb we are completely in dreams"
-namlook, #mongodb
[Reflections on MongoDB]
-Brandon Keepers, Collective Idea (June 15, 2010)
Introducing MongoDB
-Linux Magazine (September 21, 2009)
The Other Blog - The Holy Grail of the Funky Data Model
-Tom Smith (June 6, 2009)
Community Presentations
Scalable Event Analytics with MongoDb and Ruby on Rails
Jared Rosoff at RubyConfChina (June 2010)
MongoDB
Adrian Madrid at Mountain West Ruby Conference 2009, video
MongoDB - Ruby friendly document storage that doesn't rhyme with ouch
Wynn Netherland at Dallas.rb Ruby Group, slides
MongoDB
jnunemaker at Grand Rapids RUG, slides
Benchmarking
We keep track of user benchmarks on the Benchmarks page.
Job Board
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About
Philosophy
Use Cases
Production Deployments
Mongo-Based Applications
Events
Slide Gallery
Articles
Benchmarks
FAQ
Product Comparisons
Licensing
Philosophy
Design Philosophy
Use Cases
See also the Production Deployments page for a discussion of how companies like Shutterfly, foursquare, bit.ly, Etsy, SourceForge, etc. use
MongoDB.
Well Suited
Operational data store of a web site. MongoDB is very good at real-time inserts, updates, and queries. Scalability and replication are
provided which are necessary functions for large web sites' real-time data stores. Specific web use case examples:
content management
comment storage, management, voting
real time page view counters
user registration, profile, session data
Caching. With its potential for high performance, MongoDB works well as a caching tier in an information infrastructure. The persistent
backing of Mongo's cache assures that on a system restart the downstream data tier is not overwhelmed with cache population activity.
High volume problems. Problems where a traditional DBMS might be too expensive for the data in question. In many cases developers
would traditionally write custom code to a filesystem instead using flat files or other methodologies.
Storage of program objects and JSON data (and equivalent). Mongo's BSON data format makes it very easy to store and retrieve data in
a document-style / "schemaless" format. Addition of new properties to existing objects is easy and does not require blocking "ALTER
TABLE" style operations.
Document and Content Management Systems - as a document-oriented (JSON) database, MongoDB's flexible schemas are a good fit
for this.
Electronic record keeping - similar to document management.
Systems with a heavy emphasis on complex transations such as banking systems and accounting. These systems typically require
multi-object transactions, which MongoDB doesn't support. It's worth noting that, unlike many "NoSQL" solutions, MongoDB does support
atomic operations on single documents. As documents can be fairly rich entities, for many use cases this is sufficient.
Traditional Business Intelligence. Data warehouses are more suited to new, problem-specific BI databases. However note that
MongoDB can work very well for several reporting and analytics problems where data is predistilled or aggregated in runtime -- but
classic, nightly batch load business intelligence, while possible, is not necessarily a sweet spot.
Problems requiring SQL.
One implementation model is to have a sessions collection, and store the session object's _id value in a browser cookie.
With its update-in-place design and general optimization to make updates fast, the database is efficient at receiving an update to the session
object on every single app server page view.
The best way to age out old sessions is to use the auto-LRU facility of capped collections. The one complication is that objects in capped
collections may not grow beyond their initial allocation size. To handle this, we can "pre-pad" the objects to some maximum size on initial
addition, and then on further updates we are fine if we do not go above the limit. The following mongo shell javascript example demonstrates
padding.
(Note: a clean padding mechanism should be added to the db so the steps below are not necessary.)
> db.createCollection('sessions', { capped: true, size : 1000000 } )
{"ok" : 1}
> p = "";
> for( x = 0; x < 100; x++ ) p += 'x';
> s1 = { info: 'example', _padding : p };
{"info" : "example" , "_padding" :
"xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
}
> db.sessions.save(s1)
> s1
{"info" : "example" , "_padding" :
"xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"
, "_id" : ObjectId( "4aafb74a5761d147677233b0") }
Production Deployments
If you're using MongoDB in production, we'd love to list you here! Email [email protected].
bit.ly allows users to shorten, share, and track links. bit.ly uses MongoDB to store user
history. For more information:
MongoDB is used for back-end storage on the SourceForge front pages, project pages,
and download pages for all projects.
Etsy is a website that allows users to buy and sell handmade items. Read the
MongoDB at Etsy blog series:
Building a Better Submission Form - NYTimes Open Blog (May 25, 2010)
A Behind the Scenes Look at the New York Times Moment in Time Project -
Hacks/Hackers Blog (July 28, 2010)
Examiner.com is the fastest-growing local content network in the U.S., powered by the
largest pool of knowledgeable and passionate contributors in the world. Launched in
April 2008 with 60 cities, Examiner.com now serves hundreds of markets across the
U.S. and Canada.
Examiner.com migrated their site from Cold Fusion and SQL Server to Drupal 7 and
MongoDB. Details of the deployment are outlined in an Acquia case study
BoxedIce's server monitoring solution - Server Density - stores 600 million+ documents
in MongoDB.
Wordnik stores its entire text corpus in MongoDB - 1.2TB of data in over 5 billion
records. The speed to query the corpus was cut to 1/4 the time it took prior to migrating
to MongoDB. More about MongoDB at Wordnik:
ShareThis makes it easy to share ideas and get to the good stuff online. ShareThis is
the world’s largest sharing network reaching over 400 million users across 150,000
sites and 785,000 domains across the web
Business Insider has been using MongoDB since the beginning of 2008. All of the site's
data, including posts, comments, and even the images, are stored on MongoDB. For
more information:
GitHub, the social coding site, is using MongoDB for an internal reporting application.
Gilt Groupe is an invitation only luxury shopping site. Gilt uses MongoDB for real time
ecommerce analytics.
Tracking and visualizing mail logs with MongoDB and gviz_api - Grig
Gheorghiu's blog (July 2010)
MongoHQ provides a hosting platform for MongoDB and also uses MongoDB as the
back-end for its service. Our hosting centers page provides more information about
MongoHQ and other MongoDB hosting options.
Justin.tv is the easy, fun, and fast way to share live video online. MongoDB powers
Justin.tv's internal analytics tools for virality, user retention, and general usage stats
that out-of-the-box solutions can't provide. Read more about Justin.tv's broadcasting
architecture.
The Secret Weapons Behind Chartbeat - Kushal's coding blog (April 2010)
Kushal Dave's Presentation at MongoNYC (May 2010)
Hot Potato is a social tool that organizes conversations around events. For more
information:
Hot Potato's presentation about using Scala and MongoDB at the New York
Tech Talks Meetup (March 2010)
Hot Potato presentation at MongoSF (April 2010)
Hot Potato Infrastructure from Hot Potato blog (May 2010)
Hot Potato presentation at MongoNYC (May 2010)
Eventbrite gives you all the online tools you need to bring people together for an event
and sell tickets. EventBrite uses MongoDB to track page views.
Why you should track page views with MongoDB - EventBrite Blog (June
2010)
Flowdock is a modern web-based team messenger, that helps your team to become
more organized simply by chatting. Flowdock backend uses MongoDB to store all
messages.
The Chicago Tribune uses MongoDB in its Illinois School Report Cards application,
which is generated from a nearly 9,000 column denormalized database dump produced
annually by the State Board of Education. The application allows readers to search by
school name, city, county, or district and to view demographic, economic, and
performance data for both schools and districts.
Sugar CRM uses MongoDB to power the backend of its preview feedback mechanism.
It captures users' comments and whether they like or dislike portions of the application
all from within beta versions of Sugar.
WHERE® is a local search and recommendation service that helps people discover
places, events and mobile coupons in their area. Using WHERE, people can find
everything from the weather, news, and restaurant reviews, to the closest coffee shop,
cheapest gas, traffic updates, movie showtimes and offers from local merchants.
WHERE is available as a mobile application and as a web service at Where.com. here,
Inc. uses MongoDB to store geographic content for the WHERE application and for
WHERE Ads™ - a hyper-local ad network.
Yottaa offers Performance Analytics, a cloud service that monitors, ranks and analyzes
the performance of millions of web sites, providing an open database to answer
questions such as “why performance matters” and “how fast is my site”. Yottaa is using
Ruby on Rails and MongoDB to build their scalable analytics engine.
BuzzFeed is a trends aggregator that uses a web crawler and human editors to find
and link to popular stories around the web. BuzzFeed moved an analytics system
tracking over 400 million monthly events from MySQL to MongoDB.
The Mozilla open-source Ubiquity Herd project uses MongoDB for back-end storage.
Source code is available on bitbucket.
Codaset is an open system where you can browse and search through open source
projects, and check out what your friends are coding.
Shopwiki uses Mongo as a data store for its shopping search engine, where they
commit all the data generated, such as custom analytics. Mongo's performance is such
that ShopWiki uses it in cases where MySQL would just not be practical. ShopWiki is
also using it as a storage engine for all R&D and data-mining efforts where MongoDB's
document oriented architecture offers maximum flexibility.
MyPunchbowl.com is a start to finish party planning site that uses MongoDB for
tracking user behavior and datamining.
photostre.am streams image data from flickr and uses MongoDB as it's only database.
Fotopedia uses MongoDB as storage backend for its copy of wikipedia data, storage for
users and albums timelines, a feature that is currently under heavy refactoring, and as
the "metacache", an index of every tiny html fragment in its varnish cache for proactive
invalidation of stale content.
Grooveshark currently uses Mongo to manage over one million unique user sessions
per day.
Stickybits is a fun and social way to attach digital content to real world objects.
MongoDB is being used for the game feeds component. It caches game data from
different sources which gets served to ea.com, rupture.com and the EA download
manager.
Struq develops technology that personalises the contents and design of online display
advertising in real time.
Pitchfork is using MongoDB for their year-end readers survey and internal analytics.
Floxee, a web toolkit for creating Twitter directories, leverages MongoDB for back-end
storage. The award-winning TweetCongress is powered by Floxee.
Sailthru is an email service provider that uses MongoDB for click-stream analysis and
reporting.
Silentale keeps track of your contacts and conversations from multiple platforms and
allows you to search and access them from anywhere. Silentale is using MongoDB as
the back-end for indexing and searching on millions of stored messages of different
types. More details on Silentale can be found in this TechCrunch article.
One Year with MongoDB presentation from MongoUK (June 2010): Slides and
Video
TeachStreet helps people find local and online classes by empowering teachers with
robust tools to manage their teaching businesses. MongoDB powers our real-time
analytics system which provide teachers with insight into the performance and
effectiveness of their listings on TeachStreet.
TweetSaver is a web service for backing up, searching, and tagging your tweets.
TweetSaver uses MongoDB for back-end storage.
KLATU Networks designs, develops and markets asset monitoring solutions which
helps companies manage risk, reduce operating costs and streamline operations
through proactive management of the status, condition, and location of cold storage
assets and other mission critical equipment. KLATU uses MongoDB to store
temperature, location, and other measurement data for large wireless sensor networks.
KLATU chose MongoDB over competitors for scalability and query capabilities.
songkick lets you track your favorite artists so you never miss a gig again.
Detexify is a cool application to find LaTeX symbols easily. It uses MongoDB for
back-end storage. Check out the blog post for more on why Detexfy is using MongoDB.
Stylesignal is using MongoDB to store opinions from social media, blogs, forums and
other sources to use in their sentiment analysis system, Zeitgeist.
@trackmeet helps you take notes with twitter, and is built on MongoDB
Shapado is a multi-topic question and answer site in the style of Stack Overflow.
Shapado is written in Rails and uses MongoDB for back-end storage.
Sifino enables students to help each other with their studies. Students can share
notes, course summaries, and old exams, and can also ask and respond to questions
about particular courses.
MyBankTracker iPhone App uses MongoDB for the iPhone app's back-end server.
BillMonitor uses MongoDB to store all user data, including large amounts of billing
information. This is used by the live site and also by BillMonitor's internal data analysis
tools.
Tubricator allows you to create easy to remember links to YouTube videos. It's built on
MongoDB and Django.
Mu.ly uses MongoDB for user registration and as a backend server for its iPhone Push
notification service. MongoDB is mu.ly's Main backend database and absolute mission
critical for mu.ly.
Avinu is a Content Management System (CMS) built on the Vork enterprise framework
and powered by MongoDB.
Topsy is a search engine powered by Tweets that uses Mongo for realtime log
processing and analysis.
Similaria.pl is an online platform, created to connect users with people and products
that match them.
ToTuTam uses Mongo to store information about events in its portal and also to store
and organise information about users preferences.
themoviedb.org is a free, user driven movie database that uses MongoDB as its
primary database.
OCW Search is a search engine for OpenCourseWare. It stores all the course materials
in MongoDB and uses Sphinx to index these courses.
Full Text Search with Sphinx - Presentation from MongoUK (June 2010)
Mixero is the new generation Twitter client for people who value their time and are tired
of information noise. Mixero uses Mongo to store users' preferences and data.
DokDok makes it easy and automatic for users to find, work on and share the latest
version of any document - right from their inbox. DokDok migrated to a Mongo backend
in August 2009. See Bruno Morency's presentation Migrating to MongoDB for more
information.
Enbil is a swedish website for finding, and comparing, rental cars. MongoDB is used for
storing and querying data about geographical locations and car rental stations.
Websko is a content management system designed for individual Web developers and
cooperative teams. MongoDB's lack of schema gives unlimited possibilities for defining
manageable document oriented architecture and is used for back-end storage for all
manageable structure and data content. Websko is written in Rails, uses MongoMapper
gem and in-house crafted libraries for dealing with Mongo internals.
markitfor.me is a bookmarking service that makes your bookmarks available via full-text
search so you don't have to remember tags or folders. You can just search for what
you're looking for and the complete text of all of your bookmarked pages will be
searched. MongoDB is used as the datastore for the marked pages.
musweet keeps track of what artists and bands publish on the social web.
Eiwa System Management, Inc. is a software development firm that has been using
MongoDB for various projects since January 2010.
PeerPong discovers everyone's expertise and connects you to the best person to
answer any question. We index users across the entire web, looking at public profiles,
real-time streams, and other publicly available information to discover expertise and to
find the best person to answer any question.
ibibo ("I build, I bond") is a social network using MongoDB for its dashboard feeds.
Each feed is represented as a single document containing an average of 1000 entries;
the site currently stores over two million of these documents in MongoDB.
MediaMath is the leader in the new and rapidly growing world of digital media trading.
Zoofs is a new way to discover YouTube videos that people are talking about on
Twitter. Zoofs camps in Twitter searching for tweets with YouTube video links, and then
ranks them based on popularity.
Oodle is an online classifieds marketplace that serves up more than 15 million visits a
month and is the company behind the popular Facebook Marketplace. Oodle is using
Mongo for storing user profile data for our millions of users and has also open sourced
its Mongo ORM layer.
Funadvice relaunched using the MongoDB and MongoMapper. Read the Funadvice
CTO's post to MongoDB User Forum from May 2010 for more details.
Ya Sabe is using MongoDB for the backend storage of business listings. Yasabe.com
is the first local search engine built for Hispanics in the US with advanced search
functionality. You can find and discover more than 14 million businesses via the web or
your mobile phone. All the information is in both Spanish and in English.
LoteriaFutbol.com is a Fantasy Soccer Portal recently launched for the World Soccer
Cup: South Africa 2010. Mongo has been used entirely to store data about users,
groups, news, tournaments and picks. It uses the PHP driver with a Mongo module for
Kohana v3 (Mango).
Kehalim switched over to MongoDB 1 year ago after exhausting other cloud and
relational options. As a contextual affiliate network, Kehalim stores all of its advertisers,
ads and even impressions on top of MongoDB. MongoDB has outed both MySQL and
memcached completely and also provides great hadoop-like alternative with its own
map-reduce.
Givemebeats.net is an e-commerce music site that allows people to buy beats (music
instrumentals) produced by some of the best producers in the world. Now we entirely
use MongoDB to store users profile, beats information, and transaction statistics.
Cheméo, a search engine for chemical properties, is built on top of MongoDB. For a
fairly extensive explanation of the tools and software used and some MongoDB tips,
please go to chemeo.com/doc/technology.
Planetaki is place were you can read all your favourite websites in one place. MongoDB
has replaced MySQL for the storage backend that does all the heavy lifting and caching
of each website's news feed.
[ChinaVisual.com] is the leading and largest vertical portal and community for creative
people in China. ChinaVisual.com moved from mysql to mongoDB in early 2009.
Currently MongoDB powers its most major production and service, like file storage,
session server, and user tracking.
RowFeeder is an easy social media monitoring solution that allows people to track
tweets and Facebook posts in a spreadsheet. RowFeeder uses MongoDB to keep up
with the high volume of status updates across multiple social networks as well as
generate basic stats.
MongoDB for Real Time Data Collection and Stats Generation - Presentation
at Mongo Seattle (July 2010)
Mini Medical Record is designed to facilitate medical care for all members of the public.
While useful for everyone, it is especially useful for travelers, professional road
warriors, homeless, substance dependent, and other members of the public who
receive care through multiple medical systems.
Open Dining Network is a restaurant data and food ordering platform that provides a
RESTful API to take web and mobile orders. MongoDB is used to manage all
restaurant, customer, and order information.
URLi.st is a small web application to create and share list of links. The web application
is coded in Python (using the pylons framework) and uses MongoDB (with pymongo
1.6) in production to power its data layer.
LearnBoost is a free and amazing gradebook web app that leverages MongoDB for its
data storage needs. LearnBoost is the creator of Mongoose, a JavaScript async ORM
for MongoDB that is flexible, extensible and simple to use.
Kidiso is a safe online playground for children up to 13, with advanced parental
controls. In the current setup, we are using MongoDB for logging, analysis tasks, and
background jobs that aggregate data for performance (ie search results and allowed
content).
Carbon Calculated provides an open platform that aggregates carbon and green house
gas emissions for everything in the world, from passenger transport, raw materials,
through to consumer goods. Built on top of this platform, Carbon Calculated offers a
suite of products that make carbon calculation accessible and intuitive.
Vowch is a simple platform for telling the world about all the people, places and things
that matter most to you. It is a platform for making positive, public endorsements for
anyone or anything from a Twitter account.
Ros Spending is the first Russian public spending monitoring project. It includes
information about 1,400,000 federal government and 210,000 regional government
contracts, as well as information about more than 260,000 suppliers and 26,000
customers. MongoDB stores all reports, customer and supplier information, stats and
pre-cached queries. The project was initiated by the Institute of Contemporary
Development and launched publicly in July 2010 during the Tver economic forum.
BlueSpark designs and develops iPhone and iPad applications and specializes in
Adobe Flash development, we have a passion for creating great user experiences and
products that feel simple to use.
[Aghora] is a time attendance application specially designed for the requirements of the
Brasilian governmental requirements. Our whole application is based on PHP and
MongoDB. Click here for more information.
Man of the House is the real man's magazine, a guide for the jack of all trades trying to
be better – at work and at home, as a father and as a husband. The entire backend of
the site depends on MongoDB.
PeerIndex is an algorithmic authority ranking web service that uses MongoDB to scale
processing of the firehose of social media, as a distributed data store and middle cache
for fast site performance.
sahibinden.com is an online classifieds marketplace that serves more than 14.5 million
unique visitors and over 1.5 billion pageviews a month. sahibinden.com is using
MongoDB for storing classifieds data and caching.
Shadelight is a unique fantasy roleplaying game where you play one of the legendary
Guardians of Elumir. Set out on magical quests, battle mysterious creatures and
explore a truly unique fantasy world.
Friendmaps is a tool that allows users to view all of their social networks on a single
map.
The affiliate marketing platform Jounce has gone live using MongoDB as the main
storage solution for its search data. As of August 2010, ~10 million offers are stored in
the database.
Virb Looking for a place to park your portfolio, your band, your website? Build an
elegantly simple website with Virb. You provide the content, we’ll help with the rest —
for only $10/month.
Deal Machine is a streamlined CRM that makes sales fun and effective. We use
MongoDB as our main storage. It has helped us a lot to make the web app better and
more scalable.
arrivalguides.com is the largest network of free online (and pdf) travel guides.
arrivalguides.com recently launched a new site where they rewrote the whole
application switching from SQL server to MongoDB using the NoRM Driver for C#. The
website is purely driven by MongoDB as the database backend.
The Hype Machine keeps track of emerging music on the web. We use MongoDB to
accelerate storage and retrieval of user preferences, and other core site data.
MongoDB's web-native design and high performance in our workloads was what got
our attention. It's from the future!
See also
MongoDB Apps
Use Cases
User Feedback
Mongo-Based Applications
Please list applications that leverage MongoDB here. If you're using MongoDB for your application, we'd love to list you here! Email
[email protected].
See Also
Production Deployments - Companies and Sites using MongoDB
Hosting Center
CMS
HarmonyApp
Harmony is a powerful web-based platform for creating and managing websites. It helps connect developers with content editors, for
unprecedented flexibility and simplicity. For more information, view Steve Smith's presentation on Harmony at MongoSF (April 2010).
c5t
Websko
Websko is a content management system designed for individual Web developers and cooperative teams.
Graylog2
Graylog2 is an open source syslog server implementation that stores logs in MongoDB and provides a Rails frontend.
Analytics
Hummingbird
Events
Follow us on Facebook and Twitter to get all of the latest updates!
Mongo Conferences 10gen Weekly "Office
Hours"
Submit a proposal to present at an upcoming MongoDB conference! 10gen holds weekly open "office hours" with whiteboarding, hack
sessions, etc., in NYC. Come over to 10gen headquarters to
meet the MongoDB team.
Mongo Boston September 20
San Francisco
Mongo Hamburg October 5
On the west coast? Stop by the Epicenter Cafe in San
Free, evening meetup in Hamburg, Germany, hosted by Jimdo Francisco on Mondays to meet 10gen Software Engineer
Click here for conference agenda and registration. Aaron Staple. Ask questions, hack, have some coffee.
Look for a laptop with a "Powered by MongoDB" sticker.
Mongo Chicago October 20
Mondays 5pm - 7pm PT
One day conference in Chicago, IL. Epicenter Cafe
Click here for conference agenda and registration. 764 Harrison St
Between 4th St & Lapu St
San Francisco, CA
MongoDB Webinars
New York MongoDB User Group San Francisco MongoDB User Group
Conferences and
Meetups
Southwest
South
Introduction to MongoDB
Mohammad Azam, Sogeti
Houston Tech Fest
October 9
If you're interested in having someone present MongoDB at your conference or meetup, or if you would like to list your MongoDB event on this
page, contact meghan at 10gen dot com. Want some MongoDB stickers to give out at your talk? Complete the Swag Request Form.
[ MongoDB Conferences ] [ Ruby/Rails ] [ Python ] [ Alt.NET ] [ User Experiences ] [ More about MongoDB ]
MongoDB Conferences
Ruby/Rails
MongoDB
Seth Edwards
London Ruby Users Group
London, UK
Wednesday April 14
Video & Slides
MongoDB Rules
Kyle Banker, Software Engineer, 10gen
Mountain West Ruby Conference
Salt Lake City, UT
Thursday March 11 & Friday March 12
Slides
Introduction to Mongo DB
Joon Yu, RubyHead
teachmetocode.com
Nov-Dec, 2009
Screencasts
Python
Alt.NET
User Experiences
Humongous Drupal
DrupalCon San Francisco
Karoly Negyesi, Examiner.com
Saturday April 17
Slides | Video
Migrating to MongoDB
Bruno Morency, DokDok
Confoo.ca
March 10 - 12
Slides
Introduction to MongoDB
Mike Dirolf, Software Engineer, 10gen
Emerging Technologies for the Enterprise Conference
Philadelphia, PA
Friday, April 9
Slides
MongoDB Day
Geek Austin Data Series
Austin, TX
Saturday March 27
Photo
Mongo Scale!
Kristina Chodorow, Software Engineer, 10gen
Webcast
Friday March 26
Webcast
Intro to MongoDB
Alex Sharp, Founder / Lead Software Architect, FrothLogic
LA WebDev Meetup
February 23, 2010
Slides
Introduction to MongoDB
Kristina Chodorow, Software Engineer, 10gen
FOSDEM - Brussels, Belgium
February 7, 2010
Video | Slides | Photos
If you're interested in having someone present MongoDB at your conference or meetup, or if you would like to list your MongoDB event on this
page, contact meghan at 10gen dot com.
Slide Gallery
Click here to visit our full listing of videos & slides from recent events and presentations.
Ruby/Rails Python
Java PHP
Articles
See also the User Feedback page for community presentations, blog posts, and more.
On Atomic Operations
Reaching into Objects - how to do sophisticated query operations on nested JSON-style objects
Schema Design
Full Text Search in Mongo
MongoDB Production Deployments
Videos
Benchmarks
If you've done a benchmark, we'd love to hear about it! Let us know at kristina at 10gen dot com.
March 9, 2010 - Speed test between django_mongokit and postgresql_psycopg2 benchmarks creating, editing, and deleting.
February 15, 2010 - Benchmarking Tornado's Sessions flatfile, Memcached, MySQL, Redis, and MongoDB compared.
January 23, 2010 - Inserts and queries against MySQL, CouchDB, and Memcached.
August 11, 2009 - MySQL vs. MongoDB vs. Tokyo Tyrant vs. CouchDB inserts and queries using PHP.
August 23, 2009 - MySQL vs. MongoDB in PHP: Part 1 (inserts), Part 2 (queries), aginst InnoDB with and without the query log and MyISAM.
November 9, 2009 - MySQL vs. MongoDB in PHP and Ruby inserts (original Russian, English translation)
Disclaimer: these benchmarks were created by third parties not affiliated with MongoDB. MongoDB does not guarantee in any way the
correctness, thoroughness, or repeatability of these benchmarks.
See Also
http://blog.mongodb.org/post/472834501/mongodb-1-4-performance
FAQ
This FAQ answers basic questions for new evaluators of MongoDB. See also:
Developer FAQ
Sharding FAQ
MongoDB is an document-oriented DBMS. Think of it as MySQL but JSON (actually, BSON ) as the data model, not relational. There are no
joins. If you have used object-relational mapping layers before in your programs, you will find the Mongo interface similar to use, but faster, more
powerful, and less work to set up.
No, but MongoDB does support ad hoc queries via a JSON-style query language. See the Tour and Advanced Queries pages for more
information on how one performs operations.
For simple queries (with an index) Mongo should be fast enough that you can query the database directly without needing the equivalent of
memcached. The goal is for Mongo to be an alternative to an ORM/memcached/mysql stack. Some MongoDB users do like to mix it with
memcached though.
The database is written in C++. Drivers are usually written in their respective languages, although some use C extensions for speed.
MongoDB uses memory-mapped files. When running on a 32-bit operating system, the total storage size for the server (data, indexes,
everything) is 2gb. If you are running on a 64-bit os, there is virtually no limit to storage size. See the blog post for more information.
Product Comparisons
Code: http://github.com/mdirolf/simple-messaging-service/tree/master
Replication Master-master (with developer supplied Master-slave (and "replica sets") Master-slave
conflict resolution)
Query Method Map/reduce of javascript functions to lazily Dynamic; object-based query Dynamic; SQL
build an index per query language
Distributed Eventually consistent (master-master Strong consistency. Eventually Strong consistency. Eventually
Consistency replication with versioning and version consistent reads from secondaries are consistent reads from secondaries are
Model reconciliation) available. available.
See Also
We are not CouchDB gurus so please let us know in the forums if we have something wrong.
MVCC
One big difference is that CouchDB is MVCC based, and MongoDB is more of a traditional update-in-place store. MVCC is very good for certain
classes of problems: problems which need intense versioning; problems with offline databases that resync later; problems where you want a large
amount of master-master replication happening. Along with MVCC comes some work too: first, the database must be compacted periodically, if
there are many updates. Second, when conflicts occur on transactions, they must be handled by the programmer manually (unless the db also
does conventional locking -- although then master-master replication is likely lost).
MongoDB updates an object in-place when possible. Problems require high update rates of objects are a great fit; compaction is not necessary.
Mongo's replication works great but, without the MVCC model, it is more oriented towards master/slave and auto failover configurations than to
complex master-master setups. With MongoDB you should see high write performance, especially for updates.
Horizontal Scalability
One fundamental difference is that a number of Couch users use replication as a way to scale. With Mongo, we tend to think of replication as a
way to gain reliability/failover rather than scalability. Mongo uses (auto) sharding as our path to scalabity (sharding is GA as of 1.6). In this sense
MongoDB is more like Google BigTable. (We hear that Couch might one day add partitioning too.)
Query Expression
Couch uses a clever index building scheme to generate indexes which support particular queries. There is an elegance to the approach, although
one must predeclare these structures for each query one wants to execute. One can think of them as materialized views.
Mongo uses traditional dynamic queries. As with, say, MySQL, we can do queries where an index does not exist, or where an index is helpful but
only partially so. Mongo includes a query optimizer which makes these determinations. We find this is very nice for inspecting the data
administratively, and this method is also good when we don't want an index: such as insert-intensive collections. When an index corresponds
perfectly to the query, the Couch and Mongo approaches are then conceptually similar. We find expressing queries as JSON-style objects in
MongoDB to be quick and painless though
Atomicity
Both MongoDB and CouchDB support concurrent modifications of single documents. Both forego complex transactions involving large numbers
of objects.
Durability
The products take different approaches to durability. CouchDB is a "crash-only" design where the db can terminate at any time and remain
consistent. MongoDB take a different approach to durability. On a machine crash, one then would run a repairDatabase() operation when
starting up again (similar to MyISAM). MongoDB recommends using replication -- either LAN or WAN -- for true durability as a given server could
permanently be dead. To summarize: CouchDB is better at durability when using a single server with no replication.
Map Reduce
Both CouchDB and MongoDB support map/reduce operations. For CouchDB map/reduce is inherent to the building of all views. With MongoDB,
map/reduce is only for data processing jobs but not for traditional queries.
Javascript
Both CouchDB and MongoDB make use of Javascript. CouchDB uses Javascript extensively including in the building of views .
MongoDB supports the use of Javascript but more as an adjunct. In MongoDB, query expressions are typically expressed as JSON-style query
objects; however one may also specify a javascript expression as part of the query. MongoDB also supports running arbitrary javascript functions
server-side and uses javascript for map/reduce operations.
REST
Couch uses REST as its interface to the database. With its focus on performance, MongoDB relies on language-specific database drivers for
access to the database over a proprietary binary protocol. Of course, one could add a REST interface atop an existing MongoDB driver at any
time -- that would be a very nice community project. Some early stage REST implementations exist for MongoDB.
Performance
Philosophically, Mongo is very oriented toward performance, at the expense of features that would impede performance. We see Mongo DB
being useful for many problems where databases have not been used in the past because databases are too "heavy". Features that give
MongoDB good performance are:
client driver per language: native socket protocol for client/server interface (not REST)
use of memory mapped files for data storage
collection-oriented storage (objects from the same collection are stored contiguously)
update-in-place (not MVCC)
written in C++
Use Cases
It may be helpful to look at some particular problems and consider how we could solve them.
if we were building Lotus Notes, we would use Couch as its programmer versioning reconciliation/MVCC model fits perfectly. Any
problem where data is offline for hours then back online would fit this. In general, if we need several eventually consistent master-master
replica databases, geographically distributed, often offline, we would use Couch.
if we had very high performance requirements we would use Mongo. For example, web site user profile object storage and caching of
data from other sources.
if we were building a system with very critical transactions, such as bond trading, we would not use MongoDB for those transactions --
although we might in hybrid for other data elements of the system. For something like this we would likely choose a traditional RDBMS.
for a problem with very high update rates, we would use Mongo as it is good at that. For example, updating real time analytics counters
for a web sites (pages views, visits, etc.)
Generally, we find MongoDB to be a very good fit for building web infrastructure.
Licensing
If you are using a vanilla MongoDB server from either source or binary packages you have NO obligations. You can ignore the
rest of this page.
MongoDB Database
Free Software Foundation's GNU AGPL v3.0.
Commercial licenses are also available from 10gen.
Drivers:
mongodb.org "Supported Drivers": Apache License v2.0.
Third parties have created drivers too; licenses will vary there.
Documentation: Creative Commons.
Our goal with using AGPL is to preserve the concept of copyleft with MongoDB. With traditional GPL, copyleft was associated
with the concept of distribution of software. The problem is that nowadays, distribution of software is rare: things tend to run in
the cloud. AGPL fixes this “loophole” in GPL by saying that if you use the software over a network, you are bound by the
copyleft. Other than that, the license is virtually the same as GPL v3.
Note however that it is never required that applications using mongo be published. The copyleft applies only to the mongod and
mongos database programs. This is why Mongo DB drivers are all licensed under an Apache license. Your application, even
though it talks to the database, is a separate program and “work”.
If you intend to modify the server and distribute or provide access to your modified version you are required to release the full source code for the
modified MongoDB server. To reiterate, you only need to provide the source for the MongoDB server and not your application (assuming you use
the provided interfaces rather than linking directly against the server).
A few example cases of when you'd be required to provide your changes to MongoDB to external users:
Case Required
Regardless of whether you are required to release your changes we request that you do. The preferred way to do this is via a github fork. Then
we are likely to include your changes so everyone can benefit.
Windows
Running as a Service
See the Windows Service page.
Writing Apps
You can write apps in almost any programming language – see the Drivers page. In particular C#, .NET, PHP, C and C++ work just fine.
Versions of Windows
We have successfully ran MongoDB (mongod etc.) on:
International Docs
Most documentation for MongoDB is currently written in English. We are looking for volunteers to contribute documentation in
other languages. If you're interested in contributing to documentation in another language please email roger at 10gen dot
com.
Language Homepages
Deutsch
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Books
Available for Pre-Order
The Definitive Guide to MongoDB: The NoSQL Database for Cloud and Desktop Computing
By Peter Membrey
Coming Soon
MongoDB in Action
by Kyle Banker
First two chapters available through Manning Early Access Program
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