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FAQ: MongoDB for Application Developers

This document answers common questions about application development using MongoDB.

If you don’t find the answer you’re looking for, check the complete list of FAQs or post your question to the MongoDB User Mailing List.

What is a namespace in MongoDB?

A “namespace” is the concatenation of the database name and the collection names [1] with a period character in between.

Collections are containers for documents that share one or more indexes. Databases are groups of collections stored on disk using a single set of data files. [2]

For an example acme.users namespace, acme is the database name and users is the collection name. Period characters can occur in collection names, so that acme.user.history is a valid namespace, with acme as the database name, and user.history as the collection name.

While data models like this appear to support nested collections, the collection namespace is flat, and there is no difference from the perspective of MongoDB between acme, acme.users, and acme.records.

[1]Each index also has its own namespace.
[2]MongoDB database have a configurable limit on the number of namespaces in a database.

If you remove a document, does MongoDB remove it from disk?

Yes.

When you use remove(), the object will no longer exist in MongoDB’s on-disk data storage.

When does MongoDB write updates to disk?

MongoDB flushes writes to disk on a regular interval.

MMAPv1

In the default configuration for the MMAPv1 storage engine, MongoDB writes to the data files on disk every 60 seconds and writes to the journal files roughly every 100 milliseconds.

To change the interval for writing to the data files, use the storage.syncPeriodSecs setting. For the journal files, see storage.journal.commitIntervalMs setting.

These values represent the maximum amount of time between the completion of a write operation and when MongoDB writes to the data files or to the journal files. In many cases MongoDB and the operating system flush data to disk more frequently, so that the above values represents a theoretical maximum.

WiredTiger

For the data files, MongoDB creates checkpoints (i.e. write the snapshot data to disk) at intervals of 60 seconds or 2 gigabytes of data to write, depending on which occurs first. For the journal data,

  • WiredTiger sets checkpoints for journal data at intervals of 60 seconds or 2 GB of data, depending on which occurs first.
  • Because MongoDB uses a log file size limit of 100 MB, WiredTiger creates a new journal file approximately every 100 MB of data. When WiredTiger creates a new journal file, WiredTiger syncs the previous journal file.
  • If the write operation includes a write concern of j:true, WiredTiger forces a sync on commit of that operation as well as anything that has happened before.

How do I do transactions and locking in MongoDB?

MongoDB does not have support for traditional locking or complex transactions with rollback. MongoDB aims to be lightweight, fast, and predictable in its performance. This is similar to the MySQL MyISAM autocommit model. By keeping transaction support extremely simple, MongoDB can provide greater performance especially for partitioned or replicated systems with a number of database server processes.

MongoDB does have support for atomic operations within a single document. Given the possibilities provided by nested documents, this feature provides support for a large number of use-cases.

See also

The Atomicity and Transactions page.

How do you aggregate data with MongoDB?

In version 2.1 and later, you can use the new aggregation framework, with the aggregate command.

MongoDB also supports map-reduce with the mapReduce command, as well as basic aggregation with the group, count, and distinct. commands.

See also

The Aggregation page.

Why does MongoDB log so many “Connection Accepted” events?

If you see a very large number connection and re-connection messages in your MongoDB log, then clients are frequently connecting and disconnecting to the MongoDB server. This is normal behavior for applications that do not use request pooling, such as CGI. Consider using FastCGI, an Apache Module, or some other kind of persistent application server to decrease the connection overhead.

If these connections do not impact your performance you can use the run-time quiet option or the command-line option --quiet to suppress these messages from the log.

Does MongoDB run on Amazon EBS?

Yes.

MongoDB users of all sizes have had a great deal of success using MongoDB on the EC2 platform using EBS disks.

See also

Amazon EC2

Why are MongoDB’s data files so large?

MongoDB aggressively preallocates data files to reserve space and avoid file system fragmentation. You can use the storage.smallFiles setting to modify the file preallocation strategy.

How do I optimize storage use for small documents?

Each MongoDB document contains a certain amount of overhead. This overhead is normally insignificant but becomes significant if all documents are just a few bytes, as might be the case if the documents in your collection only have one or two fields.

Consider the following suggestions and strategies for optimizing storage utilization for these collections:

  • Use the _id field explicitly.

    MongoDB clients automatically add an _id field to each document and generate a unique 12-byte ObjectId for the _id field. Furthermore, MongoDB always indexes the _id field. For smaller documents this may account for a significant amount of space.

    To optimize storage use, users can specify a value for the _id field explicitly when inserting documents into the collection. This strategy allows applications to store a value in the _id field that would have occupied space in another portion of the document.

    You can store any value in the _id field, but because this value serves as a primary key for documents in the collection, it must uniquely identify them. If the field’s value is not unique, then it cannot serve as a primary key as there would be collisions in the collection.

  • Use shorter field names.

    MongoDB stores all field names in every document. For most documents, this represents a small fraction of the space used by a document; however, for small documents the field names may represent a proportionally large amount of space. Consider a collection of documents that resemble the following:

    { last_name : "Smith", best_score: 3.9 }
    

    If you shorten the field named last_name to lname and the field named best_score to score, as follows, you could save 9 bytes per document.

    { lname : "Smith", score : 3.9 }
    

    Shortening field names reduces expressiveness and does not provide considerable benefit for larger documents and where document overhead is not of significant concern. Shorter field names do not reduce the size of indexes, because indexes have a predefined structure.

    In general it is not necessary to use short field names.

  • Embed documents.

    In some cases you may want to embed documents in other documents and save on the per-document overhead.

When should I use GridFS?

For documents in a MongoDB collection, you should always use GridFS for storing files larger than 16 MB.

In some situations, storing large files may be more efficient in a MongoDB database than on a system-level filesystem.

  • If your filesystem limits the number of files in a directory, you can use GridFS to store as many files as needed.
  • When you want to keep your files and metadata automatically synced and deployed across a number of systems and facilities. When using geographically distributed replica sets MongoDB can distribute files and their metadata automatically to a number of mongod instances and facilities.
  • When you want to access information from portions of large files without having to load whole files into memory, you can use GridFS to recall sections of files without reading the entire file into memory.

Do not use GridFS if you need to update the content of the entire file atomically. As an alternative you can store multiple versions of each file and specify the current version of the file in the metadata. You can update the metadata field that indicates “latest” status in an atomic update after uploading the new version of the file, and later remove previous versions if needed.

Furthermore, if your files are all smaller the 16 MB BSON Document Size limit, consider storing the file manually within a single document. You may use the BinData data type to store the binary data. See your drivers documentation for details on using BinData.

For more information on GridFS, see GridFS.

How does MongoDB address SQL or Query injection?

BSON

As a client program assembles a query in MongoDB, it builds a BSON object, not a string. Thus traditional SQL injection attacks are not a problem. More details and some nuances are covered below.

MongoDB represents queries as BSON objects. Typically client libraries provide a convenient, injection free, process to build these objects. Consider the following C++ example:

BSONObj my_query = BSON( "name" << a_name );
auto_ptr<DBClientCursor> cursor = c.query("tutorial.persons", my_query);

Here, my_query then will have a value such as { name : "Joe" }. If my_query contained special characters, for example ,, :, and {, the query simply wouldn’t match any documents. For example, users cannot hijack a query and convert it to a delete.

JavaScript

Note

You can disable all server-side execution of JavaScript, by passing the --noscripting option on the command line or setting security.javascriptEnabled in a configuration file.

All of the following MongoDB operations permit you to run arbitrary JavaScript expressions directly on the server:

You must exercise care in these cases to prevent users from submitting malicious JavaScript.

Fortunately, you can express most queries in MongoDB without JavaScript and for queries that require JavaScript, you can mix JavaScript and non-JavaScript in a single query. Place all the user-supplied fields directly in a BSON field and pass JavaScript code to the $where field.

If you need to pass user-supplied values in a $where clause, you may escape these values with the CodeWScope mechanism. When you set user-submitted values as variables in the scope document, you can avoid evaluating them on the database server.

Dollar Sign Operator Escaping

Field names in MongoDB’s query language have semantic meaning. The dollar sign (i.e $) is a reserved character used to represent operators (i.e. $inc.) Thus, you should ensure that your application’s users cannot inject operators into their inputs.

In some cases, you may wish to build a BSON object with a user-provided key. In these situations, keys will need to substitute the reserved $ and . characters. Any character is sufficient, but consider using the Unicode full width equivalents: U+FF04 (i.e. “$”) and U+FF0E (i.e. “.”).

Consider the following example:

BSONObj my_object = BSON( a_key << a_name );

The user may have supplied a $ value in the a_key value. At the same time, my_object might be { $where : "things" }. Consider the following cases:

  • Insert. Inserting this into the database does no harm. The insert process does not evaluate the object as a query.

    Note

    MongoDB client drivers, if properly implemented, check for reserved characters in keys on inserts.

  • Update. The update() operation permits $ operators in the update argument but does not support the $where operator. Still, some users may be able to inject operators that can manipulate a single document only. Therefore your application should escape keys, as mentioned above, if reserved characters are possible.

  • Query Generally this is not a problem for queries that resemble { x : user_obj }: dollar signs are not top level and have no effect. Theoretically it may be possible for the user to build a query themselves. But checking the user-submitted content for $ characters in key names may help protect against this kind of injection.

Driver-Specific Issues

See the “PHP MongoDB Driver Security Notes” page in the PHP driver documentation for more information

How does MongoDB provide concurrency?

MongoDB uses multi-granularity locking [3] that allows operations to lock at the global, database or collection level, and allows for individual storage engines to implement their own concurrency control below the collection level (e.g., at the document-level in WiredTiger).

MongoDB uses reader-writer locks that allow concurrent readers shared access to a resource, such as a database or collection, but in MMAPv1, give exclusive access to a single write operation.

When writing to a replica set, the lock’s scope applies to the primary.

In a sharded cluster, locks apply to each individual shard, not to the whole cluster; i.e. each mongod instance is independent of the others in the shard cluster and uses its own locks. The operations on one mongod instance do not block the operations on any others.

For more information, see FAQ: Concurrency.

[3]See the Wikipedia page on Multiple granularity locking for more information.

What is the compare order for BSON types?

MongoDB permits documents within a single collection to have fields with different BSON types. For instance, the following documents may exist within a single collection.

{ x: "string" }
{ x: 42 }

When comparing values of different BSON types, MongoDB uses the following comparison order, from lowest to highest:

  1. MinKey (internal type)
  2. Null
  3. Numbers (ints, longs, doubles)
  4. Symbol, String
  5. Object
  6. Array
  7. BinData
  8. ObjectId
  9. Boolean
  10. Date
  11. Timestamp
  12. Regular Expression
  13. MaxKey (internal type)

MongoDB treats some types as equivalent for comparison purposes. For instance, numeric types undergo conversion before comparison.

Changed in version 3.0.0: Date objects sort before Timestamp objects. Previously Date and Timestamp objects sorted together.

The comparison treats a non-existent field as it would an empty BSON Object. As such, a sort on the a field in documents { } and { a: null } would treat the documents as equivalent in sort order.

With arrays, a less-than comparison or an ascending sort compares the smallest element of arrays, and a greater-than comparison or a descending sort compares the largest element of the arrays. As such, when comparing a field whose value is a single-element array (e.g. [ 1 ]) with non-array fields (e.g. 2), the comparison is between 1 and 2. A comparison of an empty array (e.g. [ ]) treats the empty array as less than null or a missing field.

MongoDB sorts BinData in the following order:

  1. First, the length or size of the data.
  2. Then, by the BSON one-byte subtype.
  3. Finally, by the data, performing a byte-by-byte comparison.

Consider the following mongo example:

db.test.insert( {x : 3 } );
db.test.insert( {x : 2.9 } );
db.test.insert( {x : new Date() } );
db.test.insert( {x : true } );

db.test.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)" }

The $type operator provides access to BSON type comparison in the MongoDB query syntax. See the documentation on BSON types and the $type operator for additional information.

Warning

Data models that associate a field name with different data types within a collection are strongly discouraged.

Without internal consistency complicates application code, and can lead to unnecessary complexity for application developers.

See also

When multiplying values of mixed types, what type conversion rules apply?

The $mul multiplies the numeric value of a field by a number. For multiplication with values of mixed numeric types (32-bit integer, 64-bit integer, float), the following type conversion rules apply:

  32-bit Integer 64-bit Integer Float
32-bit Integer 32-bit or 64-bit Integer 64-bit Integer Float
64-bit Integer 64-bit Integer 64-bit Integer Float
Float Float Float Float

Note

  • If the product of two 32-bit integers exceeds the maximum value for a 32-bit integer, the result is a 64-bit integer.
  • Integer operations of any type that exceed the maximum value for a 64-bit integer produce an error.

How do I query for fields that have null values?

Different query operators treat null values differently.

Consider the collection test with the following documents:

{ _id: 1, cancelDate: null }
{ _id: 2 }

Comparison with Null

The { cancelDate : null } query matches documents that either contain the cancelDate field whose value is null or that do not contain the cancelDate field. If the queried index is sparse, however, then the query will only match null values, not missing fields.

Changed in version 2.6: If using the sparse index results in an incomplete result, MongoDB will not use the index unless a hint() explicitly specifies the index. See Sparse Indexes for more information.

Given the following query:

db.test.find( { cancelDate: null } )

The query returns both documents:

{ "_id" : 1, "cancelDate" : null }
{ "_id" : 2 }

Type Check

The { cancelDate : { $type: 10 } } query matches documents that contains the cancelDate field whose value is null only; i.e. the value of the cancelDate field is of BSON Type Null (i.e. 10) :

db.test.find( { cancelDate : { $type: 10 } } )

The query returns only the document that contains the null value:

{ "_id" : 1, "cancelDate" : null }

Existence Check

The { cancelDate : { $exists: false } } query matches documents that do not contain the cancelDate field:

db.test.find( { cancelDate : { $exists: false } } )

The query returns only the document that does not contain the cancelDate field:

{ "_id" : 2 }

See also

The reference documentation for the $type and $exists operators.

Are there any restrictions on the names of Collections?

Collection names can be any UTF-8 string with the following exceptions:

  • A collection name should begin with a letter or an underscore.

  • The empty string ("") is not a valid collection name.

  • Collection names cannot contain the $ character. (version 2.2 only)

  • Collection names cannot contain the null character: \0

  • Do not name a collection using the system. prefix. MongoDB reserves system. for system collections.

  • The maximum length of the collection namespace, which includes the database name, the dot (.) separator, and the collection name (i.e. <database>.<collection>), is 120 bytes.

    However, for maximum flexibility, collections should have names less than 80 characters.

If your collection name includes special characters, such as the underscore character, then to access the collection use the db.getCollection() method or a similar method for your driver.

Example

To create a collection _foo and insert the { a : 1 } document, use the following operation:

db.getCollection("_foo").insert( { a : 1 } )

To perform a query, use the find() method, in as the following:

db.getCollection("_foo").find()

How do I isolate cursors from intervening write operations?

MongoDB cursors can return the same document more than once in some situations. [4] You can use the snapshot() method on a cursor to isolate the operation for a very specific case.

snapshot() guarantees that the query will return each document no more than once.

The snapshot() does not guarantee that the data returned by the query will reflect a single moment in time nor does it provide isolation from insert or delete operations.

Warning

As an alternative, if your collection has a field or fields that are never modified, you can use a unique index on this field or these fields to achieve a similar result as the snapshot(). Query with hint() to explicitly force the query to use that index.

[4]As a cursor returns documents other operations may interleave with the query: with MMAPv1 storage engine, if some of these operations are updates that cause the document to move (in the case of a table scan, caused by document growth) or that change the indexed field on the index used by the query; then the cursor will return the same document more than once.

When should I embed documents within other documents?

When modeling data in MongoDB, embedding is frequently the choice for:

  • “contains” relationships between entities.
  • one-to-many relationships when the “many” objects always appear with or are viewed in the context of their parents.

You should also consider embedding for performance reasons if you have a collection with a large number of small documents. Nevertheless, if small, separate documents represent the natural model for the data, then you should maintain that model.

If, however, you can group these small documents by some logical relationship and you frequently retrieve the documents by this grouping, you might consider “rolling-up” the small documents into larger documents that contain an array of embedded documents. Keep in mind that if you often only need to retrieve a subset of the documents within the group, then “rolling-up” the documents may not provide better performance.

“Rolling up” these small documents into logical groupings means that queries to retrieve a group of documents involve sequential reads and fewer random disk accesses.

Additionally, “rolling up” documents and moving common fields to the larger document benefit the index on these fields. There would be fewer copies of the common fields and there would be fewer associated key entries in the corresponding index. See Index Concepts for more information on indexes.

Where can I learn more about data modeling in MongoDB?

Begin by reading the documents in the Data Models section. These documents contain a high level introduction to data modeling considerations in addition to practical examples of data models targeted at particular issues.

Additionally, consider the following external resources that provide additional examples:

Can I manually pad documents to prevent moves during updates?

Changed in version 3.0.0.

With the MMAPv1 storage engine, an update can cause a document to move on disk if the document grows in size. To minimize document movements, MongoDB uses padding.

You should not have to pad manually because by default, MongoDB uses Power of 2 Sized Allocations to add padding automatically. The Power of 2 Sized Allocations ensures that MongoDB allocates document space in sizes that are powers of 2, which helps ensure that MongoDB can efficiently reuse free space created by document deletion or relocation as well as reduce the occurrences of reallocations in many cases.

However, if you must pad a document manually, you can add a temporary field to the document and then $unset the field, as in the following example.

Warning

Do not manually pad documents in a capped collection. Applying manual padding to a document in a capped collection can break replication. Also, the padding is not preserved if you re-sync the MongoDB instance.

var myTempPadding = [ "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa",
                      "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa",
                      "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa",
                      "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"];

db.myCollection.insert( { _id: 5, paddingField: myTempPadding } );

db.myCollection.update( { _id: 5 },
                        { $unset: { paddingField: "" } }
                      )

db.myCollection.update( { _id: 5 },
                        { $set: { realField: "Some text that I might have needed padding for" } }
                      )

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