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- Release Notes for MongoDB 3.0
Release Notes for MongoDB 3.0¶
On this page
March 3, 2015
MongoDB 3.0 is now available. Key features include support for the
WiredTiger storage engine, pluggable storage engine API,
SCRAM-SHA-1
authentication mechanism, and improved explain
functionality.
MongoDB Ops Manager, which includes Automation, Backup, and Monitoring, is now also available. See the Ops Manager documentation and the Ops Manager release notes for more information.
Minor Releases¶
3.0.15 – May 15, 2017¶
Issues fixed:
- SERVER-27164: Deadlock during initial sync or steady state replication when CRUD operations implicitly create collections on the same database.
- SERVER-28548: In MMAPv1, index readers/writers can return invalid data if record no longer exists.
- All issues closed in 3.0.15
3.0.14 – Nov 4, 2016¶
Issues fixed:
- Incorrect memory access on 3.0.13 triggers segmentation fault: SERVER-26889
3.0.13 – Oct 31, 2016¶
Issues fixed:
- Debian 8(Jessie) packages: SERVER-18329
- Upgrade to Perl compatible regular expressions (PCRE 8.39): SERVER-24662
- Limit memory usage during 2dsphere index build: SERVER-25075
- All issues closed in 3.0.13
3.0.12 – May 9, 2016¶
Issues fixed:
- Background index build may result in extra index key entries that do not correspond to indexed documents: SERVER-22970
- Documents that contain embedded null characters can be created: SERVER-7005
- IX GlobalLock being held while waiting for WiredTiger cache eviction: SERVER-22964
- All issues closed in 3.0.12
3.0.11 – Mar 31, 2016¶
Issues fixed:
- For MongoDB 3.0.9 and MongoDB 3.0.10, during chunk migration, insert and update operations to documents in the migrating chunk are not reflected in the destination shard: SERVER-23425
3.0.10 – Mar 8, 2016¶
Issues fixed:
- Read preference of
secondaryPreferred
can end up using unversioned connections: SERVER-18671 - For MMAPv1 journaling, the “last sequence number” file (
lsn
file) may be ahead of what is synced to the data files: SERVER-22261. - Data size change for oplog deletes can overflow 32-bit int: SERVER-22634
- High fragmentation on WiredTiger databases under write workloads: SERVER-22898.
- All issues closed in 3.0.10
3.0.9 – Jan 26, 2016¶
Issues fixed:
- Queries which specify sort and batch size can return results out of order if documents are concurrently updated. SERVER-19996
- Large amounts of create and drop collections can cause
listDatabases
to be slow under WiredTiger. SERVER-20961 - Authentication failure message includes server IP address instead of the client IP address. SERVER-22054
- All issues closed in 3.0.9
3.0.8 – Dec 15, 2015¶
Issues fixed:
findAndModify
onmongos
can upsert to the wrong shard. SERVER-20407.- WiredTiger commit visibility caused document not found. SERVER-21275.
- The oplog can grow to 3x configured size. SERVER-21553
- All issues closed in 3.0.8
3.0.7 – Oct 13, 2015¶
Issues fixed:
- WiredTiger memory handling and performance issues: SERVER-20159, SERVER-20204, SERVER-20091, and SERVER-20176.
- Reconfig during a pending step down may prevent a primary from stepping down: SERVER-20262.
- Built-in roles requires additional privileges: SERVER-19131, SERVER-15893, and SERVER-13647.
- All issues closed in 3.0.7
3.0.6 – August 24, 2015¶
Issues fixed:
- WiredTiger Stability issues: SERVER-19751, SERVER-19673, and SERVER-19573.
- Interaction between SSL and Auditing: SERVER-19538.
- Aggregation
$sort
on sharded systems SERVER-19464. - All issues closed in 3.0.6
3.0.5 – July 28, 2015¶
Issues fixed and improvements:
- Improvements to WiredTiger for capped collections and replication (SERVER-19178, SERVER-18875 and SERVER-19513).
- Additional WiredTiger improvements for performance (SERVER-19189) and improvements related to cache and session use (SERVER-18829 SERVER-17836).
- Performance improvements for longer running queries, particularly
$text
and$near
queries SERVER-18926. - All issues closed in 3.0.5
3.0.4 – June 16, 2015¶
Issues fixed:
- Missed writes with concurrent inserts during chunk migration from shards with WiredTiger primaries: SERVER-18822
- Write conflicts with multi-update updates with
upsert=true
with the Wired Tiger Storage engine: SERVER-18213 - Secondary reads could block replication: SERVER-18190
- Performance on Windows with WiredTiger and documents larger than 16kb: SERVER-18079
- WiredTiger data files are not correctly recovered following unexpected system restarts: SERVER-18316
- All issues closed in 3.0.4
3.0.3 – May 12, 2015¶
Issues fixed:
- Deprecate
db.eval()
and add warnings: SERVER-17453 - Potential for abrupt termination with the Windows service stop operation: SERVER-17802
- Crash caused by update with a key too large to index on WiredTiger and RocksDB storage engines: SERVER-17882
- Inconsistent support for
mapReduce
ineval
environment: SERVER-17889 - All issues closed in 3.0.3
3.0.2 – April 9, 2015¶
Issues fixed:
- Inefficient query plans for
2d
$nearSphere
: SERVER-17469 - Starting
mongod
during repair operations with WiredTiger: SERVER-17652 and SERVER-17729 - Invalid compression stream error with WiredTiger and
zlib
block compression: SERVER-17713 - Memory use issue for inserts into large indexed arrays: SERVER-17616
- All issues closed in 3.0.2
3.0.1 – March 17, 2015¶
Issues fixed:
- Race condition in WiredTiger between inserts and checkpoints that could result in lost records: SERVER-17506.
- WiredTiger’s capped collections implementation causes a server crash: SERVER-17345.
- Initial sync with duplicate
_id
entries: SERVER-17487. - Deadlock condition in MMAPv1 between the journal lock and the oplog collection lock: SERVER-17416.
- All issues closed in 3.0.1
Major Changes¶
Pluggable Storage Engine API¶
MongoDB 3.0 introduces a pluggable storage engine API that allows third parties to develop storage engines for MongoDB.
WiredTiger¶
MongoDB 3.0 introduces support for the WiredTiger storage engine. With the support for WiredTiger, MongoDB now supports two storage engines:
- MMAPv1, the storage engine available in previous versions of MongoDB and the default storage engine for MongoDB 3.0, and
- WiredTiger, available only in the 64-bit versions of MongoDB 3.0.
WiredTiger Usage¶
WiredTiger is an alternate to the default MMAPv1 storage engine. WiredTiger supports all MongoDB features, including operations that report on server, database, and collection statistics. Switching to WiredTiger, however, requires a change to the on-disk storage format. For instructions on changing the storage engine to WiredTiger, see the appropriate sections in the Upgrade MongoDB to 3.0 documentation.
MongoDB 3.0 replica sets and sharded clusters can have members with different storage engines; however, performance can vary according to workload. For details, see the appropriate sections in the Upgrade MongoDB to 3.0 documentation.
The WiredTiger storage engine requires the latest official MongoDB drivers. For more information, see WiredTiger and Driver Version Compatibility.
See also
Support for touch Command, WiredTiger Storage Engine documentation
WiredTiger Configuration¶
To configure the behavior and properties of the WiredTiger storage
engine, see storage.wiredTiger
configuration options. You
can set WiredTiger options on the command line.
See also
WiredTiger Concurrency and Compression¶
The 3.0 WiredTiger storage engine provides document-level locking and compression.
By default, WiredTiger compresses collection data using the snappy compression library. WiredTiger uses prefix compression on all indexes by default.
See also
WiredTiger section in the Production Notes, the blog post New Compression Options in MongoDB 3.0
MMAPv1 Improvements¶
MMAPv1 Concurrency Improvement¶
In version 3.0, the MMAPv1 storage engine adds support for collection-level locking.
MMAPv1 Configuration Changes¶
To support multiple storage engines, some configuration settings for MMAPv1 have changed. See Configuration File Options Changes.
MMAPv1 Record Allocation Behavior Changes¶
MongoDB 3.0 no longer implements dynamic record allocation and
deprecates paddingFactor. The default
allocation strategy for collections in instances that use MMAPv1 is
power of 2 allocation, which has been
improved to better handle large document sizes. In 3.0, the
usePowerOf2Sizes
flag is ignored, so the power of 2 strategy is
used for all collections that do not have noPadding
flag set.
For collections with workloads that consist only of inserts or in-place
updates (such as incrementing counters), you can disable the power of 2
strategy. To disable the power of 2 strategy for a collection, use the
collMod
command with the noPadding
flag or the
db.createCollection()
method with the noPadding
option.
Warning
Do not set noPadding
if the workload includes removes or any
updates that may cause documents to grow. For more information, see
No Padding Allocation Strategy.
When low on disk space, MongoDB 3.0 no longer errors on all writes but only when the required disk allocation fails. As such, MongoDB now allows in-place updates and removes when low on disk space.
See also
Replica Sets¶
Increased Number of Replica Set Members¶
In MongoDB 3.0, replica sets can have up to 50 members. [1] The following drivers support the larger replica sets:
- C# (.NET) Driver 1.10
- Java Driver 2.13
- Python Driver (PyMongo) 3.0
- Ruby Driver 2.0
- Node.JS Driver 2.0
The C, C++, Perl, and PHP drivers, as well as the earlier versions of the Ruby, Python, and Node.JS drivers, discover and monitor replica set members serially, and thus are not suitable for use with large replica sets.
[1] | The maximum number of voting members remains at 7. |
Replica Set Step Down Behavior Changes¶
The process that a primary member of a replica set uses to step down has the following changes:
- Before stepping down,
replSetStepDown
will attempt to terminate long running user operations that would block the primary from stepping down, such as an index build, a write operation or a map-reduce job. - To help prevent rollbacks, the
replSetStepDown
will wait for an electable secondary to catch up to the state of the primary before stepping down. Previously, a primary would wait for a secondary to catch up to within 10 seconds of the primary (i.e. a secondary with a replication lag of 10 seconds or less) before stepping down. replSetStepDown
now allows users to specify asecondaryCatchUpPeriodSecs
parameter to specify how long the primary should wait for a secondary to catch up before stepping down.
Other Replica Set Operational Changes¶
- Initial sync builds indexes more efficiently for each collection and applies oplog entries in batches using threads.
- Definition of w: “majority” write concern changed to mean majority of voting nodes.
- Stronger restrictions on Replica Set Configuration. For details, see Replica Set Configuration Validation.
- For pre-existing collections on secondary members, MongoDB 3.0 no
longer automatically builds missing
_id
indexes.
Sharded Clusters¶
MongoDB 3.0 provides the following enhancements to sharded clusters:
- Adds a new
sh.removeTagRange()
helper to improve management of sharded collections with tags. The newsh.removeTagRange()
method acts as a complement tosh.addTagRange()
. - Provides a more predictable read preference behavior.
mongos
instances no longer pin connections to members of replica sets when performing read operations. Instead,mongos
reevaluates read preferences for every operation to provide a more predictable read preference behavior when read preferences change. - Provides a new
writeConcern
setting to configure the write concern of chunk migration operations. You can configure thewriteConcern
setting for the balancer as well as formoveChunk
andcleanupOrphaned
commands. - Improves visibility of balancer operations.
sh.status()
includes information about the state of the balancer. Seesh.status()
for details.
Security Improvements¶
MongoDB 3.0 includes the following security enhancements:
- MongoDB 3.0 adds a new SCRAM-SHA-1 challenge-response user authentication
mechanism.
SCRAM-SHA-1
requires a driver upgrade if your current driver version does not supportSCRAM-SHA-1
. For the driver versions that supportSCRAM-SHA-1
, see Upgrade Drivers. - Increases restrictions when using the Localhost Exception to access MongoDB. For details, see Localhost Exception Changed.
See also
Improvements¶
New Query Introspection System¶
MongoDB 3.0 includes a new query introspection system that provides an improved output format and a finer-grained introspection into both query plan and query execution.
For details, see the new db.collection.explain()
method and
the new explain
command as well as the updated
cursor.explain()
method.
For information on the format of the new output, see Explain Results.
Enhanced Logging¶
To improve usability of the log messages for diagnosis, MongoDB categorizes some log messages under specific components, or operations, and provides the ability to set the verbosity level for these components. For information, see Log Messages.
MongoDB Tools Enhancements¶
All MongoDB tools except for mongosniff
and
mongoperf
are now written in Go and maintained as a separate
project.
- New options for parallelized
mongodump
andmongorestore
. You can control the number of collections thatmongorestore
will restore at a time with the--numParallelCollections
option. - New options
-excludeCollection
and--excludeCollectionsWithPrefix
formongodump
to exclude collections. mongorestore
can now accept BSON data input from standard input in addition to reading BSON data from file.mongostat
andmongotop
can now return output in JSON format with the--json
option.- Added configurable write concern to
mongoimport
,mongorestore
, andmongofiles
. Use the--writeConcern
option. The default writeConcern has been changed to ‘w:majority’. mongofiles
now allows you to configure the GridFS prefix with the--prefix
option so that you can use custom namespaces and store multiple GridFS namespaces in a single database.
See also
Indexes¶
- Background index builds will no longer automatically interrupt if
dropDatabase
,drop
,dropIndexes
operations occur for the database or collection affected by the index builds. ThedropDatabase
,drop
, anddropIndexes
commands will still fail with the error messagea background operation is currently running
, as in 2.6. - If you specify multiple indexes to the
createIndexes
command,- the command only scans the collection once, and
- if at least one index is to be built in the foreground, the operation will build all the specified indexes in the foreground.
- For sharded collections, indexes can now cover queries that execute against the
mongos
if the index includes the shard key.
See also
Query Enhancements¶
MongoDB 3.0 includes the following query enhancements:
- For geospatial queries, adds support for “big” polygons for
$geoIntersects
and$geoWithin
queries. “Big” polygons are single-ringed GeoJSON polygons with areas greater than that of a single hemisphere. See$geometry
,$geoIntersects
, and$geoWithin
for details. - For
aggregate()
, adds a new$dateToString
operator to facilitate converting a date to a formatted string. - Adds the
$eq
query operator to query for equality conditions.
Distributions and Supported Versions¶
Most non-Enterprise MongoDB distributions now include support for TLS/SSL.
Previously, only MongoDB Enterprise distributions came with TLS/SSL support
included; for non-Enterprise distributions, you had to build MongoDB
locally with the --ssl
flag (i.e. scons --ssl
).
32-bit MongoDB builds are available for testing, but are not for production use. 32-bit MongoDB builds do not include the WiredTiger storage engine.
MongoDB builds for Solaris do not support the WiredTiger storage engine.
MongoDB builds are available for Windows Server 2003 and Windows Vista (as “64-bit Legacy”), but the minimum officially supported Windows version is Windows Server 2008.
See also
Package Repositories¶
Non-Enterprise MongoDB Linux packages for 3.0 and later are in a new repository. Follow the appropriate Linux installation instructions to install the 3.0 packages from the new location.
MongoDB Enterprise Features¶
Auditing¶
Auditing in MongoDB Enterprise can filter on any
field in the audit message, including the
fields returned in the param
document. This enhancement, along with the
auditAuthorizationSuccess
parameter, enables auditing to
filter on CRUD operations. However, enabling
auditAuthorizationSuccess
to audit of all authorization
successes degrades performance more than auditing only the
authorization failures.
Additional Information¶
Changes Affecting Compatibility¶
Some changes in 3.0 can affect compatibility and may require user actions. For a detailed list of compatibility changes, see Compatibility Changes in MongoDB 3.0.
Upgrade Process¶
See Upgrade MongoDB to 3.0 for full upgrade instructions.
Download¶
To download MongoDB 3.0, go to the downloads page.