mongostat
macOS Sierra and Go 1.6 Incompatibility
Users running on macOS Sierra require the 3.2.10 or newer versionof mongostat.
Synopsis
The mongostat
utility provides a quick overview of thestatus of a currently running mongod
or mongos
instance. mongostat
is functionally similar to theUNIX/Linux file system utility vmstat
, but provides data regardingmongod
and mongos
instances.
Run mongostat
from the system command line, not the mongo
shell.
Availability
The mongostat
tool is part of the MongoDB tools package. Consult theinstallation guide for your platform forinstructions on how to install the tools package as part of yourMongoDB installation.
The tools package is also available from theMongoDB Download Center,either as a separate tools
download, or contained within theTGZ
or ZIP
downloads, depending on platform. On Windows, the MSI
installer includes all tools as part of the default installation.
Tip
If downloading the TGZ
or ZIP
files from the DownloadCenter, you may want to update your PATH
environmentvariable to include the directory where you installed these tools.See the installation guidefor your platform for more information.
Required Access
In order to connect to a mongod
that enforces authorizationwith the —auth
option, specify the—username
and —password
options, and the connecting user must have theserverStatus
privilege action on the cluster resources.
The built-in role clusterMonitor
provides this privilege aswell as other privileges. To create a role with just the privilege torun mongostat
, see Create a Role to Run mongostat.
Behavior
FIPS
Starting in version 4.2, MongoDB removes the —sslFIPSMode
option for mongostat. mongostatwill use FIPS compliant connections tomongod
/mongos
if themongod
/mongos
instances areconfigured to use FIPS mode.
Options
—verbose
,
-v
- Increases the amount of internal reporting returned on standard outputor in log files. Increase the verbosity with the
-v
form byincluding the option multiple times, (e.g.-vvvvv
.)
New in version 3.4.6.
Specify a resolvable URIconnection string (enclose in quotes) to connect to the MongoDB deployment.
- --uri="mongodb://[username:password@]host1[:port1][,host2[:port2],...[,hostN[:portN]]][/[database][?options]]"
For information on the components of the connection string, seethe Connection String URI Format documentation.
Note
For TLS/SSL options, use the command-line options instead of theURI options for TLS/SSL (Available starting in4.2).
Important
The following command-line options cannot be used in conjunctionwith —uri
option:
—host
—port
—username
—password
(if theURI connection string also includes the password)—authenticationDatabase
—authenticationMechanism
Instead, specify these options as part of your—uri
connection string.
Specifies a resolvable hostname for the mongod
to which toconnect. By default, the mongostat attempts to connect to a MongoDBinstance running on the localhost on port number 27017
.
To connect to a replica set, you can specify the set member ormembers to report on, as in the following (see also the—discover
flag):
- --host=<hostname1><:port>,<hostname2><:port>,<...>
Changed in version 3.0.0: If you use IPv6 and use the <address>:<port>
format, you mustenclose the portion of an address and port combination inbrackets (e.g. [<address>]
).
Note
You cannot specify both —host
and —uri
.
Specifies the TCP port on which the MongoDB instance listens forclient connections.
Note
You cannot specify both —port
and —uri
.
Enables IPv6 support and allows mongostat to connect to theMongoDB instance using an IPv6 network. Prior to MongoDB 3.0, youhad to specify —ipv6
to use IPv6. In MongoDB 3.0 and later, IPv6is always enabled.
New in version 2.6.
Enables connection to a mongod
or mongos
that hasTLS/SSL support enabled.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, seeConfigure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL andTLS/SSL Configuration for Clients .
New in version 2.6.
Specifies the .pem
file that contains the root certificate chainfrom the Certificate Authority. Specify the file name of the.pem
file using relative or absolute paths.
Starting in version 3.4, if —tlsCAFile
/net.tls.CAFile
(ortheir aliases —sslCAFile
/net.ssl.CAFile
) is not specifiedand you are not using x.509 authentication, the system-wide CAcertificate store will be used when connecting to an TLS/SSL-enabledserver.
To use x.509 authentication, —tlsCAFile
or net.tls.CAFile
must be specified unless using —tlsCertificateSelector
or—net.tls.certificateSelector
. Or if using the ssl
aliases,—sslCAFile
or net.ssl.CAFile
must be specified unless using—sslCertificateSelector
or net.ssl.certificateSelector
.
Warning
Version 3.2 and earlier: For TLS/SSL connections (—ssl
) tomongod
and mongos
, if the mongostat runs without the—sslCAFile
, mongostat will not attemptto validate the server certificates. This creates a vulnerabilityto expired mongod
and mongos
certificates aswell as to foreign processes posing as valid mongod
ormongos
instances. Ensure that you always specify theCA file to validate the server certificates in cases whereintrusion is a possibility.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, seeConfigure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL andTLS/SSL Configuration for Clients .
New in version 2.6.
Specifies the .pem
file that contains both the TLS/SSL certificateand key. Specify the file name of the .pem
file using relativeor absolute paths.
This option is required when using the —ssl
option to connectto a mongod
or mongos
that hasCAFile
enabled withoutallowConnectionsWithoutCertificates
.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, seeConfigure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL andTLS/SSL Configuration for Clients .
New in version 2.6.
Specifies the password to de-crypt the certificate-key file (i.e.—sslPEMKeyFile
). Use the—sslPEMKeyPassword
optiononly if the certificate-key file is encrypted. In all cases, themongostat will redact the password from all logging andreporting output.
If the private key in the PEM file is encrypted and you do notspecify the —sslPEMKeyPassword
option, the mongostat will promptfor a passphrase. See TLS/SSL Certificate Passphrase.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, seeConfigure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL andTLS/SSL Configuration for Clients .
New in version 2.6.
Specifies the .pem
file that contains the Certificate RevocationList. Specify the file name of the .pem
file using relative orabsolute paths.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, seeConfigure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL andTLS/SSL Configuration for Clients .
New in version 2.6.
Bypasses the validation checks for server certificates and allowsthe use of invalid certificates. When using theallowInvalidCertificates
setting, MongoDB logs as awarning the use of the invalid certificate.
Starting in MongoDB 4.0, if you specify—sslAllowInvalidCertificates
ornet.ssl.allowInvalidCertificates: true
(or in MongoDB 4.2, thealias —tlsAllowInvalidateCertificates
ornet.tls.allowInvalidCertificates: true
) when using x.509authentication, an invalid certificate is only sufficient toestablish a TLS/SSL connection but is insufficient forauthentication.
Warning
Although available, avoid using the—sslAllowInvalidCertificates
option if possible. If the use of—sslAllowInvalidCertificates
is necessary, only use the optionon systems where intrusion is not possible.
If the mongo
shell (and otherMongoDB Tools) runs with the—sslAllowInvalidCertificates
option, themongo
shell (and otherMongoDB Tools) will not attempt to validatethe server certificates. This creates a vulnerability to expiredmongod
and mongos
certificates aswell as to foreign processes posing as validmongod
or mongos
instances. If youonly need to disable the validation of the hostname in theTLS/SSL certificates, see —sslAllowInvalidHostnames
.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, seeConfigure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL andTLS/SSL Configuration for Clients .
New in version 3.0.
Disables the validation of the hostnames in TLS/SSL certificates. Allowsmongostat to connect to MongoDB instances even if the hostname in theircertificates do not match the specified hostname.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, seeConfigure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL andTLS/SSL Configuration for Clients .
—username
=<username>
,
-u
=<username>
- Specifies a username with which to authenticate to a MongoDBdatabase that uses authentication. Use in conjunction with the
—password
and—authenticationDatabase
options.
Note
You cannot specify both —username
and —uri
.
—password
=<password>
,
-p
=<password>
- Specifies a password with which to authenticate to a MongoDBdatabase that uses authentication. Use in conjunction with the
—username
and—authenticationDatabase
options.
Changed in version 3.0.2: To prompt the user for the password, pass the —username
option without —password
orspecify an empty string as the —password
value, as in—password=""
.
Note
You cannot specify both —password
and —uri
.
—authenticationDatabase
=<dbname>
- Specifies the authentication database where the specified
—username
has been created. SeeAuthentication Database.
Note
You cannot specify both —authenticationDatabase
and —uri
.
—authenticationDatabase
is required for mongod
and mongos
instances that use Authentication.
Specifies the authentication mechanism the mongostat instance uses toauthenticate to the mongod
or mongos
.
Changed in version 4.0: MongoDB removes support for the deprecated MongoDBChallenge-Response (MONGODB-CR
) authentication mechanism.
MongoDB adds support for SCRAM mechanism using the SHA-256 hashfunction (SCRAM-SHA-256
).
ValueDescriptionSCRAM-SHA-1RFC 5802 standardSalted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA-1hash function.SCRAM-SHA-256RFC 7677 standardSalted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA-256hash function.
Requires featureCompatibilityVersion set to 4.0
.
New in version 4.0.
MONGODB-X509MongoDB TLS/SSL certificate authentication.GSSAPI (Kerberos)External authentication using Kerberos. This mechanism isavailable only in MongoDB Enterprise.PLAIN (LDAP SASL)External authentication using LDAP. You can also use PLAIN
for authenticating in-database users. PLAIN
transmitspasswords in plain text. This mechanism is available only inMongoDB Enterprise.
Note
You cannot specify both —authenticationMechanism
and —uri
.
New in version 2.6.
Specify the name of the service using GSSAPI/Kerberos. Only required if the service does not use thedefault name of mongodb
.
This option is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
New in version 2.6.
Specify the hostname of a service using GSSAPI/Kerberos. Only required if the hostname of a machine doesnot match the hostname resolved by DNS.
This option is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
New in version 3.4.
When true
, mongostat formats dates and quantity values foreasier reading, as in the following sample output:
- insert query update delete getmore command dirty used flushes vsize res qrw arw net_in net_out conn time
- 991 *0 *0 *0 0 2|0 3.4% 4.5% 0 2.90G 297M 0|0 0|0 12.9m 84.2k 2 Oct 6 09:45:37.478
- 989 *0 *0 *0 0 2|0 3.6% 4.7% 0 2.91G 310M 0|0 0|0 12.9m 84.1k 2 Oct 6 09:45:38.476
- 988 *0 *0 *0 0 1|0 3.7% 4.8% 0 2.92G 323M 0|0 0|0 12.8m 83.8k 2 Oct 6 09:45:39.481
- 976 *0 *0 *0 0 2|0 3.9% 5.0% 0 2.94G 335M 0|0 0|0 12.7m 83.7k 2 Oct 6 09:45:40.476
When false
, mongostat returns the raw data, as in the followingsample output:
- insert query update delete getmore command dirty used flushes vsize res qrw arw net_in net_out conn time
- 992 *0 *0 *0 0 2|0 1.3 2.4 0 2941255680 149946368 0|0 0|0 12913607 84271 2 2016-10-06T09:45:25-04:00
- 989 *0 *0 *0 0 1|0 1.5 2.6 0 2974810112 163577856 0|0 0|0 12873225 84087 2 2016-10-06T09:45:26-04:00
- 996 *0 *0 *0 0 1|0 1.6 2.8 0 2972712960 177209344 0|0 0|0 12955423 84345 2 2016-10-06T09:45:27-04:00
- 987 *0 *0 *0 0 1|0 1.8 2.9 0 2989490176 190840832 0|0 0|0 12861852 84008 2 2016-10-06T09:45:28-04:00
New in version 3.4.
When specified, mongostat includes only the specified fieldsin the mongostat output.
Use dot notation to specifyserverStatus fields
, as inmetrics.document.inserted
.
To specify a custom name for a field, use <field>=<customName>
,as in:
- mongostat -o='host=H,time=T,version=MongoDB Version'
-o
supports the following methods to modify the informationreturned for a given serverStatus field:
rate
()- Use
.rate()
to view the rate per second at which aserverStatus field is changing frommongostat
call tocall.
View Rate of Change for a Field with .rate() illustrates how to usemongostat
with -o
and the .rate()
method.
diff
()- Use
.diff()
to view how much a serverStatus field haschanged since the previousmongostat
call. The intervalbetween calls is specified by<sleeptime>
.
View Field Changes with .diff() illustrates how to usemongostat
with -o
and the .diff()
method.
mongostat supports specifying either-o
or -O
:you cannot include both options.
See Specify mongostat Output Fields for an example of-o
.
New in version 3.4.
When specified, mongostat includes the specifiedserverStatus
fields after the default mongostat output.
Use dot notation to specifyserverStatus fields
, as inmetrics.document.inserted
.
To specify a custom name for a field, use <field>=<customName>
,as in:
- mongostat -O=host=H,time=T
mongostat supports specifying either-O
or -o
: you cannot includeboth options.
See Add Fields to mongostat Output for an example of-O
.
—rowcount
=<number>
,
-n
=<number>
- Controls the number of rows to output. Use in conjunction withthe
sleeptime
argument to control the duration of amongostat
operation.
Unless —rowcount
is specified, mongostat
will return an infinite number of rows (e.g. value of 0
.)
—discover
- Discovers and reports on statistics from all members of a replicaset or sharded cluster. When connected to any member of areplica set,
—discover
all non-hidden members of the replica set. When connected to amongos
,mongostat
will return data from all shards inthe cluster. If a replica set provides a shard in the sharded cluster,mongostat
will report on non-hidden members of that replicaset.
The mongostat —host
option is not required butpotentially useful in this case.
Changed in version 2.6: When running with —discover
, mongostat
nowrespects —rowcount
.
—http
- Configures
mongostat
to collect data using the HTTP interfacerather than a raw database connection.
Changed in version 3.6: MongoDB 3.6 removes the deprecated HTTP interface and REST API toMongoDB.
New in version 3.0.0.
Returns output for mongostat in JSON format.
New in version 3.4.
Display mongostat output in an interactive non-scrolling interfacerather than the default scrolling output.
—interactive
is not available with the —json
option.
See: View Statistics in an Interactive Interface for an example of —interactive
.
The final mongostat argument is the length of time, in seconds, thatmongostat
waits in between calls. By default mongostat
returns one call every second.
mongostat
returns values that reflect the operationsover a 1 second period. For values of <sleeptime>
greaterthan 1, mongostat
averages data to reflect averageoperations per second.
Fields
mongostat
returns values that reflect the operations over a1 second period. When mongostat <sleeptime> has a valuegreater than 1, mongostat
averages the statistics to reflectaverage operations per second.
mongostat
outputs the following fields:
inserts
- The number of objects inserted into the database per second. Iffollowed by an asterisk (e.g.
*
), the datum refers to areplicated operation.
query
- The number of query operations per second.
update
- The number of update operations per second.
delete
- The number of delete operations per second.
getmore
- The number of get more (i.e. cursor batch) operations per second.
command
- The number of commands per second. Onsecondary systems,
mongostat
presents two valuesseparated by a pipe character (e.g.|
), in the form oflocal|replicated
commands.
flushes
Changed in version 3.0.
For the WiredTiger Storage Engine, flushes
refers to the numberof WiredTiger checkpoints triggered between each polling interval.
dirty
New in version 3.0.
Only for WiredTiger Storage Engine. The percentage of the WiredTigercache with dirty bytes, calculated bywiredTiger.cache.tracked dirty bytes in the cache
/ wiredTiger.cache.maximum bytes configured
.
used
New in version 3.0.
Only for WiredTiger Storage Engine. The percentage of the WiredTigercache that is in use, calculated bywiredTiger.cache.bytes currently in the cache
/wiredTiger.cache.maximum bytes configured
.
vsize
- The amount of virtual memory in megabytes used by the process atthe time of the last
mongostat
call.
res
- The amount of resident memory in megabytes used by the process atthe time of the last
mongostat
call.
locked
Changed in version 3.0: Only appears when mongostat
runs against pre-3.0versions of MongoDB instances.
The percent of time in a global write lock.
qr
- The length of the queue of clients waiting to read data from theMongoDB instance.
qw
- The length of the queue of clients waiting to write data from theMongoDB instance.
ar
- The number of active clients performing read operations.
aw
- The number of active clients performing write operations.
netIn
- The amount of network traffic, in bytes, received by the MongoDB instance.
This includes traffic from mongostat
itself.
netOut
- The amount of network traffic, in bytes, sent by the MongoDB instance.
This includes traffic from mongostat
itself.
conn
- The total number of open connections.
set
- The name, if applicable, of the replica set.
repl
- The replication status of the member.
Value**Replication Type**MmasterSECsecondaryRECrecoveringUNKunknownRTRmongos process (“router”)ARBarbiter
Examples
Specify mongostat Collection Period and Frequency
In the first example, mongostat
will return data everysecond for 20 seconds. mongostat
collects data from themongod
instance running on the localhost interface onport 27017. All of the following invocations produce identicalbehavior:
- mongostat --rowcount=20 1
- mongostat --rowcount=20
- mongostat -n=20 1
- mongostat -n=20
In the next example, mongostat
returns data every 5 minutes(or 300 seconds) for as long as the program runs. mongostat
collects data from the mongod
instance running on thelocalhost interface on port 27017
. The followinginvocations produce identical behavior:
- mongostat --rowcount=0 300
- mongostat -n=0 300
- mongostat 300
In the following example, mongostat
returns data every 5minutes for an hour (12 times.) mongostat
collects datafrom the mongod
instance running on the localhost interfaceon port 27017. The following invocations produce identicalbehavior:
- mongostat --rowcount=12 300
- mongostat -n=12 300
Add Fields to mongostat Output
New in version 3.4.
-O
allows you to specify fields fromserverStatus
output to add to the defaultmongostat
output. The following example adds the host
and version
fields as well as the network.numRequests
field,which will display as “network requests”, to the defaultmongostat
output:
- mongostat -O='host,version,network.numRequests=network requests'
The mongostat
output would then resemble:
- insert query update delete getmore command dirty used flushes vsize res qrw arw net_in net_out conn time host version network requests
- *0 *0 *0 *0 0 2|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 2.51G 19.0M 0|0 0|0 158b 39.4k 2 Oct 11 12:14:45.878 localhost:37017 3.3.14 91
- *0 *0 *0 *0 0 1|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 2.51G 19.0M 0|0 0|0 157b 39.3k 2 Oct 11 12:14:46.879 localhost:37017 3.3.14 95
- *0 *0 *0 *0 0 1|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 2.51G 19.0M 0|0 0|0 157b 39.2k 2 Oct 11 12:14:47.884 localhost:37017 3.3.14 99
Specify mongostat Output Fields
New in version 3.4.
-o
specifies the columns mongostat
includes in itsoutput. You can specify any serverStatus
field as amongostat
output column. The following example specifies thehost
, time
, and metrics.document.inserted
fields:
- mongostat -o='host,time,metrics.document.inserted'
The mongostat
output would then resemble:
- host time metrics.document.inserted
- localhost:37017 Oct 11 12:21:17.370 0
- localhost:37017 Oct 11 12:21:18.371 0
- localhost:37017 Oct 11 12:21:19.371 0
- localhost:37017 Oct 11 12:21:20.368 0
View Rate of Change for a Field with .rate()
New in version 3.4.
.rate()
enables you to view the rate per second at which anumerical field has changed from one mongostat
call to thenext. For example, you can view the rate at which documents have beeninserted during an insert operation. .rate()
can thereforehelp you view the performance of your mongod
instance.
The following example reports on the rate of change of themetrics.document.inserted
serverStatus
field. Theinvocation uses -o
’s ability to specify the name of an columnto label metrics.document.inserted.rate()
as “inserted rate” andmetrics.document.inserted
as “inserted”:
- mongostat -o='host,mem,bits,metrics.document.inserted.rate()=inserted rate,metrics.document.inserted=inserted' --rowcount=5
The output would then resemble:
- host mem.bits inserted rate inserted
- localhost:37017 64 501 3455
- localhost:37017 64 967 13128
- localhost:37017 64 972 22851
- localhost:37017 64 214 25000
- localhost:37017 64 0 25000
View Field Changes with .diff()
New in version 3.4.
.diff()
returns the difference between the currentserverStatus
field value and the value from the previousmongostat
call. The following example returns statistics onthe number of documents being inserted into a collection: inserteddiff
is the difference in themetrics.document.inserted
field between subsequentcalls, while inserted
is the value ofmetrics.document.inserted
:
- mongostat -o='host,mem.bits,metrics.document.inserted.diff()=inserted diff,metrics.document.inserted=inserted' --rowcount=5
The output would then resemble:
- host mem.bits inserted diff inserted
- localhost:27017 64 0 25359
- localhost:27017 64 94 25453
- localhost:27017 64 938 26391
- localhost:27017 64 964 27355
- localhost:27017 64 978 28333
View Statistics for a Replica Set or Sharded Cluster
In many cases, using the —discover
optionwill help provide a more complete snapshot of the state of an entiregroup of machines. If a mongos
process connected to asharded cluster is running on port 27017
of the localmachine, you can use the following form to return statistics from allmembers of the cluster:
- mongostat --discover
View Statistics in an Interactive Interface
New in version 3.4.
Use the —interactive
option toview statistics in a non-scrolling ncurses -styleinteractive output. The —interactive
option lets you highlight specifichosts, columns, or fields to view. When combined with —discover
,—interactive
displays statistics for all members of areplica set or sharded cluster, as in the following example:
- mongostat --discover --interactive
The output for a sharded cluster would then resemble:
- host insert query update delete getmore command dirty used flushes mapped vsize res faults qrw arw net_in net_out conn set repl time
- hostname.local:27018 *0 *0 *0 *0 0 1|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 3.25G 25.0M n/a 0|0 1|0 157b 43.9k 19 tic PRI Nov 2 11:44:46.439
- hostname.local:27019 *0 *0 *0 *0 0 2|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 3.18G 26.0M n/a 0|0 1|0 322b 44.4k 12 tic SEC Nov 2 11:44:46.439
- hostname.local:27020 *0 *0 *0 *0 0 2|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 3.18G 26.0M n/a 0|0 1|0 322b 44.4k 12 tic SEC Nov 2 11:44:46.439
- hostname.local:27021 2017 *0 *0 *0 826 1029|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 3.25G 31.0M n/a 0|0 1|0 1.74m 1.60m 20 tac PRI Nov 2 11:44:46.439
- hostname.local:27022 *2021 *0 *0 *0 0 2|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 3.19G 32.0M n/a 0|0 1|0 322b 44.6k 12 tac SEC Nov 2 11:44:46.438
- hostname.local:27023 *2022 *0 *0 *0 0 3|0 0.0% 0.0% 0 3.19G 33.0M n/a 0|0 1|0 323b 44.7k 12 tac SEC Nov 2 11:44:46.438
- localhost:27017 2071 *0 *0 *0 0 2073|0 0 0B 2.43G 9.00M 0 0|0 0|0 249k 130k 4 RTR Nov 2 11:44:47.429
- Press '?' to toggle help
Additional Information
For more information about monitoring MongoDB, seeMonitoring for MongoDB.
For more background on other MongoDB status outputs see:
For an additional utility that provides MongoDB metrics seemongotop.