Config Database
The collections in the config
database support:
- sharded cluster operations, and
- starting in MongoDB 3.6, causally consistent sessions for standalones, replica sets, and sharded clusters andretryable writes for replica sets and sharded clusters.
Restrictions
Important
The schema of the config
database isinternal and may change between releases of MongoDB. Theconfig
database is not a dependable API, and users should notwrite data to the config
database in the course of normaloperation or maintenance.
Note
You cannot perform read/write operations to the collections in theconfig
database inside a multi-document transaction.
Collections to Support Sharded Cluster Operations
To access the config
database and view the list of collections thatsupport sharding operations, connect a mongo
shell to amongos
instance in a sharded cluster and issue the following:
- use config
- show collections
Note
If running with access control, ensure you have privileges thatgrant listCollections
action on the database.
The config database is mainly for internal use, and during normaloperations you should never manually insert or store data in it.However, if you need to verify the write availability of the configserver for a sharded cluster, you can insert a document into a testcollection (after making sure that no collection of that name alreadyexists):
Warning
Modification of the config
database on a functioningsystem may lead to instability or inconsistent data sets. If youmust modify the config
database, use mongodump
tocreate a full backup of the config
database.
- db.testConfigServerWriteAvail.insert( { a : 1 } )
If the operation succeeds, the config server is available to processwrites.
Future releases of the server may include different collections inthe config database, so be careful when selecting a name for yourtest collection.
MongoDB uses the following collections in the config
databaseto support sharding:
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The changelog
collection stores a document for each change tothe metadata of a sharded collection.
Example
The following example displays a single record of a chunk splitfrom a changelog
collection:
- {
- "_id" : "<hostname>-<timestamp>-<increment>",
- "server" : "<hostname><:port>",
- "clientAddr" : "127.0.0.1:63381",
- "time" : ISODate("2012-12-11T14:09:21.039Z"),
- "what" : "split",
- "ns" : "<database>.<collection>",
- "details" : {
- "before" : {
- "min" : {
- "<database>" : { $minKey : 1 }
- },
- "max" : {
- "<database>" : { $maxKey : 1 }
- },
- "lastmod" : Timestamp(1000, 0),
- "lastmodEpoch" : ObjectId("000000000000000000000000")
- },
- "left" : {
- "min" : {
- "<database>" : { $minKey : 1 }
- },
- "max" : {
- "<database>" : "<value>"
- },
- "lastmod" : Timestamp(1000, 1),
- "lastmodEpoch" : ObjectId(<...>)
- },
- "right" : {
- "min" : {
- "<database>" : "<value>"
- },
- "max" : {
- "<database>" : { $maxKey : 1 }
- },
- "lastmod" : Timestamp(1000, 2),
- "lastmodEpoch" : ObjectId("<...>")
- }
- }
- }
Each document in the changelog
collection contains thefollowing fields:
config.changelog.
_id
The value of
changelog._id
is:<hostname>-<timestamp>-<increment>
.The hostname of the server that holds this data.
A string that holds the address of the client, a
mongos
instance that initiates this change.A ISODate timestamp that reflects when the changeoccurred.
Reflects the type of change recorded. Possible values include:
dropCollection
dropCollection.start
dropDatabase
dropDatabase.start
moveChunk.start
moveChunk.commit
split
multi-split
config.changelog.
ns
Namespace where the change occurred.
- A document that contains additional details regardingthe change. The structure of the
details
document depends on the type of change.
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The chunks
collection stores a document for each chunk inthe cluster. Consider the following example of a document for achunk named mydb.foo-a_\"cat\"
:
- {
- "_id" : "mydb.foo-a_\"cat\"",
- "lastmod" : Timestamp(2, 1),
- "lastmodEpoch" : ObjectId("5d8aa9fbe7a2f52c300e8e6f"),
- "ns" : "mydb.foo",
- "min" : {
- "animal" : "cat"
- },
- "max" : {
- "animal" : "dog"
- },
- "shard" : "shard0004",
- "history" : [ { "validAfter" : Timestamp(1569368571, 27), "shard" : "shard0004" } ]
- }
These documents store the range of values for the shard key thatdescribe the chunk in the min
and max
fields. Additionallythe shard
field identifies the shard in the cluster that “owns”the chunk.
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The collections
collection stores a document for each sharded collectionin the cluster. Given a collection named pets
in the records
database, a document in the collections
collection would resemble the following:
- {
- "_id" : "records.pets",
- "lastmod" : ISODate("1970-01-16T15:00:58.107Z"),
- "dropped" : false,
- "key" : {
- "a" : 1
- },
- "unique" : false,
- "lastmodEpoch" : ObjectId("5078407bd58b175c5c225fdc"),
- "uuid" : UUID("f8669e52-5c1b-4ea2-bbdc-a00189b341da")
- }
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The databases
collection stores a document for eachdatabase in the cluster.
For each database, the corresponding document displays the name, thedatabase’s primary shard , the database’ssharding enabled status, and a version.
- { "_id" : "test", "primary" : "shardA", "partitioned" : true, "version" : { "uuid" : UUID("516a5f79-5eb9-4844-8ee9-b8e9de91b760"), "lastMod" : 1 } }
- { "_id" : "hr", "primary" : "shardA", "partitioned" : false, "version" : { "uuid" : UUID("8e39d61d-6259-4c33-a5ed-bcd2ae317b6f"), "lastMod" : 1 } }
- { "_id" : "reporting", "primary" : "shardB", "partitioned" : false, "version" : { "uuid" : UUID("07c63242-51b3-460c-865f-a67b3372d792"), "lastMod" : 1 } }
The method sh.status()
returns this information in theDatabases section.
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The lockpings
collection keeps track of the active componentsin the sharded cluster. Given a cluster with a mongos
running on example.com:30000
, the document in thelockpings
collection would resemble:
- { "_id" : "example.com:30000:1350047994:16807", "ping" : ISODate("2012-10-12T18:32:54.892Z") }
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The locks
collection stores the distributed locks. Theprimary of the config server replica set takes a lock byinserting a document into the locks
collection.
- {
- "_id" : "test.myShardedCollection",
- "state" : 2,
- "process" : "ConfigServer",
- "ts" : ObjectId("5be0b9ede46e4f441a60d891"),
- "when" : ISODate("2018-11-05T21:52:00.846Z"),
- "who" : "ConfigServer:Balancer",
- "why" : "Migrating chunk(s) in collection test.myShardedCollection"
- }
As of version 3.4, the state
field will always have a value2
to prevent any legacy mongos
instances fromperforming the balancing operation. The when
field specifies thetime when the config server member became the primary.
In version 3.4, when the balancer is active, the balancer takes alock, as in the following 3.4 example:
- {
- "_id" : "balancer",
- "state" : 2,
- "ts" : ObjectId("5be0bc6cb20effa83b15baa8"),
- "who" : "ConfigServer:Balancer",
- "process" : "ConfigServer",
- "when" : ISODate("2018-11-05T21:56:13.096Z"),
- "why" : "CSRS Balancer"
- }
Starting in version 3.6, the balancer no longer takes a “lock”. Ifyou have upgraded from 3.4 to 3.6, you may choose to delete anyresidual "_id" : "balancer"
documents.
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The mongos
collection stores a document for eachmongos
instance affiliated with thecluster. mongos
instances send pings to all members ofthe cluster every 30 seconds so the cluster can verify that themongos
is active. The ping
field shows the time ofthe last ping, while the up
field reports the uptime of themongos
as of the last ping. The cluster maintains thiscollection for reporting purposes.
The following document shows the status of the mongos
running on example.com:27017
.
- {
- "_id" : "example.com:27017",
- "advisoryHostFQDNs" : [
- "example.com"
- ],
- "mongoVersion" : "4.2.0",
- "ping" : ISODate("2019-09-25T19:26:52.360Z"),
- "up" : NumberLong(50),
- "waiting" : true
- }
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The settings
collection holds the followingsharding configuration settings:
Chunk size. To change chunk size,see Modify Chunk Size in a Sharded Cluster.The specified
chunksize
value is in megabytes.Balancer status. To change status,see Disable the Balancer.
Starting in MongoDB 4.2:
- [<code>balancerStart</code>]($c9976ce90b549a26.md#dbcmd.balancerStart) also enables auto-splitting for the sharded cluster.
- [<code>balancerStop</code>]($8535964567f61ca4.md#dbcmd.balancerStop) also disables auto-splitting for the sharded cluster.
- Autosplit. To enable or disable the autosplit flag, use thecorresponding
sh.enableAutoSplit()
method orsh.disableAutoSplit()
method.
Starting in MongoDB 4.2:
- [<code>balancerStart</code>]($c9976ce90b549a26.md#dbcmd.balancerStart) also enables auto-splitting for thesharded cluster.
- [<code>balancerStop</code>]($8535964567f61ca4.md#dbcmd.balancerStop) also disables auto-splitting for thesharded cluster.
The following are some example documents in the settings
collection:
- { "_id" : "chunksize", "value" : 64 }
- { "_id" : "balancer", "mode" : "full", "stopped" : false }
- { "_id" : "autosplit", "enabled" : true }
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The shards
collection represents each shard in the clusterin a separate document, as in the following:
- { "_id" : "shard0000", "host" : "localhost:30000", "state" : 1 }
If the shard is a replica set, thehost
field displays the name of the replica set, then a slash, thena comma-separated list of the hostnames of each member of the replica set,as in the following example:
- { "_id" : "shard0001", "host" : "shard0001/localhost:27018,localhost:27019,localhost:27020", "state" : 1 }
If the shard has zones assigned, thisdocument has a tags
field, that holds an array of the zonesto which it is assigned, as in the following example:
- { "_id" : "shard0002", "host" : "localhost:30002", "state" : 1, "tags": [ "NYC" ] }
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The tags
collection holds documents for each zonerange in the cluster. The documents in thetags
collection resemble the following:
- {
- "_id" : { "ns" : "records.users", "min" : { "zipcode" : "10001" } },
- "ns" : "records.users",
- "min" : { "zipcode" : "10001" },
- "max" : { "zipcode" : "10281" },
- "tag" : "NYC"
- }
Internal MongoDB Metadata
The config
database is internal: applications andadministrators should not modify or depend upon its content in thecourse of normal operation.
The version
collection holds the current metadata version number. Thiscollection contains only one document. For example:
- { "_id" : 1, "minCompatibleVersion" : 5, "currentVersion" : 6, "clusterId" : ObjectId("5d8bc01a690d8abbd2014ddd") }
To access the version
collection, you must use thedb.getCollection()
method. For example, to retrieve thecollection’s document:
- db.getCollection("version").find()
Collections to Support Sessions
New in version 3.6.
Starting in MongoDB 3.6, the config
database contains theinternal collections to support causally consistent sessions for standalones, replica sets, and sharded clusters andretryable writes and transactions forreplica sets and sharded clusters.
Warning
Do not manually modify or drop these collections.
To access these collections for a mongod
ormongos
instance, connect mongo
shell to theinstance.
config.system.
sessions
- The
system.sessions
collection stores session records that areavailable to all members of the deployment.
When a user creates a session on a mongod
ormongos
instance, the record of the session initiallyexists only in-memory on the instance. Periodically, the instancewill sync its cached sessions to the system.sessions
collection;at which time, they are visible to all members of the deployment.
To view records in the system.sessions
collection, use$listSessions
.
Warning
Do not manually modify or drop the system.sessions
collection.
In a sharded cluster, the system.sessions
collection is sharded.When adding a shard to the sharded cluster, if the shard to addalready contains its own system.sessions
collection, MongoDBdrops the new shard’s system.sessions
collection during the addprocess.
config.
transactions
- The
transactions
collection stores records used to supportretryable writes and transactions for replica sets and sharded clusters.
Warning
Do not manually modify or drop the transactions
collection.