mongo Shell Command History
You can retrieve previous commands issued in the mongo shell with the up and down arrow keys. Command history is stored in ~/.dbshell file. See .dbshell for more information.
Command Line Options
The mongo shell can be started with numerous options. See mongo shell page for details on all available options. The following table displays some common options for mongo:
Option | Description |
--help | Show command line options |
--nodb |
Start mongo shell without connecting to a database. To connect later, see Opening New Connections. |
--shell |
Used in conjunction with a JavaScript file (i.e. <file.js>) to continue in the mongo shell after running the JavaScript file. See JavaScript file for an example. |
Command Helpers
The mongo shell provides various help. The following table displays some common help methods and commands:
Help Methods and Commands | Description |
help | Show help. |
db.help() | Show help for database methods. |
db.<collection>.help() | Show help on collection methods. The <collection> can be the name of an existing collection or a non-existing collection. |
show dbs | Print a list of all databases on the server. |
use <db> | Switch current database to <db>. The mongo shell variable db is set to the current database. |
show collections | Print a list of all collections for current database |
show users | Print a list of users for current database. |
show roles | Print a list of all roles, both user-defined and built-in, for the current database. |
show profile | Print the five most recent operations that took 1 millisecond or more. See database profiler for more information. |
show databases | Print a list of all available databases. |
load() | Execute a JavaScript file. See Write Scripts for the mongo Shell for more information. |
Basic Shell JavaScript Operations
The mongo shell provides a JavaScript API for database operations.
In the mongo shell, db is the variable that references the current database. The variable is automatically set to the default database test or is set when you use the use <db> to switch current database.
The following table displays some common JavaScript operations:
JavaScript Database Operations | Description |
db.auth() | If running in secure mode, authenticate the user. |
coll = db.<collection> |
Set a specific collection in the current database to a variable coll, as in the following example: coll = db.myCollection; You can perform operations on the myCollection using the variable, as in the following example: coll.find(); |
db.collection.find() |
Find all documents in the collection and returns a cursor. See the db.collection.find() and Query Documents for more information and examples. See Iterate a Cursor in the mongo Shell for information on cursor handling in the mongo shell. |
db.collection.insert() | Insert a new document into the collection. |
db.collection.update() | Update an existing document in the collection. |
db.collection.save() | Insert either a new document or update an existing document in the collection. |
db.collection.remove() | Delete documents from the collection. |
db.collection.drop() | Drops or removes completely the collection. |
db.collection.createIndex() | Create a new index on the collection if the index does not exist; otherwise, the operation has no effect. |
db.getSiblingDB() | Return a reference to another database using this same connection without explicitly switching the current database. This allows for cross database queries. |
For more information on performing operations in the shell, see:
Keyboard Shortcuts
The mongo shell provides most keyboard shortcuts similar to those found in the bash shell or in Emacs. For some functions mongo provides multiple key bindings, to accommodate several familiar paradigms.
The following table enumerates the keystrokes supported by the mongo shell:
Keystroke | Function |
Up-arrow | previous-history |
Down-arrow | next-history |
Home | beginning-of-line |
End | end-of-line |
Tab | autocomplete |
Left-arrow | backward-character |
Right-arrow | forward-character |
Ctrl-left-arrow | backward-word |
Ctrl-right-arrow | forward-word |
Meta-left-arrow | backward-word |
Meta-right-arrow | forward-word |
Ctrl-A | beginning-of-line |
Ctrl-B | backward-char |
Ctrl-C | exit-shell |
Ctrl-D | delete-char (or exit shell) |
Ctrl-E | end-of-line |
Ctrl-F | forward-char |
Ctrl-G | abort |
Ctrl-J | accept-line |
Ctrl-K | kill-line |
Ctrl-L | clear-screen |
Ctrl-M | accept-line |
Ctrl-N | next-history |
Ctrl-P | previous-history |
Ctrl-R | reverse-search-history |
Ctrl-S | forward-search-history |
Ctrl-T | transpose-chars |
Ctrl-U | unix-line-discard |
Ctrl-W | unix-word-rubout |
Ctrl-Y | yank |
Ctrl-Z | Suspend (job control works in linux) |
Ctrl-H (i.e. Backspace) | backward-delete-char |
Ctrl-I (i.e. Tab) | complete |
Meta-B | backward-word |
Meta-C | capitalize-word |
Meta-D | kill-word |
Meta-F | forward-word |
Meta-L | downcase-word |
Meta-U | upcase-word |
Meta-Y | yank-pop |
Meta-[Backspace] | backward-kill-word |
Meta-< | beginning-of-history |
Meta-> | end-of-history |
Queries
In the mongo shell, perform read operations using the find() and findOne() methods.
The find() method returns a cursor object which the mongo shell iterates to print documents on screen. By default, mongo prints the first 20. The mongo shell will prompt the user to “Type it” to continue iterating the next 20 results.
The following table provides some common read operations in the mongo shell:
Read Operations | Description |
db.collection.find(<query>) | Find the documents matching the <query> criteria in the collection. If the <query> criteria is not specified or is empty (i.e {} ), the read operation selects all documents in the collection. |
db.collection.find(<query>, <projection>) |
The following example selects the documents in the userscollection with the name field equal to "Joe": coll = db.users; For more information on specifying the <query> criteria, see Specify Query Filter Conditions. |
db.collection.find().sort(<sort order>) |
Find documents matching the <query> criteria and return just specific fields in the <projection>. The following example selects all documents from the collection but returns only the name field and the _id field. The _id is always returned unless explicitly specified to not return. coll = db.users; For more information on specifying the <projection>, see Project Fields to Return from Query. |
db.collection.find(<query>).sort(<sort order>) |
Return results in the specified <sort order>. The following example selects all documents from the collection and returns the results sorted by the name field in ascending order (1). Use -1 for descending order: coll = db.users; |
db.collection.find( ... ).limit( <n> ) | Limit result to <n> rows. Highly recommended if you need only a certain number of rows for best performance. |
db.collection.find( ... ).skip( <n> ) | Skip <n> results. |
db.collection.count() | Returns total number of documents in the collection. |
db.collection.find(<query>).count() |
Returns the total number of documents that match the query. The count() ignores limit() and skip(). For example, if 100 records match but the limit is 10, count() will return 100. This will be faster than iterating yourself, but still take time. |
db.collection.findOne(<query>) |
Find and return a single document. Returns null if not found. The following example selects a single document in the users collection with the name field matches to "Joe": coll = db.users; Internally, the findOne() method is the find() method with a limit(1). |
See Query Documents documentation for more information and examples. See Query and Projection Operators to specify other query operators.
Error Checking Methods
Changed in version 2.6.
The mongo shell write methods now integrates the Write Concern directly into the method execution rather than with a separate db.getLastError() method. As such, the write methods now return a WriteResult() object that contains the results of the operation, including any write errors and write concern errors.
Previous versions used db.getLastError() and db.getLastErrorObj() methods to return error information.
Administrative Command Helpers
The following table lists some common methods to support database administration:
JavaScript Database Administration Methods | Description |
db.cloneDatabase(<host>) | Clone the current database from the <host> specified. The<host> database instance must be in noauth mode. |
db.copyDatabase(<from>, <to>, <host>) |
Copy the <from> database from the <host> to the <to>database on the current server. The <host> database instance must be in noauth mode. |
db.fromColl.renameCollection(<toColl>) | Rename collection from fromColl to <toColl>. |
db.repairDatabase() | Repair and compact the current database. This operation can be very slow on large databases. |
db.getCollectionNames() | Get the list of all collections in the current database. |
db.dropDatabase() | Drops the current database. |
See also administrative database methods for a full list of methods.
Opening Additional Connections
You can create new connections within the mongo shell. The following table displays the methods to create the connections:
JavaScript Connection Create Methods | Description |
db = connect("<host><:port>/<dbname>") | Open a new database connection. |
conn = new Mongo() |
Open a connection to a new server using new Mongo(). Use getDB() method of the connection to select a database. |
See also Opening New Connections for more information on the opening new connections from the mongoshell.
Miscellaneous
The following table displays some miscellaneous methods:
Method | Description |
Object.bsonsize(<document>) | Prints the BSON size of a <document> in bytes |
See the MongoDB JavaScript API Documentation for a full list of JavaScript methods
Additional Resources
Consider the following reference material that addresses the mongo shell and its interface:
Additionally, the MongoDB source code repository includes a jstests directory which contains numerous mongo shell scripts.