mongo (1) Linux Manual Page
NAME
mongo – MongoDB Shell
DESCRIPTION
mongo is an interactive JavaScript shell interface to MongoDB, which provides a powerful interface for systems administrators as well as a way for developers to test queries and operations directly with the database. mongo also provides a fully functional JavaScript environment for use with a MongoDB. This document addresses the basic invocation of the mongo shell and an overview of its usage.
OPTIONS
Core Options
mongo–shell- Enables the shell interface. If you invoke the
mongocommand and specify a JavaScript file as an argument, or use –eval to specify JavaScript on the command line, the –shell option provides the user with a shell prompt after the file finishes executing. –nodb- Prevents the shell from connecting to any database instances. Later, to connect to a database within the shell, see mongo-shell-new-connections.
–norc- Prevents the shell from sourcing and evaluating
~/.mongorc.json start up. –quiet- Silences output from the shell during the connection process.
–port <port>- Specifies the port where the
mongodormongosinstance is listening. If –port is not specified,mongoattempts to connect to port27017. –host <hostname>- Specifies the name of the host machine where the
mongodormongosis running. If this is not specified,mongoattempts to connect to a MongoDB process running on the localhost. –eval <javascript>- Evaluates a JavaScript expression that is specified as an argument.
mongodoes not load its own environment when evaluating code. As a result many options of the shell environment are not available. –username <username>, -u- Specifies a username with which to authenticate to a MongoDB database that uses authentication. Use in conjunction with the
–passwordand–authenticationDatabaseoptions. –password <password>, -p- Specifies a password with which to authenticate to a MongoDB database that uses authentication. Use in conjunction with the
–usernameand–authenticationDatabaseoptions. –help, -h- Returns information on
mongooptions and usage. –version- Returns the
mongorelease number. –verbose- Increases the verbosity of the output of the shell during the connection process.
–ipv6- Enables IPv6 support, which allows
mongoto connect to the MongoDB instance using an IPv6 network. All MongoDB programs and processes, includingmongo, disable IPv6 support by default. <db address>- Specifies the "database address" of the database to connect to. For example:
mongo admin
The above command will connect the
mongoshell to the admin database on the local machine. You may specify a remote database instance, with the resolvable hostname or IP address. Separate the database name from the hostname using a/character. See the following examples:mongo mongodb1.example.net mongo mongodb1/admin mongo 10.8.8.10/test
<file.js>- Specifies a JavaScript file to run and then exit. Generally this should be the last option specified.
Optional
To specify a JavaScript file to execute and allow mongo to prompt you for a password using –password, pass the filename as the first parameter with –username and –password as the last options, as in the following:
mongo file.js --username username --password
Use the –shell option to return to a shell after the file finishes running.
Authentication Options
–authenticationDatabase <dbname>- New in version 2.4.
Specifies the database that holds the user’s credentials. If you do not specify an authentication database,
mongoassumes that the database specified as the argument to the –db option holds the user’s credentials. –authenticationMechanism <name>- New in version 2.4.
Specifies the authentication mechanism. By default, the authentication mechanism is
MONGODB-CR, which is the MongoDB challenge/response authentication mechanism. In MongoDB Enterprise,mongoalso includes support forGSSAPIto handle Kerberos authentication. See http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/control-access-to-mongodb-with-kerberos-authentication for more information about Kerberos authentication.
SSL Options
–ssl- New in version 2.6.
Enables connection to a
mongodormongosthat has SSL support enabled.The default distribution of MongoDB does not contain support for SSL. For more information on MongoDB and SSL, see http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/configure-ssl.
–sslPEMKeyFile <filename>- New in version 2.6.
Specifies the
.pemfile that contains both the SSL certificate and key. Specify the file name of the.pemfile using relative or absolute paths.This option is required when using the –ssl option to connect to a
mongodormongosthat hassslCAFileenabled withoutsslWeakCertificateValidation.The default distribution of MongoDB does not contain support for SSL. For more information on MongoDB and SSL, see http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/configure-ssl.
–sslPEMKeyPassword <value>- New in version 2.6.
Specifies the password to de-crypt the certificate-key file (i.e. –sslPEMKeyFile). Use –sslPEMKeyPassword only if the certificate-key file is encrypted. In all cases,
mongowill redact the password from all logging and reporting output.If the private key in the PEM file is encrypted and you do not specify –sslPEMKeyPassword,
mongowill prompt for a passphrase. See ssl-certificate-password.The default distribution of MongoDB does not contain support for SSL. For more information on MongoDB and SSL, see http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/configure-ssl.
–sslCAFile <filename>- New in version 2.6.
Specifies the
.pemfile that contains the root certificate chain from the Certificate Authority. Specify the file name of the.pemfile using relative or absolute paths.The default distribution of MongoDB does not contain support for SSL. For more information on MongoDB and SSL, see http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/configure-ssl.
–sslCRLFile <filename>- New in version 2.6.
Specifies the
.pemfile that contains the Certificate Revocation List. Specify the file name of the.pemfile using relative or absolute paths.The default distribution of MongoDB does not contain support for SSL. For more information on MongoDB and SSL, see http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/configure-ssl.
–sslFIPSMode- New in version 2.6.
Directs
mongoto use the FIPS mode of the installed OpenSSL library. Your system must have a FIPS compliant OpenSSL library to use –sslFIPSMode.The default distribution of MongoDB does not contain support for SSL. For more information on MongoDB and SSL, see http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/configure-ssl.
–sslAllowInvalidCertificates- New in version 2.6.
Bypasses the validation checks for server certificates and allows the use of invalid certificates. When using the
sslAllowInvalidCertificatessetting, MongoDB logs as a warning the use of the invalid certificate.The default distribution of MongoDB does not contain support for SSL. For more information on MongoDB and SSL, see http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/tutorial/configure-ssl.
FILES
~/.dbshell-
mongomaintains a history of commands in the.dbshellfile.NOTE:mongodoes not recorded interaction related to authentication in the history file, includingauthenticateanddb.addUser().WARNING:Versions of Windowsmongo.exeearlier than 2.2.0 will save the .dbshell file in themongo.exeworking directory. ~/.mongorc.js-
mongowill read the.mongorc.jsfile from the home directory of the user invokingmongo. In the file, users can define variables, customize themongoshell prompt, or update information that they would like updated every time they launch a shell. If you use the shell to evaluate a JavaScript file or expression either on the command line with –eval or by specifying a .js file to mongo,mongowill read the.mongorc.jsfile after the JavaScript has finished processing.Specify the –norc option to disable reading
.mongorc.js. /etc/mongorc.js- Global
mongorc.jsfile which themongoshell evaluates upon start-up. If a user also has a.mongorc.jsfile located in the HOME directory, themongoshell evaluates the global/etc/mongorc.jsfile before evaluating the user’s.mongorc.jsfile./etc/mongorc.jsmust have read permission for the user running the shell. The –norc option formongosuppresses only the user’s.mongorc.jsfile.On Windows, the global
mongorc.js </etc/mongorc.js>exists in the%ProgramData%\MongoDBdirectory. /tmp/mongo_edit<time_t>.js- Created by
mongowhen editing a file. If the file exists,mongowill append an integer from1to10to the time value to attempt to create a unique file. %TEMP%mongo_edit<time_t>.js- Created by
mongo.exeon Windows when editing a file. If the file exists,mongowill append an integer from1to10to the time value to attempt to create a unique file.
ENVIRONMENT
EDITOR- Specifies the path to an editor to use with the
editshell command. A JavaScript variableEDITORwill override the value of EDITOR. HOME- Specifies the path to the home directory where
mongowill read the.mongorc.jsfile and write the.dbshellfile. HOMEDRIVE- On Windows systems, HOMEDRIVE specifies the path the directory where
mongowill read the.mongorc.jsfile and write the.dbshellfile. HOMEPATH- Specifies the Windows path to the home directory where
mongowill read the.mongorc.jsfile and write the.dbshellfile.
KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS
The mongo shell supports the following keyboard shortcuts: [1]
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Keybinding |
Function
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| Up arrow | Retrieve previous command from history |
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| Down-arrow | Retrieve next command from history |
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| Home | Go to beginning of the line |
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| End | Go to end of the line |
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| Tab | Autocomplete method/command |
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| Left-arrow | Go backward one character |
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| Right-arrow | Go forward one character |
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| Ctrl-left-arrow | Go backward one word |
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| Ctrl-right-arrow | Go forward one word |
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| Meta-left-arrow | Go backward one word |
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| Meta-right-arrow | Go forward one word |
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| Ctrl-A | Go to the beginning of the line |
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| Ctrl-B | Go backward one character |
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| Ctrl-C | Exit the mongo shell
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| Ctrl-D | Delete a char (or exit the mongo shell)
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| Ctrl-E | Go to the end of the line |
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| Ctrl-F | Go forward one character |
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| Ctrl-G | Abort |
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| Ctrl-J | Accept/evaluate the line |
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| Ctrl-K | Kill/erase the line |
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Ctrl-L or type cls |
Clear the screen |
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| Ctrl-M | Accept/evaluate the line |
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| Ctrl-N | Retrieve next command from history |
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| Ctrl-P | Retrieve previous command from history |
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| Ctrl-R | Reverse-search command history |
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| Ctrl-S | Forward-search command history |
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| Ctrl-T | Transpose characters |
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| Ctrl-U | Perform Unix line-discard |
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| Ctrl-W | Perform Unix word-rubout |
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| Ctrl-Y | Yank |
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| Ctrl-Z | Suspend (job control works in linux) |
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| Ctrl-H | Backward-delete a character |
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| Ctrl-I | Complete, same as Tab |
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| Meta-B | Go backward one word |
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| Meta-C | Capitalize word |
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| Meta-D | Kill word |
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| Meta-F | Go forward one word |
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| Meta-L | Change word to lowercase |
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| Meta-U | Change word to uppercase |
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| Meta-Y | Yank-pop |
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| Meta-Backspace | Backward-kill word |
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| Meta-< | Retrieve the first command in command history |
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| Meta-> | Retrieve the last command in command history |
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- [1]
- MongoDB accommodates multiple keybinding. Since 2.0,
mongoincludes support for basic emacs keybindings.
USE
Typically users invoke the shell with the mongo command at the system prompt. Consider the following examples for other scenarios.
To connect to a database on a remote host using authentication and a non-standard port, use the following form:
mongo-- username<user> --password<pass> --host<host> --port 28015
Alternatively, consider the following short form:
mongo -u <user> -p <pass> --host <host> --port 28015
Replace <user>, <pass>, and <host> with the appropriate values for your situation and substitute or omit the –port as needed.
To execute a JavaScript file without evaluating the ~/.mongorc.js file before starting a shell session, use the following form:
mongo --shell --norc alternate-environment.js
To execute a JavaScript file with authentication, with password prompted rather than provided on the command-line, use the following form:
mongo script-file.js -u <user> -p
To print return a query as JSON, from the system prompt using the –eval option, use the following form:
mongo --eval 'db.collection.find().forEach(printjson)'
Use single quotes (e.g. ‘) to enclose the JavaScript, as well as the additional JavaScript required to generate this output.
AUTHOR
MongoDB Documentation Project
COPYRIGHT
2011-2014, MongoDB, Inc.
