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The mongo Shell

The mongo shell is an interactive JavaScript interface to MongoDB. You can use the mongo shell to query and update data as well as perform administrative operations.

Download the mongo Shell

The mongo shell is included as part of the MongoDB server installation. If you have already installed the server, the mongo shell is installed to the same location as the server binary.

Alternatively, if you would like to download the mongo shell separately from the MongoDB Server, you can install the shell as a standalone package by following these steps:

  1. Access the Download Center for your Edition of MongoDB:

  2. Select your preferred Version and Platform from the dropdowns.

  3. Select the Package to download according to your platform:

    Platform Download Package
    Windows Select the zip package to download an archive which includes the mongo shell.
    macOS Select the tgz package to download an archive which includes the mongo shell.
    Linux Select the tgz package to download the mongo shell.
  4. Copy the mongo shell from the archive to a location on your filesystem.

For additional installation guidance specific to your platform, or to install the mongo shell as part of a MongoDB Server installation, see the installation guide for your platform.

Start the mongo Shell and Connect to MongoDB

Once you have downloaded the mongo shell, you can use it to connect to your running MongoDB server.

Note

Starting in MongoDB 4.2 (and 4.0.13), the mongo shell displays a warning message when connected to non-genuine MongoDB instances as these instances may behave differently from the official MongoDB instances; e.g. missing or incomplete features, different feature behaviors, etc.

Prerequisites

  • The MongoDB server must be installed and running before you can connect to it from the mongo shell. Follow the steps in the installation tutorial for your platform to install and start the MongoDB server if required.

  • Once you have verified that the mongod server is running, open a terminal window (or a command prompt for Windows) and go to your <mongo shell installation dir> directory:

    cd <mongo shell installation dir>
    

    Tip

    Adding your <mongo shell installation dir> to the PATH environment variable allows you to type mongo directly instead of having to first go to the <mongo shell installation dir> directory or specify the full path to the binary. Alternatively, you can copy the mongo shell to a location on your filesystem that is already present in your PATH, such as /usr/bin on Linux.

macOS Security Verification

For macOS users:

macOS may prevent the mongo shell from running after installation. If you receive a security error when starting the mongo shell indicating that the developer could not be identified or verified, do the following to grant the mongo shell access to run:

  • Open System Preferences
  • Select the Security and Privacy pane.
  • Under the General tab, click the button to the right of the message about the mongo shell, labelled either Open Anyway or Allow Anyway depending on your version of macOS.

Local MongoDB Instance on Default Port

You can run mongo shell without any command-line options to connect to a MongoDB instance running on your localhost with default port 27017:

mongo

Local MongoDB Instance on a Non-default Port

To explicitly specify the port, include the --port command-line option. For example, to connect to a MongoDB instance running on localhost with a non-default port 28015:

mongo --port 28015

MongoDB Instance on a Remote Host

To explicitly specify the hostname and/or port,

  • You can specify a connection string. For example, to connect to a MongoDB instance running on a remote host machine:

    mongo "mongodb://mongodb0.example.com:28015"
    
  • You can use the command-line option --host <host>:<port>. For example, to connect to a MongoDB instance running on a remote host machine:

    mongo --host mongodb0.example.com:28015
    
  • You can use the --host <host> and --port <port> command-line options. For example, to connect to a MongoDB instance running on a remote host machine:

    mongo --host mongodb0.example.com --port 28015
    

MongoDB Instance with Authentication

To connect to a MongoDB instance requires authentication:

  • You can specify the username, authentication database, and optionally the password in the connection string. For example, to connect and authenticate to a remote MongoDB instance as user alice:

    Note

    If you do not specify the password in the connection string, the shell will prompt for the password.

    mongo "mongodb://alice@mongodb0.examples.com:28015/?authSource=admin"
    
  • You can use the --username <user> and --password, --authenticationDatabase <db> command-line options. For example, to connect and authenticate to a remote MongoDB instance as user alice:

    Note

    If you specify --password without the user’s password, the shell will prompt for the password.

    mongo --username alice --password --authenticationDatabase admin --host mongodb0.examples.com --port 28015
    

Connect to a MongoDB Replica Set

To connect to a replica set:

  • You can specify the replica set name and members in the connection string.

    mongo "mongodb://mongodb0.example.com.local:27017,mongodb1.example.com.local:27017,mongodb2.example.com.local:27017/?replicaSet=replA"
    
  • If using the DNS Seedlist Connection Format, you can specify the connection string:

    mongo "mongodb+srv://server.example.com/"
    

    Note

    Use of the +srv connection string modifier automatically sets the ssl option to true for the connection.

  • You can specify the replica set name and members from the --host <replica set name>/<host1>:<port1>,<host2>:<port2>,... command-line option. For example, to connect to replica set named replA:

    mongo --host replA/mongodb0.example.com.local:27017,mongodb1.example.com.local:27017,mongodb2.example.com.local:27017
    

TLS/SSL Connection

For TLS/SSL connections,

  • You can specify the ssl=true option in the connection string.

    mongo "mongodb://mongodb0.example.com.local:27017,mongodb1.example.com.local:27017,mongodb2.example.com.local:27017/?replicaSet=replA&ssl=true"
    
  • If using the DNS Seedlist Connection Format, you can include the +srv connection string modifier:

    mongo "mongodb+srv://server.example.com/"
    

    Note

    Use of the +srv connection string modifier automatically sets the ssl option to true for the connection.

  • You can specify --ssl command-line option. For example, to connect to replica set named replA:

    mongo --ssl --host replA/mongodb0.example.com.local:27017,mongodb1.example.com.local:27017,mongodb2.example.com.local:27017
    

See also

For more information on the options used in the connection examples as well as other options, see mongo reference and examples of starting up mongo.

Working with the mongo Shell

To display the database you are using, type db:

db

The operation should return test, which is the default database.

To switch databases, issue the use <db> helper, as in the following example:

use <database>

See also db.getSiblingDB() method to access a different database from the current database without switching your current database context (i.e. db).

To list the databases available to the user, use the helper show dbs. [1]

You can switch to non-existing databases. When you first store data in the database, such as by creating a collection, MongoDB creates the database. For example, the following creates both the database myNewDatabase and the collection myCollection during the insertOne() operation:

use myNewDatabase
db.myCollection.insertOne( { x: 1 } );

The db.myCollection.insertOne() is one of the methods available in the mongo shell.

  • db refers to the current database.
  • myCollection is the name of the collection.

If the mongo shell does not accept the name of a collection, you can use the alternative db.getCollection() syntax. For instance, if a collection name contains a space or hyphen, starts with a number, or conflicts with a built-in function:

db.getCollection("3 test").find()
db.getCollection("3-test").find()
db.getCollection("stats").find()

The mongo shell prompt has a limit of 4095 codepoints for each line. If you enter a line with more than 4095 codepoints, the shell will truncate it.

For more documentation of basic MongoDB operations in the mongo shell, see:

[1]If the deployment runs with access control, the operation returns different values based on user privileges. See listDatabases Behavior for details.

Format Printed Results

The db.collection.find() method returns a cursor to the results; however, in the mongo shell, if the returned cursor is not assigned to a variable using the var keyword, then the cursor is automatically iterated up to 20 times to print up to the first 20 documents that match the query. The mongo shell will prompt Type it to iterate another 20 times.

To format the printed result, you can add the .pretty() to the operation, as in the following:

db.myCollection.find().pretty()

In addition, you can use the following explicit print methods in the mongo shell:

  • print() to print without formatting
  • print(tojson(<obj>)) to print with JSON formatting and equivalent to printjson()
  • printjson() to print with JSON formatting and equivalent to print(tojson(<obj>))

For more information and examples on cursor handling in the mongo shell, see Iterate a Cursor in the mongo Shell. See also Cursor Help for list of cursor help in the mongo shell.

Multi-line Operations in the mongo Shell

If you end a line with an open parenthesis ('('), an open brace ('{'), or an open bracket ('['), then the subsequent lines start with ellipsis ("...") until you enter the corresponding closing parenthesis (')'), the closing brace ('}') or the closing bracket (']'). The mongo shell waits for the closing parenthesis, closing brace, or the closing bracket before evaluating the code, as in the following example:

> if ( x > 0 ) {
... count++;
... print (x);
... }

You can exit the line continuation mode if you enter two blank lines, as in the following example:

> if (x > 0
...
...
>

Tab Completion and Other Keyboard Shortcuts

The mongo shell supports keyboard shortcuts. For example,

  • Use the up/down arrow keys to scroll through command history. See .dbshell documentation for more information on the .dbshell file.

  • Use <Tab> to autocomplete or to list the completion possibilities, as in the following example which uses <Tab> to complete the method name starting with the letter 'c':

    db.myCollection.c<Tab>
    

    Because there are many collection methods starting with the letter 'c', the <Tab> will list the various methods that start with 'c'.

For a full list of the shortcuts, see Shell Keyboard Shortcuts

.mongorc.js File

When starting, mongo checks the user’s HOME directory for a JavaScript file named .mongorc.js. If found, mongo interprets the content of .mongorc.js before displaying the prompt for the first time. If you use the shell to evaluate a JavaScript file or expression, either by using the --eval option on the command line or by specifying a .js file to mongo, mongo will read the .mongorc.js file after the JavaScript has finished processing. You can prevent .mongorc.js from being loaded by using the --norc option.