mongomirror¶
mongomirror
is a tool for manually migrating data from an existing MongoDB
replica set to a MongoDB Atlas replica set.
Syntax¶
To run mongomirror
, you must specify:
- The source replica set and the target Atlas replica set.
- A user in the Atlas cluster with appropriate privileges, the corresponding password, and appropriate privileges, if the source replica set requires authentication.
mongomirror --host <sourceReplSet> \ --destination <atlasCluster> \ --destinationUsername <atlasAdminUser> \ --destinationPassword <atlasPassword> \ [Additional options]
Options¶
--host <host>
¶The host information for the source replica set. Specify the replica set name and a seed list of the members, as in the following:
<RSname>/<host1>:<port1>,<host2>:<port2>,<host3>:<port3>
--username <username>
¶If the source replica set requires authentication, the name of a user in the source replica set with privileges to read any database, including the
local
database. A user with thebackup
role provides the appropriate privileges. For details on the specific privileges required, see Required Access on Source Replica Set.
--password <password>
¶Password for the user specified in
--username
.
--authenticationDatabase <authenticationDatabase>
¶The database in the source replica set where the user specified in
--username
was created. The authentication database for:- SCRAM-authenticated users is the
admin
database. - X.509-authenticated users is the
$external
database. - AWS IAM-authenticated users is the
$external
database.
To learn more, see Authentication Database.
- SCRAM-authenticated users is the
--authenticationMechanism <authenticationMechanism>
¶The authentication mechanism to use to authenticate the user to the source replica set.
ValueDescriptionRFC 5802 standard Salted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA-1 hash function.RFC 5802 standard Salted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA-256 hash function.MongoDB challenge/response authentication.MongoDB TLS/SSL certificate authentication.GSSAPI (Kerberos)External authentication using Kerberos. This mechanism is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.PLAIN (LDAP SASL)External authentication using LDAP. You can also usePLAIN
for authenticating in-database users.PLAIN
transmits passwords in plain text. This mechanism is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.MONGODB-IAMNew in version 0.10.0
External authentication with AWS IAM.
To authenticate with AWS IAM credentials, use the following options:
--username
<AWS access key id>--password
<secret access key id>--awsSessionToken
<AWS session token>
To learn more, see Authentication Mechanisms.
--awsSessionToken
¶New in version 0.10.0
An AWS session token for use with the
MONGODB-IAM
authentication mechanism.
--compressors <snappy,...>
¶New in version 0.9.0
Comma-separated list of compressors to enable. Use 'none' to disable. Default:
snappy,zstd,zlib
--destination <destination>
¶The host information for the target Atlas replica set.
Specify the replica set name and a seed list of the members, as in the following:
<RSname>/<host1>:<port1>,<host2>:<port2>,<host3>:<port3>
--destinationAuthenticationDatabase <authentication database>
¶Authentication database for the database user in the Atlas cluster. The authentication database for:
- SCRAM-authenticated users is the
admin
database. - X.509-authenticated users is the
$external
database. - AWS IAM-authenticated users is the
$external
database.
To learn more, see Database User Authentication.
- SCRAM-authenticated users is the
--destinationAuthenticationMechanism <authentication mechanicsm>
¶Authentication mechanism for the database user in the Atlas cluster. Atlas offers the following forms of authentication for database users:
ValueDescriptionRFC 5802 standard Salted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA-1 hash function.RFC 5802 standard Salted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA-256 hash function.MongoDB challenge/response authentication.MongoDB TLS/SSL certificate authentication.GSSAPI (Kerberos)External authentication using Kerberos. This mechanism is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.PLAIN (LDAP SASL)External authentication using LDAP. You can also usePLAIN
for authenticating in-database users.PLAIN
transmits passwords in plain text. This mechanism is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.MONGODB-IAMNew in version 0.10.0
External authentication with AWS IAM.
To authenticate with AWS IAM credentials, use the following options:
--username
<AWS access key id>--password
<secret access key id>--awsSessionToken
<AWS session token>
To learn more, see Database User Authentication.
--destinationUsername <Atlas user name>
¶Name of a database user in the Atlas cluster with privileges to read, write, and admin any database. A user with the Atlas admin role provides the appropriate privileges. For details on the specific privileges required, see Required Access on Target Cluster.
--destinationPassword <password>
¶Password of the database user specified in
--destinationUsername
.
--drop
¶Flag that indicates that
mongomirror
should drop all but thesystem.*
collections in the target cluster.
--noIndexRestore
¶New in version 0.10.0
Omit indexes when migrating data.
--includeNamespace <database.collection>
¶Specify a namespace on the source cluster to mirror to the target cluster. May be provided multiple times.
NoteIf a transaction spans multiple namespaces, only write operations applied to the namespaces specified in
--includeNamespace
or--includeDB
are applied to the destination cluster.
--includeDB <database>
¶Specify a database on the source cluster to mirror to the target cluster. May be provided multiple times.
NoteIf a transaction spans multiple namespaces, only write operations applied to the namespaces specified in
--includeNamespace
or--includeDB
are applied to the destination cluster.
--ssl
¶Enables TLS/SSL encrypted connections to the source replica set.
--sslPEMKeyFile <file>
¶The .pem file if the source replica set requires clients to present a certificate. The .pem file contains both the TLS/SSL certificate and key. Specify the file using relative or absolute paths.
--sslPEMKeyPassword <value>
¶Password to decrypt the certificate-key file specified in
--sslPEMKeyFile
. Use if the--sslPEMKeyFile
is encrypted.
--sslCAFile <file>
¶The .pem file that contains the root certificate chain from the Certificate Authority(CA) for the source replica set. Specify the file using relative or absolute paths.
--sslCRLFile <filename>
¶The .pem file that contains the Certificate Revocation List for the source replica set. Specify the file using relative or absolute paths.
--sslAllowInvalidHostnames
¶Deprecated. Use
tlsInsecure
instead.Disables the validation of the TLS/SSL certificates presented by the source replica set. Allows
mongomirror
to connect to the source replica set if the hostname in the certificates does not match the specified hostname.ImportantThis option skips all certificate validation, which may result in accepting invalid certificates.
--sslAllowInvalidCertificates
¶Deprecated. Use
tlsInsecure
instead.Bypasses the validation checks for certificates presented by the source replica set. When using the
--allowInvalidCertificates
setting, MongoDB logs as a warning the use of the invalid certificate.ImportantThis option skips all certificate validation, which may result in accepting invalid certificates.
--tlsInsecure
¶Bypasses the validation checks for the server's certificate chain and host name. This allows you to use invalid certificates and host names.
This replaces the deprecated
sslAllowInvalidHostnames
andsslAllowInvalidCertificates
options.
--gssapiServiceName <name>
¶If the source replica set uses Kerberos authentication, the name of the service using GSSAPI/Kerberos. Only required if the service does not use the default name of
mongodb
.This option is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
--gssapiHostName <host>
¶If the source replica set uses Kerberos authentication, the hostname of a service using GSSAPI/Kerberos. Only required if the hostname of a machine does not match the hostname resolved by DNS.
This option is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
--readPreference <read preference>
¶Deprecated since version 0.9.0
mongomirror
always reads from the primary unless the source is a single host without a replica set name, in which case it makes a direct connection only to that host.
--writeConcern <write concern>
¶Deprecated since version 0.2.3:
mongomirror
always uses majority write concern.
--numParallelCollections <num>, -j <num>
¶Default: 4
The number of collections to copy and restore in parallel.
--bypassDocumentValidation
¶Deprecated since version 0.2.3:
mongomirror
always bypasses document validation.
--bookmarkFile <file>
¶Default: mongomirror.bookmark
Name of the oplog timestamp bookmark file.
--forceDump
¶Flag that indicates that
mongomirror
resync all source collections, even if a nonempty bookmark file exists.
--oplogPath <path>
¶New in version 0.5.0
Enables
mongomirror
to buffer the initial sync oplog window to disk. When you specify a value for this option,mongomirror
streams the source oplog entries to the specified directory in a single file:<oplogPath>/oplog-mongomirror.bson.sz
. After the entire oplog file is replayed to the destination cluster,mongomirror
removes the file and starts tailing the source oplog without buffering.By default,
mongomirror
streams oplog entries from the source and applies them to the destination cluster. However, the migration may fail if the source oplog is not large enough to contain the entire initial sync oplog window. To avoid this error, you can either increase the size of the source oplog, or specify this option to ensure that the source oplog will not run out of space during the migration process.ImportantThere must be enough disk space to accommodate all of the source oplog entries that occur during the initial
mongomirror
sync.ExampleIf the source oplog is 10 GB and covers 24 hours of changes, and
mongomirror
's sync is estimated to take 48 hours, there must be at least 20 GB of free disk space in the specified directory.
--oplogBatchSize <num>
¶New in version 0.8.0
Specify the number of oplog entries to send as a batch. Defaults to 10,000.
--httpStatusPort <num>
¶Directs
mongomirror
to start an HTTP server on the specified port. You can retrieve the current status ofmongomirror
by issuing an HTTPGET
request tohttp://localhost:<num>
.When running with
--httpStatusPort
,mongomirror
does not exit when it encounters an error. Instead, it logs the error as normal and reports the error over HTTP to the specified port.mongomirror
returns a document in response to the HTTP request. The following example syntax represents all the possible output fields - the actual response may only return a subset of these fields. See the subsequent table for a description of the fields and when to expect them.{ "stage" : "<stage Name>", "phase" : "<phase Name>", "details" : { "currentTimestamp" : "<BSON timestamp>", "latestTimestamp" : "<BSON timestamp>", "lastWriteOnSourceTimestamp" : "<BSON timestamp>", "<namespace>" : { "complete" : <boolean>, "copiedBytes" : <integer>, "totalBytes" : <integer>, "createIndexes" : <integer> }, ... }, "errorMessage" : "<error message>" } The following table describes each field and its possible values:
FieldDescriptionstage
The name of the stage in progress. Possible values are:
initializing
mongomirror
has started but is not yet copying any data.initial sync
mongomirror
is copying documents and indexes that already exist on the source deployment.mongomirror
also tails and applies entries from the oplog.oplog sync
mongomirror
is tailing and applying entries from the oplog.
phase
The name of the phase. Provides more specific details about what part of thestage
is in progress.details
A document providing a detailed description of the progress of the current phase.
During the
initial sync
stage, each subdocument indetails
represents a single collection being copied bymongomirror
.Depending on the
stage
orphase
,mongomirror
may not include this field in the response.details.<namespace>
The full namespace of the collection being copied, displayed as
<database>.<collection>
.Only displays during the
initial sync
phase when copying documents or indexes.details.<namespace>.complete
Displays
true
orfalse
depending on whether or notmongomirror
has copied all documents or indexes from the collection to the target Atlas cluster.Only displays during the
initial sync
phase when copying documents or indexes.details.<namespace>.copiedBytes
The number of bytes copied so far. Note that this is a different measurement from the
mongomirror
logs, which report the current/total number of documents copied.Only displays during the
initial sync
phase when copying non-index data.details.<namespace>.totalBytes
The total size (in bytes) of the collection.
Only displays during the
initial sync
phase when copying non-index data.details.<namespace>.createIndexes
The number of indexes that have been or will be created.
Only displays during the
initial sync
stage when copying indexes.details.currentTimestamp
The BSON timestamp value of the oplog entry most recently processed.
mongomirror
only refreshes this data point every 10 seconds, somongomirror
may be slightly further ahead of the reported time.Only displays during the
initial sync
oroplog sync
stages when tailing or applying oplog entries.details.latestTimestamp
During the
initial sync
stage, this represents the BSON timestamp value of the latest oplog entry available after the initial data was copied during initial sync.During the
oplog sync
stage, this represents the BSON timestamp value of the latest oplog entry available on the source deployment.Only displays during the
initial sync
oroplog sync
stages when tailing or applying oplog entries.details
.lastWriteOnSourceTimestamp
The BSON timestamp value of the most recent oplog entry that is not a no-op. No-op entries are generally system-level operations such as heartbearts that do not write or edit data in the database.
mongomirror
refreshes this value every 10 seconds. Operations which write or edit data in the database may not be reported until the next refresh occurs.The
lastWriteOnSourceTimestamp
field is useful as a confirmation that no new writes are occurring on the source deployment before cutting over during a migration.errorMessage
A string that describes any error encountered bymongomirror
.
--collStatsThreshold <num>
¶New in version 0.9.0
Maximum number of collections which may exist before collStats is disabled. Use
-1
to always run collStats or0
to never run collStats. Default:-1
--removeAutoIndexId
¶New in version 0.12.0
Removes the
autoIndexId
option from collections during the initial sync to the target cluster. Also removes theautoIndexId
option from any collections thatmongomirror
creates during the migration.Use the
--removeAutoIndexId
option when migrating collections that were created withautoIndexId: false
from MongoDB 3.6 or earlier to Atlas.
Examples¶
Migrate a Replica Set into Atlas¶
The following example migrates from a source replica set that does not require authentication:
mongomirror --host sourceRS/source-host1:27017,source-host2:27017 \ --destination myAtlasRS/atlas-host1:27017,atlas-host2:27017 \ --destinationUsername myAtlasUser \ --destinationPassword myAtlasPwd
To migrate from a source replica set that does not require
authentication, run mongomirror
with the following
options:
--host
<sourceReplSet/seed list of members>--destination
<Atlas Cluster>--destinationUsername
<atlasUser>--destinationPassword
<atlasPassword>
For the target, specify the replica set name followed by a seed list of members in the following format:
<replicaSetName>/<host1>:<port1>,<host2>:<port2>,<host3>:<port3>,...
The specified user must have the Atlas admin
on Atlas.
Source Replica Set Uses SCRAM-SHA1 Authentication¶
The following example migrates from a source replica set that uses SCRAM-SHA1 authentication:
mongomirror --host sourceRS/source-host1:27017,source-host2:27017,source-host3:27017 \ --username mySourceUser \ --password mySourcePassword \ --authenticationDatabase admin \ --destination myAtlasRS/atlas-host1:27017,atlas-host2:27017 \ --destinationUsername myAtlasUser \ --destinationPassword atlasPassw0Rd
To migrate from a source replica set that does uses SCRAM-SHA1
authentication, run mongomirror
with the following
options:
--host
<sourceReplSet/seed list of members>--username
<sourceUser>--password
<sourcePassword>--authenticationDatabase
<sourceDatabase>--destination
<Atlas Cluster>--destinationUsername
<atlasUser>--destinationPassword
<atlasPassword>
The source replica set user must have the required access on source
cluster. The backup
role provides the appropriate privileges.
For the target, specify the replica set name followed by a seed list of members in the following format:
<replicaSetName>/<replicaMember>,<replicaMember>,<replicaMember>,...
The specified user must have the Atlas admin
on Atlas.
Save mongomirror
Output to a File¶
You can save the output logs from a mongomirror
procedure to a
file for later examination and debugging. Use the following
format to save output to a file called mongomirror.log
:
mongomirror <args> 2>&1 | tee -a mongomirror.log
Source Replica Set Requires X.509 Client Authentication¶
The following example migrates from a source replica set that uses X.509 authentication:
mongomirror --host sourceRS/source-host1:27017,source-host2:27017,source-host3:27017 \ --username "CN=myName,OU=myOrgUnit,O=myOrg,L=myLocality,ST=myState,C=myCountry" \ --authenticationDatabase '$external' \ --authenticationMechanism MONGODB-X509 \ --ssl \ --sslPEMKeyFile <path-to-my-client-certificate.pem> \ --sslCAFile <path-to-my-certificate-authority-certificate.pem> \ --destination myAtlasRS/atlas-host1:27017,atlas-host2:27017 \ --destinationUsername myAtlasUser \ --destinationPassword atlasPassw0Rd
To migrate from a source replica set that uses X.509 authentication,
run mongomirror
with the following options:
--host
<sourceReplSet/seed list of members>--username
<subject from the client certificate>--authenticationMechanism
MONGODB-X509
--authenticationDatabase
'$external'
--ssl
--sslPEMKeyFile
<path-to-my-client-certificate.pem>--sslCAFile
<path to root CA PEM file>--destination
<Atlas Cluster>--destinationUsername
<atlasUser>--destinationPassword
<atlasPassword>
The source replica set user must have the required access on source
cluster. The backup
role provides the appropriate privileges.
For the target, specify the replica set name followed by a seed list of members in the following format:
<replicaSetName>/<replicaMember>,<replicaMember>,<replicaMember>,...
The specified user must have the Atlas admin
on Atlas.
Source Replica Set Requires Kerberos/GSSAPI Authentication¶
The following example migrates from a source replica set that uses Kerberos authentication:
mongomirror --host sourceRS/source-host1:27017,source-host2:27017,source-host3:27017 \ --username sourceUser/administrator@MYREALM.COM \ --authenticationDatabase '$external' \ --authenticationMechanism GSSAPI \ --destination myAtlasRS/atlas-host1:27017,atlas-host2:27017,atlas-host3:27017 \ --destinationUsername atlasUser \ --destinationPassword atlasPass
To migrate from a source replica set that uses Kerberos authentication,
run mongomirror
with the following options:
--host
<sourceReplSet/seed list of members>--username
<Kerberos user principal>--authenticationDatabase
'$external'
--authenticationMechanism
GSSAPI
--destination
<Atlas Cluster>--destinationUsername
<atlasUser>--destinationPassword
<atlasPassword>
The source replica set user must have the required access on source
cluster. The backup
role provides the appropriate privileges.
For the target, specify the replica set name followed by a seed list of members in the following format:
<replicaSetName>/<replicaMember>,<replicaMember>,<replicaMember>,...
The specified user must have the Atlas admin
on Atlas.