renameCollection
Definition
renameCollection
Changes the name of an existing collection. Specify collection names to
renameCollection
in the form of a complete namespace (<database>.<collection>
).Tip
In
mongosh
, this command can also be run through therenameCollection()
helper method.Helper methods are convenient for
mongosh
users, but they may not return the same level of information as database commands. In cases where the convenience is not needed or the additional return fields are required, use the database command.Issue the
renameCollection
command against the admin database.
Compatibility
This command is available in deployments hosted in the following environments:
MongoDB Atlas: The fully managed service for MongoDB deployments in the cloud
Note
This command is supported in all MongoDB Atlas clusters. For information on Atlas support for all commands, see Unsupported Commands.
MongoDB Enterprise: The subscription-based, self-managed version of MongoDB
MongoDB Community: The source-available, free-to-use, and self-managed version of MongoDB
Syntax
The command has the following syntax:
db.runCommand( { renameCollection: "<source_namespace>", to: "<target_namespace>", dropTarget: <true|false>, writeConcern: <document>, comment: <any> } )
Command Fields
The command contains the following fields:
Field | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
renameCollection | string | The namespace of the collection to rename. The namespace is a
combination of the database name and the name of the collection. |
to | string | The new namespace of the collection. If the new namespace specifies a
different database, the renameCollection command copies
the collection to the new database and drops the source collection.
See Naming Restrictions. |
dropTarget | boolean | Optional. If true , mongod will drop the target of
renameCollection prior to renaming the collection. The
default value is false . |
writeConcern | document | Optional. A document that expresses the write concern for the operation. Omit to use the default write concern. When issued on a sharded cluster, |
comment | any | Optional. A user-provided comment to attach to this command. Once set, this comment appears alongside records of this command in the following locations:
A comment can be any valid BSON type (string, integer, object, array, etc). |
Behavior
Sharded Collections
Starting in MongoDB 5.0, you can use the renameCollection
command to change the name of a sharded collection. The target
database must be the same as the source database.
Unsharded Collections
You can use renameCollection
to rename an unsharded
collection in a sharded cluster as long as the source and target
databases have the same primary shard.
Time Series Collections
You cannot use renameCollection
to rename a time series
collection. For more information, see Time Series Collection Limitations.
Existing Target Collection
renameCollection
fails if target
is the name of an existing
collection and you do not specify dropTarget: true
.
Performance
renameCollection
has different performance implications depending
on the target namespace.
If the target database is the same as the source database,
renameCollection
simply changes the namespace. This is a
quick operation.
If the target database differs from the source database,
renameCollection
copies all documents from the source
collection to the target collection. Depending on the size of the
collection, this may take longer to complete.
Resource Locking in Sharded Clusters
Changed in version 5.0.
When renaming a sharded or unsharded collection in a sharded cluster, the source and target collections are exclusively locked on every shard. Subsequent operations on the source and target collections must wait until the rename operation completes.
For more information on locking in MongoDB, see FAQ: Concurrency.
Resource Locking in Replica Sets
If renaming a collection within the same database,
renameCollection
obtains an exclusive lock on
the source and target collections for the duration of the operation.
All subsequent operations on the collections must wait until
renameCollection
completes.
If renaming a collection between different databases,
renameCollection
obtains an exclusive (W) lock on the target
database, an intent shared (r) lock on the source database, and a shared (S)
lock on the source collection. Subsequent operations on the target database
must wait until renameCollection
releases the exclusive database
lock.
For more information on locking in MongoDB, see FAQ: Concurrency.
local
Database
You cannot rename a collection from a replicated database to the
local
database, which is not replicated.You cannot rename a collection from the
local
database, which is not replicated, to a replicated database.
Open Cursors and Change Streams
Warning
The db.collection.renameCollection()
method and
renameCollection
command invalidate open cursors. This creates
an invalidate event for any existing
change streams opened on the source or target
collection, and also interrupts queries that are currently returning
data from the renamed collection.
Interaction with mongodump
A mongodump
started with
--oplog
fails if a client issues the
renameCollection
command during the
dump process. See mongodump.--oplog
for more information.
Example
The following example renames a collection named orders
in the
test
database to orders2014
in the test
database.
db.adminCommand( { renameCollection: "test.orders", to: "test.orders2014" } )
mongosh
provides the
db.collection.renameCollection()
helper for the command to
rename collections within the same database. The following is
equivalent to the previous example:
use test db.orders.renameCollection( "orders2014" )