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Change Replica Set to WiredTiger

Note

Starting in version 4.0, MongoDB deprecates the MMAPv1 storage engine and will remove MMAPv1 in a future release.

Use this tutorial to update a replica set to use WiredTiger. The procedure updates the replica set in a rolling fashion to avoid downtime.

Considerations

Replica sets can have members with different storage engines. As such, you can update members to use the WiredTiger storage engine in a rolling fashion.

PSA 3-member Architecture

Starting in MongoDB 3.6, "majority" read concern, available for WiredTiger, is enabled by default. However, for MongoDB 4.0.3+, if you have a three-member replica set with a primary-secondary-arbiter (PSA) architecture, you can disable "majority" read concern. Disabling "majority" for a three member PSA architecture avoids possible cache-pressure build up.

The procedure below disables "majority" read concern for MongoDB 4.0.3 PSA architecture by including --enableMajorityReadConcern false. If you are running a MongoDB 4.0.1 or 4.0.2 PSA architecture, first upgrade to the latest 4.0 version in order to disable this read concern.

Note

Disabling "majority" read concern disables support for Change Streams.

For more information on PSA architecture and read concern "majority", see Disable Read Concern Majority.

MongoDB 3.0 or Greater

You must be using MongoDB version 3.0 or greater in order to use the WiredTiger storage engine. If using an earlier MongoDB version, you must upgrade your MongoDB version before proceeding to change your storage engine. To upgrade your MongoDB version, refer to the appropriate version of the manual.

Default Bind to Localhost

Starting with MongoDB 3.6, MongoDB binaries, mongod and mongos, bind to localhost by default. From MongoDB versions 2.6 to 3.4, only the binaries from the official MongoDB RPM (Red Hat, CentOS, Fedora Linux, and derivatives) and DEB (Debian, Ubuntu, and derivatives) packages would bind to localhost by default. To learn more about this change, see Localhost Binding Compatibility Changes.

XFS and WiredTiger

With the WiredTiger storage engine, using XFS for data bearing nodes is recommended on Linux. For more information, see Kernel and File Systems.

Procedure

The following procedure updates the replica set in a rolling fashion. The procedure updates the secondary members first, then steps down the primary, and updates the stepped-down member.

To update a member to WiredTiger, the procedure removes a member’s data, starts mongod with WiredTiger, and performs an initial sync.

A. Update the secondary members to WiredTiger.

Update the secondary members one at a time:

1

Shut down the secondary member.

In the mongo shell, shut down the secondary.

use admin
db.shutdownServer()
2

Prepare a data directory for the new mongod running with WiredTiger.

Prepare a data directory for the new mongod instance that will run with the WiredTiger storage engine. mongod must have read and write permissions for this directory. You can either delete the contents of the stopped secondary member’s current data directory or create a new directory entirely.

mongod with WiredTiger will not start with data files created with a different storage engine.

3

Start mongod with WiredTiger.

Start mongod, specifying wiredTiger as the --storageEngine and the prepared data directory for WiredTiger as the --dbpath. Specify additional options, such as --bind_ip, as appropriate for this replica set member.

Warning

Before binding to a non-localhost (e.g. publicly accessible) IP address, ensure you have secured your cluster from unauthorized access. For a complete list of security recommendations, see Security Checklist. At minimum, consider enabling authentication and hardening network infrastructure.

mongod --storageEngine wiredTiger --dbpath <newWiredTigerDBPath> --replSet <replSetName> --bind_ip localhost,<hostname(s)|ip address(es)>

Important

If you are running a three-member PSA architecture and MongoDB version 4.0.3+, include --enableMajorityReadConcern false to disable read concern majority. See PSA 3-member Architecture.

mongod --storageEngine wiredTiger --dbpath <newWiredTigerDBPath> --replSet <replSetName> --bind_ip localhost,<hostname(s)|ip address(es)> --enableMajorityReadConcern false

Since no data exists in the --dbpath, the mongod will perform an initial sync. The length of the initial sync process depends on the size of the database and network connection between members of the replica set.

You can also specify the options in a configuration file. To specify the storage engine, use the storage.engine setting.

Repeat the steps for the remaining secondary members, updating them one at a time.

B. Step down the primary.

Important

If updating all members of the replica set to use WiredTiger, ensure that all secondary members have been updated first before updating the primary.

Once all the secondary members have been upgraded to WiredTiger, connect a mongo shell to the primary and use rs.stepDown() to step down the primary and force an election of a new primary.

rs.stepDown()

C. Update the stepped down primary.

When the primary has stepped down and become a secondary, update the secondary to use WiredTiger as before:

1

Shut down the secondary member.

In the mongo shell, shut down the secondary.

use admin
db.shutdownServer()
2

Prepare a data directory for the new mongod running with WiredTiger.

Prepare a data directory for the new mongod instance that will run with the WiredTiger storage engine. mongod must have read and write permissions for this directory. You can either delete the contents of the stopped secondary member’s current data directory or create a new directory entirely.

mongod with WiredTiger will not start with data files created with a different storage engine.

3

Start mongod with WiredTiger.

Start mongod, specifying wiredTiger as the --storageEngine and the prepared data directory for WiredTiger as the --dbpath. Specify additional options, such as --bind_ip, as appropriate for this replica set member.

Warning

Before binding to a non-localhost (e.g. publicly accessible) IP address, ensure you have secured your cluster from unauthorized access. For a complete list of security recommendations, see Security Checklist. At minimum, consider enabling authentication and hardening network infrastructure.

mongod --storageEngine wiredTiger --dbpath <newWiredTigerDBPath> --replSet <replSetName> --bind_ip localhost,<hostname(s)|ip address(es)>

Important

If you are running a three-member PSA architecture and MongoDB version 4.0.3+, include --enableMajorityReadConcern false to disable read concern majority. See PSA 3-member Architecture.

mongod --storageEngine wiredTiger --dbpath <newWiredTigerDBPath> --replSet <replSetName> --bind_ip localhost,<hostname(s)|ip address(es)> --enableMajorityReadConcern false

Since no data exists in the --dbpath, the mongod will perform an initial sync. The length of the initial sync process depends on the size of the database and network connection between members of the replica set.

You can also specify the options in a configuration file. To specify the storage engine, use the storage.engine setting.