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delete

Definition

delete

The delete command removes documents from a collection. A single delete command can contain multiple delete specifications. The command cannot operate on capped collections. The remove methods provided by the MongoDB drivers use this command internally.

Tip

In the mongo Shell, this command can also be run through the deleteOne, deleteMany, and findOneAndDelete helper methods.

Helper methods are convenient for mongo 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.

The delete command has the following syntax:

{
   delete: <collection>,
   deletes: [
      { q : <query>, limit : <integer>, collation: <document> },
      { q : <query>, limit : <integer>, collation: <document> },
      { q : <query>, limit : <integer>, collation: <document> },
      ...
   ],
   ordered: <boolean>,
   writeConcern: { <write concern> }
}

The command takes the following fields:

Field Type Description
delete string The name of the target collection.
deletes array An array of one or more delete statements to perform in the named collection.
ordered boolean Optional. If true, then when a delete statement fails, return without performing the remaining delete statements. If false, then when a delete statement fails, continue with the remaining delete statements, if any. Defaults to true.
writeConcern document

Optional. A document expressing the write concern of the delete command. Omit to use the default write concern.

Do not explicitly set the write concern for the operation if run in a transaction. To use write concern with transactions, see Transactions and Write Concern.

Each element of the deletes array contains the following fields:

Field Type Description
q document The query that matches documents to delete.
limit integer The number of matching documents to delete. Specify either a 0 to delete all matching documents or 1 to delete a single document.
collation document

Optional.

Specifies the collation to use for the operation.

Collation allows users to specify language-specific rules for string comparison, such as rules for lettercase and accent marks.

The collation option has the following syntax:

collation: {
   locale: <string>,
   caseLevel: <boolean>,
   caseFirst: <string>,
   strength: <int>,
   numericOrdering: <boolean>,
   alternate: <string>,
   maxVariable: <string>,
   backwards: <boolean>
}

When specifying collation, the locale field is mandatory; all other collation fields are optional. For descriptions of the fields, see Collation Document.

If the collation is unspecified but the collection has a default collation (see db.createCollection()), the operation uses the collation specified for the collection.

If no collation is specified for the collection or for the operations, MongoDB uses the simple binary comparison used in prior versions for string comparisons.

You cannot specify multiple collations for an operation. For example, you cannot specify different collations per field, or if performing a find with a sort, you cannot use one collation for the find and another for the sort.

New in version 3.4.

Returns:A document that contains the status of the operation. See Output for details.

Behavior

Limits

The total size of all the queries (i.e. the q field values) in the deletes array must be less than or equal to the maximum BSON document size.

The total number of delete documents in the deletes array must be less than or equal to the maximum bulk size.

Transactions

delete can be used inside multi-document transactions.

Do not explicitly set the write concern for the operation if run in a transaction. To use write concern with transactions, see Transactions and Write Concern.

Important

In most cases, multi-document transaction incurs a greater performance cost over single document writes, and the availability of multi-document transactions should not be a replacement for effective schema design. For many scenarios, the denormalized data model (embedded documents and arrays) will continue to be optimal for your data and use cases. That is, for many scenarios, modeling your data appropriately will minimize the need for multi-document transactions.

For additional transactions usage considerations (such as runtime limit and oplog size limit), see also Production Considerations.

Examples

Limit the Number of Documents Deleted

The following example deletes from the orders collection one document that has the status equal to D by specifying the limit of 1:

db.runCommand(
   {
      delete: "orders",
      deletes: [ { q: { status: "D" }, limit: 1 } ]
   }
)

The returned document shows that the command deleted 1 document. See Output for details.

{ "ok" : 1, "n" : 1 }

Delete All Documents That Match a Condition

The following example deletes from the orders collection all documents that have the status equal to D by specifying the limit of 0:

db.runCommand(
   {
      delete: "orders",
      deletes: [ { q: { status: "D" }, limit: 0 } ],
      writeConcern: { w: "majority", wtimeout: 5000 }
   }
)

The returned document shows that the command found and deleted 13 documents. See Output for details.

{ "ok" : 1, "n" : 13 }

Delete All Documents from a Collection

Delete all documents in the orders collection by specifying an empty query condition and a limit of 0:

db.runCommand(
   {
      delete: "orders",
      deletes: [ { q: { }, limit: 0 } ],
      writeConcern: { w: "majority", wtimeout: 5000 }
   }
)

The returned document shows that the command found and deleted 35 documents in total. See Output for details.

{ "ok" : 1, "n" : 35 }

Bulk Delete

The following example performs multiple delete operations on the orders collection:

db.runCommand(
   {
      delete: "orders",
      deletes: [
         { q: { status: "D" }, limit: 0 },
         { q: { cust_num: 99999, item: "abc123", status: "A" }, limit: 1 }
      ],
      ordered: false,
      writeConcern: { w: 1 }
   }
)

The returned document shows that the command found and deleted 21 documents in total for the two delete statements. See Output for details.

{ "ok" : 1, "n" : 21 }

Specify Collation

New in version 3.4.

Collation allows users to specify language-specific rules for string comparison, such as rules for lettercase and accent marks.

A collection myColl has the following documents:

{ _id: 1, category: "café", status: "A" }
{ _id: 2, category: "cafe", status: "a" }
{ _id: 3, category: "cafE", status: "a" }

The following operation includes the collation option:

db.runCommand({
   delete: "myColl",
   deletes: [
     { q: { category: "cafe", status: "a" }, limit: 0, collation: { locale: "fr", strength: 1 } }
   ]
})

Output

The returned document contains a subset of the following fields:

delete.ok

The status of the command.

delete.n

The number of documents deleted.

delete.writeErrors

An array of documents that contains information regarding any error encountered during the delete operation. The writeErrors array contains an error document for each delete statement that errors.

Each error document contains the following information:

delete.writeErrors.index

An integer that identifies the delete statement in the deletes array, which uses a zero-based index.

delete.writeErrors.code

An integer value identifying the error.

delete.writeErrors.errmsg

A description of the error.

delete.writeConcernError

Document that describe error related to write concern and contains the field:

delete.writeConcernError.code

An integer value identifying the cause of the write concern error.

delete.writeConcernError.errmsg

A description of the cause of the write concern error.

The following is an example document returned for a successful delete command:

{ ok: 1, n: 1 }

The following is an example document returned for a delete command that encountered an error:

{
   "ok" : 1,
   "n" : 0,
   "writeErrors" : [
      {
         "index" : 0,
         "code" : 10101,
         "errmsg" : "can't remove from a capped collection: test.cappedLog"
      }
   ]
}