- convertToCapped
- Warning- Do Not Run This Command On Sharded Collections- MongoDB does not support the - convertToCappedcommand on sharded collections.- The - convertToCappedcommand converts an existing, non-capped collection to a capped collection within the same database.- The command has the following syntax: - { convertToCapped: <collection>, - size: <capped size>, - writeConcern: <document>, - comment: <any> - } - The command takes the following fields: FieldDescription- convertToCapped - The name of the existing collection to convert. - size - The maximum size, in bytes, for the capped collection. - writeConcern - Optional. A document expressing the write concern of the - dropcommand. Omit to use the default write concern.- comment- Optional. A user-provided comment to attach to this command. Once set, this comment appears alongside records of this command in the following locations: - mongod log messages, in the - attr.command.cursor.commentfield.
- Database profiler output, in the - command.commentfield.
- currentOpoutput, in the- command.commentfield.
 - A comment can be any valid BSON type (string, integer, object, array, etc). - New in version 4.4. - convertToCappedtakes an existing collection (- <collection>) and transforms it into a capped collection with a maximum size in bytes, specified by the- sizeargument (- <capped size>).- During the conversion process, the - convertToCappedcommand exhibits the following behavior:- MongoDB traverses the documents in the original collection in natural order and loads the documents into a new capped collection. 
- If the - capped sizespecified for the capped collection is smaller than the size of the original uncapped collection, then MongoDB will overwrite documents in the capped collection based on insertion order, or first in, first out order.
- Internally, to convert the collection, MongoDB uses the following procedure - cloneCollectionAsCappedcommand creates the capped collection and imports the data.
- MongoDB drops the original collection. 
- renameCollectionrenames the new capped collection to the name of the original collection.
 
- This holds a database exclusive lock for the duration of the operation. Other operations which lock the same database will be blocked until the operation completes. See What locks are taken by some common client operations? for operations that lock the database. 
 - Warning- The - convertToCappedwill not recreate indexes from the original collection on the new collection, other than the index on the- _idfield. If you need indexes on this collection you will need to create these indexes after the conversion is complete.
Example
Convert a Collection
The following example uses a db.collection.save() operation to create
an events collection, and db.collection.stats() to obtain
information about the collection:
db.events.save( { click: 'button-1', time: new Date() } ) db.events.stats() 
MongoDB will return the following:
{         "ns" : "test.events",         ...         "capped" : false,         ... } 
To convert the events collection into a capped collection and view the
updated collection information, run the following commands:
db.runCommand( { convertToCapped: 'events', size: 8192 } ) db.events.stats() 
MongoDB will return the following:
{      "ns" : "test.events",      ...      "capped" : true,      "max" : NumberLong("9223372036854775807"),      "maxSize" : 8192,      ... } 
The convertToCapped will not recreate indexes from
the original collection on the new collection, other than the
index on the _id field. If you need indexes on this
collection you will need to create these indexes after the
conversion is complete.