Note
The following document pertains to the mongo shell
included in the
MongoDB Server Download.
For information on the new MongoDB Shell, mongosh, refer to the
mongosh Documentation.
To understand the differences between the two shells, see
Comparison of the mongo Shell and mongosh.
Customize the Prompt
You may modify the content of the prompt by setting the variable
prompt in the mongo shell. The prompt variable can
hold strings as well as JavaScript code. If prompt holds a function
that returns a string, mongo can display dynamic information
in each prompt.
You can add the logic for the prompt in the .mongorc.js file to set the prompt each time you start up the
mongo shell.
Customize Prompt to Display Number of Operations
For example,to create a mongo shell prompt with the number
of operations issued in the current session, define the following
variables in the mongo shell:
cmdCount = 1; prompt = function() { return (cmdCount++) + "> "; }
The prompt would then resemble the following:
1> 2> 3>
Customize Prompt to Display Database and Hostname
To create a mongo shell prompt in the form of
<database>@<hostname>$, define the following variables:
host = db.serverStatus().host; prompt = function() { return db+"@"+host+"$ "; }
The prompt would then resemble the following:
test@myHost1$
Customize Prompt to Display Up Time and Document Count
To create a mongo shell prompt that contains the system
up time and the number of documents in the current database,
define the following prompt variable in the mongo
shell:
prompt = function() { return "Uptime:"+db.serverStatus().uptime+" Documents:"+db.stats().objects+" > "; }
The prompt would then resemble the following:
Uptime:5897 Documents:6 >
Use an External Editor in the mongo Shell
You can use your own editor in the mongo shell by setting
the EDITOR environment variable before starting the
mongo shell.
export EDITOR=vim mongo
Once in the mongo shell, you can edit with the specified
editor by typing edit <variable> or edit <function>, as in the
following example:
Define a function
myFunction:function myFunction () { } Edit the function using your editor:
edit myFunction The command should open the
vimedit session. When finished with the edits, save and exitvimedit session.In the
mongoshell, typemyFunctionto see the function definition:myFunction The result should be the changes from your saved edit:
function myFunction() { print("This was edited"); }
Note
As mongo shell interprets code edited in an external
editor, it may modify code in functions, depending on the
JavaScript compiler. For example, mongo may convert 1+1 to
2 or remove comments. The actual changes affect only the
appearance of the code and will vary based on the version of
JavaScript used but will not affect the semantics of the code.
Change the mongo Shell Batch Size
The db.collection.find() method is the JavaScript method to
retrieve documents from a collection. The
db.collection.find() method returns a cursor to the
results; however, in the mongo shell, if the returned cursor
is not assigned to a variable using the var keyword, then the
cursor is automatically iterated up to 20 times to print up to the
first 20 documents that match the query. The mongo shell
will prompt Type it to iterate another 20 times.
You can set the DBQuery.shellBatchSize attribute to change the
number of documents from the default value of 20, as in the
following example which sets it to 10:
DBQuery.shellBatchSize = 10;