MongoDB Command Line Database Tool binaries are not supported or tested for use with non-genuine MongoDB deployments. While the tools may work on these deployments, compatibility is not guaranteed.
This documentation is for version 100.12.2
of mongoimport
.
mongoimport
imports content from an Extended JSON, CSV, or TSV export created by mongoexport
, or potentially, another third-party export tool.
Run mongoimport
from the system command line, not the mongo
shell.
mongoexport
provides data export capabilities.
You can use the MongoDB Database Tools to migrate from a self-hosted deployment to MongoDB Atlas. MongoDB Atlas is the fully managed service for MongoDB deployments in the cloud. To learn more, see Seed with mongorestore.
To learn all the ways you can migrate to MongoDB Atlas, see Migrate or Import Data.
mongoimport
syntax:
mongoimport <options> <connection-string> <file>
--help
Returns information on the options and use of mongoimport
.
--verbose, -v
Increases the amount of internal reporting returned on standard output or in log files. Increase the verbosity with the -v
form by including the option multiple times, (e.g. -vvvvv
.)
--quiet
Runs mongoimport
in a quiet mode that attempts to limit the amount of output.
This option suppresses:
output from database commands
replication activity
connection accepted events
connection closed events
--version
Returns the mongoimport
release number.
--config=<filename>
New in version 100.3.0.
Specifies the full path to a YAML configuration file that contains sensitive values for the following mongoimport
options:
This is the recommended way to specify a password to mongoimport
, aside from specifying it through a password prompt. You can use any combination of the arguments in the file.
The configuration file takes the following form:
password: <password>uri: mongodb://mongodb0.example.com:27017sslPEMKeyPassword: <password>
If you specify the password
option without specifying uri
, you can specify the other components of the connection string by using mongoimport
command line options, such as --username
and --host
.
Be sure to secure this file with appropriate filesystem permissions.
ImportantWhen using the --config
option, keep the following limitations and behaviors in mind:
If you provide the password
field and provide a connection string in the uri
field with a conflicting password, mongorestore
throws an error.
If you specify a configuration file with --config
and also use the --password
, --uri
, or --sslPEMKeyPassword
mongoimport
command line options, the command line option overrides the corresponding configuration file option.
--uri=<connectionString>
Specifies the resolvable URI connection string of the MongoDB deployment, enclosed in quotes:
--uri "mongodb://[username:password@]host1[:port1][,host2[:port2],...[,hostN[:portN]]][/[database][?options]]"
Note
If you don't specify a database with the --db
or --uri
option, mongoimport
uses the test
database by default. If the test
database doesn't exist, mongoimport
creates the database.
Starting with version 100.0
of mongoimport
, the connection string may alternatively be provided as a positional parameter, without using the --uri
option:
mongoimport mongodb://[username:password@]host1[:port1][,host2[:port2],...[,hostN[:portN]]][/[database][?options]]
As a positional parameter, the connection string may be specified at any point on the command line, as long as it begins with either mongodb://
or mongodb+srv://
. For example:
mongoimport --username joe --password secret1 mongodb://mongodb0.example.com:27017 --ssl
Only one connection string can be provided. Attempting to include more than one, whether using the --uri
option or as a positional argument, will result in an error.
For information on the components of the connection string, see the Connection String URI Format documentation.
NoteSome components in the connection string
may alternatively be specified using their own explicit command-line options, such as --username
and --password
. Providing a connection string while also using an explicit option and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
If using mongoimport
on Ubuntu 18.04, you may experience a cannot unmarshal DNS
error message when using SRV connection strings (in the form mongodb+srv://
) with the --uri
option. If so, use one of the following options instead:
the --uri
option with a non-SRV connection string (in the form mongodb://
)
the --host
option to specify the host to connect to directly
On some systems, a password provided in a connection string with the --uri
option may be visible to system status programs such as ps
that may be invoked by other users. Consider instead:
omitting the password in the connection string to receive an interactive password prompt, or
using the --config
option to specify a configuration file containing the password.
--host=<hostname><:port>, -h=<hostname><:port>
Default: localhost:27017
Specifies the resolvable hostname of the MongoDB deployment. By default, mongoimport
attempts to connect to a MongoDB instance running on the localhost on port number 27017
.
To connect to a replica set, specify the replSetName
and a seed list of set members, as in the following:
--host=<replSetName>/<hostname1><:port>,<hostname2><:port>,<...>
When specifying the replica set list format, mongoimport
always connects to the primary.
You can also connect to any single member of the replica set by specifying the host and port of only that member:
--host=<hostname1><:port>
If you use IPv6 and use the <address>:<port>
format, you must enclose the portion of an address and port combination in brackets (e.g. [<address>]
).
Alternatively, you can also specify the hostname directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --host
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
--port=<port>
Default: 27017
Specifies the TCP port on which the MongoDB instance listens for client connections.
Alternatively, you can also specify the port directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --port
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
--ssl
Enables connection to a mongod
or mongos
that has TLS/SSL support enabled.
Alternatively, you can also configure TLS/SSL support directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --ssl
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, see Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients.
--sslCAFile=<filename>
Specifies the .pem
file that contains the root certificate chain from the Certificate Authority. Specify the file name of the .pem
file using relative or absolute paths.
Alternatively, you can also specify the .pem
file directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --sslCAFile
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, see Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients.
--sslPEMKeyFile=<filename>
Specifies the .pem
file that contains both the TLS/SSL certificate and key. Specify the file name of the .pem
file using relative or absolute paths.
This option is required when using the --ssl
option to connect to a mongod
or mongos
that has CAFile
enabled without allowConnectionsWithoutCertificates
.
Alternatively, you can also specify the .pem
file directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --sslPEMKeyFile
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, see Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients.
--sslPEMKeyPassword=<value>
Specifies the password to de-crypt the certificate-key file (i.e. --sslPEMKeyFile
). Use the --sslPEMKeyPassword
option only if the certificate-key file is encrypted. In all cases, the mongoimport
redacts the password from all logging and reporting output.
If the private key in the PEM file is encrypted and you do not specify the --sslPEMKeyPassword
option, the mongoimport
prompts for a passphrase. See TLS/SSL Certificate Passphrase.
Alternatively, you can also specify the password directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --sslPEMKeyPassword
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, see Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients.
WarningOn some systems, a password provided directly using the --sslPEMKeyPassword
option may be visible to system status programs such as ps
that may be invoked by other users. Consider using the --config
option to specify a configuration file containing the password instead.
--sslCRLFile=<filename>
Specifies the .pem
file that contains the Certificate Revocation List. Specify the file name of the .pem
file using relative or absolute paths.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, see Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients.
--sslAllowInvalidCertificates
Bypasses the validation checks for server certificates and allows the use of invalid certificates. When using the allowInvalidCertificates
setting, MongoDB logs a warning for invalid certificates.
Although available, avoid using the --sslAllowInvalidCertificates
option if possible. If the use of --sslAllowInvalidCertificates
is necessary, only use the option on systems where intrusion is not possible.
Connecting to a mongod
or mongos
instance without validating server certificates is a potential security risk. If you only need to disable the validation of the hostname in the TLS/SSL certificates, see --sslAllowInvalidHostnames
.
Alternatively, you can also disable certificate validation directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --sslAllowInvalidCertificates
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, see Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients.
--sslAllowInvalidHostnames
Disables the validation of the hostnames in TLS/SSL certificates. Allows mongoimport
to connect to MongoDB instances even if the hostname in their certificates do not match the specified hostname.
Alternatively, you can also disable hostname validation directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --sslAllowInvalidHostnames
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
For more information about TLS/SSL and MongoDB, see Configure mongod and mongos for TLS/SSL and TLS/SSL Configuration for Clients.
--username=<username>, -u=<username>
Specifies a username with which to authenticate to a MongoDB database that uses authentication. Use in conjunction with the --password
and --authenticationDatabase
options.
Alternatively, you can also specify the username directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --username
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
If connecting to a MongoDB Atlas cluster using the MONGODB-AWS
authentication mechanism
, you can specify your AWS access key ID in:
this field,
the connection string
, or
the AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
environment variable.
See Connect to a MongoDB Atlas Cluster using AWS IAM Credentials for an example of each.
--password=<password>, -p=<password>
Specifies a password with which to authenticate to a MongoDB database that uses authentication. Use in conjunction with the --username
and --authenticationDatabase
options.
To prompt the user for the password, pass the --username
option without --password
or specify an empty string as the --password
value, as in --password ""
.
Alternatively, you can also specify the password directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --password
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
If connecting to a MongoDB Atlas cluster using the MONGODB-AWS
authentication mechanism
, you can specify your AWS secret access key in:
this field,
the connection string
, or
the AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
environment variable.
See Connect to a MongoDB Atlas Cluster using AWS IAM Credentials for an example of each.
WarningOn some systems, a password provided directly using the --password
option may be visible to system status programs such as ps
that may be invoked by other users. Consider instead:
omitting the --password
option to receive an interactive password prompt, or
using the --config
option to specify a configuration file containing the password.
--awsSessionToken=<AWS Session Token>
If connecting to a MongoDB Atlas cluster using the MONGODB-AWS
authentication mechanism
, and using session tokens in addition to your AWS access key ID and secret access key, you can specify your AWS session token in:
this field,
the AWS_SESSION_TOKEN
authMechanismProperties
parameter to the connection string
, or
the AWS_SESSION_TOKEN
environment variable.
See Connect to a MongoDB Atlas Cluster using AWS IAM Credentials for an example of each.
Only valid when using the MONGODB-AWS
authentication mechanism
.
--authenticationDatabase=<dbname>
Specifies the authentication database where the specified --username
has been created. See Authentication Database.
If using the GSSAPI (Kerberos), PLAIN (LDAP SASL), or MONGODB-AWS
authentication mechanisms
, you must set --authenticationDatabase
to $external
.
Alternatively, you can also specify the authentication database directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --authenticationDatabase
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
--authenticationMechanism=<name>
Default: SCRAM-SHA-1
Specifies the authentication mechanism the mongoimport
instance uses to authenticate to the mongod
or mongos
.
Changed in version 100.1.0: Starting in version 100.1.0
, mongoimport
adds support for the MONGODB-AWS
authentication mechanism when connecting to a MongoDB Atlas cluster.
Value
Description
RFC 5802 standard Salted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA-1 hash function.
RFC 7677 standard Salted Challenge Response Authentication Mechanism using the SHA-256 hash function.
Requires featureCompatibilityVersion set to 4.0
.
MongoDB TLS/SSL certificate authentication.
MONGODB-AWS
External authentication using AWS IAM credentials for use in connecting to a MongoDB Atlas cluster. See Connect to a MongoDB Atlas Cluster using AWS IAM Credentials.
New in version 100.1.0.
GSSAPI (Kerberos)
External authentication using Kerberos. This mechanism is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
PLAIN (LDAP SASL)
External authentication using LDAP. You can also use PLAIN
for authenticating in-database users. PLAIN
transmits passwords in plain text. This mechanism is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
Alternatively, you can also specify the authentication mechanism directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --authenticationMechanism
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
--gssapiServiceName=<serviceName>
Specify the name of the service using GSSAPI/Kerberos. Only required if the service does not use the default name of mongodb
.
This option is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
--gssapiHostName=<hostname>
Specify the hostname of a service using GSSAPI/Kerberos. Only required if the hostname of a machine does not match the hostname resolved by DNS.
This option is available only in MongoDB Enterprise.
--db=<database>, -d=<database>
Specifies the name of the database on which to run the mongoimport
.
Alternatively, you can also specify the database directly in the URI connection string
. Providing a connection string while also using --db
and specifying conflicting information will result in an error.
If you don't specify a database with the --db
or --uri
option, mongoimport
uses the test
database by default. If the test
database doesn't exist, mongoimport
creates the database.
--collection=<collection>, -c=<collection>
Specifies the collection to import. If you do not specify --collection
, mongoimport
reads the collection name from the input filename, omitting the file's extension if it has one.
--fields=<field1[,field2]>, -f=<field1[,field2]>
Specify a comma separated list of field names when importing CSV or TSV files that do not have field names in the first (i.e. header) line of the file.
To also specify the field type as well as the field name, use --fields
with --columnsHaveTypes
.
If you attempt to include --fields
when importing JSON data, mongoimport
returns an error. --fields
is only for CSV or TSV imports.
--fieldFile=<filename>
As an alternative to --fields
, the --fieldFile
option allows you to specify a file that holds a list of field names if your CSV or TSV file does not include field names in the first line of the file (i.e. header). Place one field per line.
To also specify the field type as well as the field name, use --fieldFile
with --columnsHaveTypes
.
If you attempt to include --fieldFile
when importing JSON data, mongoimport
returns an error. --fieldFile
is only for CSV or TSV imports.
--ignoreBlanks
Ignores empty fields in CSV and TSV exports. If not specified, mongoimport
creates fields without values in imported documents.
If you attempt to include --ignoreBlanks
when importing JSON data, mongoimport
returns an error. --ignoreBlanks
is only for CSV or TSV imports.
--type=<json|csv|tsv>
Specifies the file type to import. The default format is JSON, but it's possible to import CSV and TSV files.
The csv
parser accepts that data that complies with RFC-4180 . As a result, backslashes are not a valid escape character. If you use double-quotes to enclose fields in the CSV data, you must escape internal double-quote marks by prepending another double-quote.
--file=<filename>
Specifies the location and name of a file containing the data to import. If you do not specify a file, mongoimport
reads data from standard input (e.g. "stdin").
--drop
Modifies the import process so that the target instance drops the collection and any associated indexes before importing data from the input.
--headerline
If using --type csv
or --type tsv
, uses the first line as field names. Otherwise, mongoimport
imports the first line as a distinct document.
If you attempt to include --headerline
when importing JSON data, mongoimport
returns an error. --headerline
is only for CSV or TSV imports.
--useArrayIndexFields
New in version 100.0.0.
Interpret natural numbers in fields as array indexes when importing CSV or TSV files.
Field names must be in the form <colName>.<arrayIndex>
where arrayIndex
is a natural number beginning with 0
and increasing sequentially by 1
for each member of the array.
For example, with the following CSV file:
a.0,a.1,a.2,a.3red,yellow,green,blue
An import with the --useArrayIndexFields
option would result in the following document:
"a" : [ "red", "yellow", "green", "blue" ]
If using the --columnsHaveTypes
option as well, use the form <colName>.<arrayIndex>.<type>(<arg>)
to specify both the array index and type for each field. See --columnsHaveTypes
for more information.
Numerical keys with leading zeros (e.g. a.000,a.001
) are not interpreted as array indexes.
If the first part of a key is a natural number (e.g. 0.a,1.a
), it is interpreted as a document key, and not an array index.
If using the --ignoreBlanks
option with --useArrayIndexFields
, mongoimport
returns an error if you attempt to import a document that contains a blank value (e.g. ""
) for an array index field.
The --useArrayIndexFields
option has no effect when importing JSON data, as arrays are already encoded in JSON format.
--mode=<insert|upsert|merge|delete>
Default: insert
Specifies how the import process should handle existing documents in the database that match documents in the import file.
By default, mongoimport
uses the _id
field to match documents in the collection with documents in the import file. To specify the fields against which to match existing documents for the upsert
, merge
, and delete
modes, use --upsertFields
.
Value
Description
insert
Insert the documents in the import file. mongoimport
returns an error if you attempt to import a document that contains a duplicate value for a field with a unique index, such as _id
.
upsert
Replace existing documents in the database with matching documents from the import file. mongoimport
inserts all other documents. Replace Matching Documents during Import describes how to use --mode
upsert
.
merge
Merge existing documents that match a document in the import file with the new document. mongoimport
inserts all other documents. Merge Matching Documents during Import describes how to use --mode
merge
.
delete
Delete existing documents in the database that match a document in the import file. mongoimport
takes no action on non-matching documents. Delete Matching Documents describes how to use --mode
delete
.
New in version 100.0.0.
--upsertFields=<field1[,field2]>
Specifies a list of fields for the query portion of the import process. --upsertFields
can be used with --mode
upsert
, merge
, and delete
.
Use this option if the _id
fields in the existing documents don't match the field in the document, but another field or field combination can uniquely identify documents as a basis for performing upsert operations.
If you do not specify a field, --upsertFields
upserts on the basis of the _id
field.
To ensure adequate performance, indexes should exist for the field or fields you specify with --upsertFields
.
--stopOnError
Forces mongoimport
to halt the insert operation at the first error rather than continuing the operation despite errors.
By default, mongoimport
continues an operation when it encounters duplicate key and document validation errors. To ensure that the program stops on these errors, specify --stopOnError
.
--jsonArray
Accepts the import of data expressed with multiple MongoDB documents within a single JSON array. Limited to imports of 16 MB or smaller.
Use --jsonArray
in conjunction with mongoexport --jsonArray
.
--legacy
Indicates that the import data is in Extended JSON v1 format instead of the default Extended JSON v2 format.
TipIn general, the versions of mongoexport
and mongoimport
should match. That is, to import data created from mongoexport
, you should use the corresponding version of mongoimport
.
For example, if the import data is in v1 format:
{"_id":1.0,"myregfield":{"$regex":"foo","$options":"i"}}
Import without the --legacy
option results in the following document in the collection:
{ "_id" : 1, "myregfield" : { "$regex" : "foo", "$options" : "i" } }
Import with the --legacy
results in the following document in the collection:
{ "_id" : 1, "myregfield" : { "$regularExpression" : { "pattern" : "foo", "options" : "i" } } }
--maintainInsertionOrder
Default: false
If specified, mongoimport
inserts the documents in the order of their appearance in the input source. That is, both the bulk write batch order and document order within the batches are maintained.
Specifying --maintainInsertionOrder
also enables --stopOnError
and sets numInsertionWorkers
to 1.
If unspecified, mongoimport
may perform the insertions in an arbitrary order.
--numInsertionWorkers=<int>
Default: 1
Specifies the number of insertion workers to run concurrently.
For large imports, increasing the number of insertion workers may increase the speed of the import.
--writeConcern=<document>
Default: majority
Specifies the write concern for each write operation that mongoimport
performs.
Specify the write concern as a document with w options:
--writeConcern "{w:'majority'}"
If the write concern is also included in the --uri connection string
, the command-line --writeConcern
overrides the write concern specified in the URI string.
--bypassDocumentValidation
Enables mongoimport
to bypass document validation during the operation. This lets you insert documents that do not meet the validation requirements.
--columnsHaveTypes
Instructs mongoimport
that the field list specified in --fields
, --fieldFile
, or --headerline
specifies the types of each field.
Field names must be in the form of <colName>.<type>(<arg>)
. You must backslash-escape the following characters if you wish to include them in an argument: (
, )
, and \
.
type
Supported Arguments
Example Header Field
auto()
None.
misc.auto()
binary(<arg>)
user thumbnail.binary(base64)
boolean()
None.
verified.boolean()
date(<arg>)
Alias for date_go(<arg>)
. Go Language time.Parse format.
created.date(2006-01-02 15:04:05)
date_go(<arg>)
created.date_go(2006-01-02T15:04:05Z)
date_ms(<arg>)
Microsoft SQL Server FORMAT format
created.date_ms(yyyy-MM-dd H:mm:ss)
date_oracle(<arg>)
Oracle Database TO_DATE format .
created.date_oracle(YYYY-MM-DD HH24:MI:SS)
decimal()
None
price.decimal()
double()
None.
revenue.double()
int32()
None.
followerCount.int32()
int64()
None.
bigNumber.int64()
string()
None.
zipcode.string()
See Import CSV with Specified Field Types for sample usage.
If you attempt to include --columnsHaveTypes
when importing JSON data, mongoimport
returns an error. --columnsHaveTypes
is only for CSV or TSV imports.
--parseGrace=<grace>
Default: stop
Specifies how mongoimport
handles type coercion failures when importing CSV or TSV files with --columnsHaveTypes
.
--parseGrace
has no effect when importing JSON documents.
Value
Description
autoCast
Assigns a type based on the value of the field. For example, if a field is defined as a double
and the value for that field was "foo"
, mongoimport
would make that field value a string type.
skipField
For the row being imported, mongoimport
does not include the field whose type does not match the expected type.
skipRow
mongoimport
does not import rows containing a value whose type does not match the expected type.
stop
mongoimport
returns an error that ends the import.
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