How to export all collections in MongoDB?

MongodbExport

Mongodb Problem Overview


I want to export all collections in MongoDB by the command:

mongoexport -d dbname -o Mongo.json

The result is:
No collection specified!

The manual says, if you don't specify a collection, all collections will be exported.
However, why doesn't this work?

http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/mongoexport/#cmdoption-mongoexport--collection

My MongoDB version is 2.0.6.

Mongodb Solutions


Solution 1 - Mongodb

For lazy people, use mongodump, it's faster:

mongodump -d <database_name> -o <directory_backup>

And to "restore/import" it (from directory_backup/dump/):

mongorestore -d <database_name> <directory_backup>

This way, you don't need to deal with all collections individually. Just specify the database.

Note that I would recommend against using mongodump/mongorestore for big data storages. It is very slow and once you get past 10/20GB of data it can take hours to restore.

Solution 2 - Mongodb

I wrote bash script for that. Just run it with 2 parameters (database name, dir to store files).

#!/bin/bash

if [ ! $1 ]; then
        echo " Example of use: $0 database_name [dir_to_store]"
        exit 1
fi
db=$1
out_dir=$2
if [ ! $out_dir ]; then
        out_dir="./"
else
        mkdir -p $out_dir
fi

tmp_file="fadlfhsdofheinwvw.js"
echo "print('_ ' + db.getCollectionNames())" > $tmp_file
cols=`mongo $db $tmp_file | grep '_' | awk '{print $2}' | tr ',' ' '`
for c in $cols
do
    mongoexport -d $db -c $c -o "$out_dir/exp_${db}_${c}.json"
done
rm $tmp_file

Solution 3 - Mongodb

To export all collections:

mongodump -d database_name -o directory_to_store_dumps

To restore them:

mongorestore -d database_name directory_backup_where_mongodb_tobe_restored

Solution 4 - Mongodb

Follow the steps below to create a mongodump from the server and import it another server/local machine which has a username and a password

1. mongodump -d dbname -o dumpname -u username -p password
2. scp -r user@remote:~/location/of/dumpname ./
3. mongorestore -d dbname dumpname/dbname/ -u username -p password

Solution 5 - Mongodb

Please let us know where you have installed your Mongo DB? (either in Ubuntu or in Windows)

  • For Windows:
  1. Before exporting you must connect to your Mongo DB in cmd prompt and make sure that you are able to connect to your local host.

  2. Now open a new cmd prompt and execute the below command,

    mongodump --db database name --out path to save  
    

    eg: mongodump --db mydb --out c:\TEMP\op.json

  3. Visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOCp3Jv6yKo for more details.

  • For Ubuntu:
  1. Login to your terminal where Mongo DB is installed and make sure you are able to connect to your Mongo DB.

  2. Now open a new terminal and execute the below command,

    mongodump -d database name -o file name to save  
    

    eg: mongodump -d mydb -o output.json

  3. Visit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Fwd2ZB86gg for more details.

Solution 6 - Mongodb

Previous answers explained it well, I am adding my answer to help in case you are dealing with a remote password protected database

mongodump --host xx.xxx.xx.xx --port 27017 --db your_db_name --username your_user_name --password your_password --out /target/folder/path

Solution 7 - Mongodb

For local and remote dump and restore:

For Local

Local dump:

mongodump -d mydb -o ./mongo-backup

Local restore:

mongorestore -d mydb ./mongo-backup/mydb

For remote

Remote dump

mongodump --uri "mongodb+srv://Admin:[email protected]/mytestdb" -o ./mongo-backup

Remote restore

mongorestore --uri "mongodb+srv://Admin:[email protected]/mytestdb" ./mongo-backup/mytestdb

Solution 8 - Mongodb

You can do it using the mongodump command

> Step 1 : Open command prompt > > Step 2 : go to bin folder of your mongoDB installation (C:\Program Files\MongoDB\Server\4.0\bin) > > Step 3 : then execute the following command > > mongodump -d your_db_name -o destination_path > > your_db_name = test > > destination_path = C:\Users\HP\Desktop

Exported files will be created in destination_path\your_db_name folder (in this example C:\Users\HP\Desktop\test)

References : o7planning

Solution 9 - Mongodb

In case you want to connect a remote mongoDB server like mongolab.com, you should pass connection credentials eg.

mongoexport -h id.mongolab.com:60599 -u username -p password -d mydb -c mycollection -o mybackup.json

Solution 10 - Mongodb

I realize that this is quite an old question and that mongodump/mongorestore is clearly the right way if you want a 100% faithful result, including indexes.

However, I needed a quick and dirty solution that would likely be forwards and backwards compatible between old and new versions of MongoDB, provided there's nothing especially wacky going on. And for that I wanted the answer to the original question.

There are other acceptable solutions above, but this Unix pipeline is relatively short and sweet:

mongo --quiet mydatabase --eval "db.getCollectionNames().join('\n')" | \
grep -v system.indexes | \
xargs -L 1 -I {} mongoexport -d mydatabase -c {} --out {}.json

This produces an appropriately named .json file for each collection.

Note that the database name ("mydatabase") appears twice. I'm assuming the database is local and you don't need to pass credentials but it's easy to do that with both mongo and mongoexport.

Note that I'm using grep -v to discard system.indexes, because I don't want an older version of MongoDB to try to interpret a system collection from a newer one. Instead I'm allowing my application to make its usual ensureIndex calls to recreate the indexes.

Solution 11 - Mongodb

If you are OK with the bson format, then you can use the mongodump utility with the same -d flag. It will dump all the collections to the dump directory (the default, can be changed via the -o option) in the bson format. You can then import these files using the mongorestore utility.

Solution 12 - Mongodb

If you're dealing with remote databases you can try these commands given that you don't mind the output being BSON

1. Dump out as a gzip archive

mongodump --uri="mongodb://YOUR_USER_ID:YOUR_PASSWORD@YOUR_HOST_IP/YOUR_DB_NAME" --gzip --archive > YOUR_FILE_NAME

2. Restore (Copy a database from one to another)

mongorestore --uri="mongodb://$targetUser:$targetPwd@$targetHost/$targetDb" --nsFrom="$sourceDb.*" --nsTo="$targetDb.*" --gzip --archive

Solution 13 - Mongodb

You can use mongo --eval 'printjson(db.getCollectionNames())' to get the list of collections and then do a mongoexport on all of them. Here is an example in ruby

  out = `mongo  #{DB_HOST}/#{DB_NAME} --eval "printjson(db.getCollectionNames())"`

  collections = out.scan(/\".+\"/).map { |s| s.gsub('"', '') }

  collections.each do |collection|
    system "mongoexport --db #{DB_NAME}  --collection #{collection}  --host '#{DB_HOST}' --out #{collection}_dump"
  end

Solution 14 - Mongodb

I needed the Windows batch script version. This thread was useful, so I thought I'd contribute my answer to it too.

mongo "{YOUR SERVER}/{YOUR DATABASE}" --eval "rs.slaveOk();db.getCollectionNames()" --quiet>__collections.txt
for /f %%a in ('type __collections.txt') do @set COLLECTIONS=%%a
for %%a in (%COLLECTIONS%) do mongoexport --host {YOUR SERVER} --db {YOUR DATABASE} --collection %%a --out data\%%a.json
del __collections.txt

I had some issues using set /p COLLECTIONS=<__collections.txt, hence the convoluted for /f method.

Solution 15 - Mongodb

I found after trying lots of convoluted examples that very simple approach worked for me.

I just wanted to take a dump of a db from local and import it on a remote instance:

on the local machine:

mongodump -d databasename

then I scp'd my dump to my server machine:

scp -r dump [email protected]:~

then from the parent dir of the dump simply:

mongorestore 

and that imported the database.

assuming mongodb service is running of course.

Solution 16 - Mongodb

If you want, you can export all collections to csv without specifying --fields (will export all fields).

From http://drzon.net/export-mongodb-collections-to-csv-without-specifying-fields/ run this bash script

OIFS=$IFS;
IFS=",";
 
# fill in your details here
dbname=DBNAME
user=USERNAME
pass=PASSWORD
host=HOSTNAME:PORT
 
# first get all collections in the database
collections=`mongo "$host/$dbname" -u $user -p $pass --eval "rs.slaveOk();db.getCollectionNames();"`;
collections=`mongo $dbname --eval "rs.slaveOk();db.getCollectionNames();"`;
collectionArray=($collections);
 
# for each collection
for ((i=0; i<${#collectionArray[@]}; ++i));
do
    echo 'exporting collection' ${collectionArray[$i]}
    # get comma separated list of keys. do this by peeking into the first document in the collection and get his set of keys
    keys=`mongo "$host/$dbname" -u $user -p $pass --eval "rs.slaveOk();var keys = []; for(var key in db.${collectionArray[$i]}.find().sort({_id: -1}).limit(1)[0]) { keys.push(key); }; keys;" --quiet`;
    # now use mongoexport with the set of keys to export the collection to csv
    mongoexport --host $host -u $user -p $pass -d $dbname -c ${collectionArray[$i]} --fields "$keys" --csv --out $dbname.${collectionArray[$i]}.csv;
done
 
IFS=$OIFS;

Solution 17 - Mongodb

If you want to dump all collections in all databases (which is an expansive interpretation of the original questioner's intent) then use

mongodump

All the databases and collections will be created in a directory called 'dump' in the 'current' location

Solution 18 - Mongodb

you can create zip file by using following command .It will create zip file of database {dbname} provided.You can later import the following zip file in you mongo DB.

Window filepath=C:\Users\Username\mongo 

mongodump --archive={filepath}\+{filename}.gz --gzip --db {dbname}

Solution 19 - Mongodb

if you want to use mongoexport and mongoimport to export/import each collection from database, I think this utility can be helpful for you. I've used similar utility couple of times;

LOADING=false
 
usage()
{
    cat << EOF
    usage: $0 [options] dbname
 
    OPTIONS:
        -h      Show this help.
        -l      Load instead of export
        -u      Mongo username
        -p      Mongo password
        -H      Mongo host string (ex. localhost:27017)
EOF
}
 
while getopts "hlu:p:H:" opt; do
    MAXOPTIND=$OPTIND
    
    case $opt in 
        h)
            usage
            exit
            ;;
        l)
            LOADING=true
            ;;
        u)
            USERNAME="$OPTARG"
            ;;
        p) 
            PASSWORD="$OPTARG"
            ;;
        H)
            HOST="$OPTARG"
            ;;
        \?)
            echo "Invalid option $opt"
            exit 1
            ;;
    esac
done

shift $(($MAXOPTIND-1))
 
if [ -z "$1" ]; then
    echo "Usage: export-mongo [opts] <dbname>"
    exit 1
fi
 
DB="$1"
if [ -z "$HOST" ]; then
    CONN="localhost:27017/$DB"
else
    CONN="$HOST/$DB"
fi
 
ARGS=""
if [ -n "$USERNAME" ]; then
    ARGS="-u $USERNAME"
fi
if [ -n "$PASSWORD" ]; then
    ARGS="$ARGS -p $PASSWORD"
fi

echo "*************************** Mongo Export ************************"
echo "**** Host:      $HOST"
echo "**** Database:  $DB"
echo "**** Username:  $USERNAME"
echo "**** Password:  $PASSWORD"
echo "**** Loading:   $LOADING"
echo "*****************************************************************"
 
if $LOADING ; then
    echo "Loading into $CONN"
    tar -xzf $DB.tar.gz
    pushd $DB >/dev/null
 
    for path in *.json; do
        collection=${path%.json}
        echo "Loading into $DB/$collection from $path"
        mongoimport $ARGS -d $DB -c $collection $path
    done
 
    popd >/dev/null
    rm -rf $DB
else
    DATABASE_COLLECTIONS=$(mongo $CONN $ARGS --quiet --eval 'db.getCollectionNames()' | sed 's/,/ /g')
    
    mkdir /tmp/$DB
    pushd /tmp/$DB 2>/dev/null
     
    for collection in $DATABASE_COLLECTIONS; do
        mongoexport --host $HOST -u $USERNAME -p $PASSWORD -db $DB -c $collection --jsonArray -o $collection.json >/dev/null
    done
 
    pushd /tmp 2>/dev/null
    tar -czf "$DB.tar.gz" $DB 2>/dev/null
    popd 2>/dev/null
    popd 2>/dev/null
    mv /tmp/$DB.tar.gz ./ 2>/dev/null
    rm -rf /tmp/$DB 2>/dev/null
fi

Solution 20 - Mongodb

Here's what worked for me when restoring an exported database:

mongorestore -d 0 ./0 --drop

where ./contained the exported bson files. Note that the --drop will overwrite existing data.

Solution 21 - Mongodb

If you want to backup all the dbs on the server, without having the worry about that the dbs are called, use the following shell script:

#!/bin/sh

md=`which mongodump`
pidof=`which pidof`
mdi=`$pidof mongod`
dir='/var/backup/mongo'

if [ ! -z "$mdi" ]
   then
        if [ ! -d "$dir" ]
           then
	           mkdir -p $dir
           fi
        $md --out $dir >/dev/null 2>&1
   fi

This uses the mongodump utility, which will backup all DBs if none is specified.

You can put this in your cronjob, and it will only run if the mongod process is running. It will also create the backup directory if none exists.

Each DB backup is written to an individual directory, so you can restore individual DBs from the global dump.

Solution 22 - Mongodb

First, of Start the Mongo DB - for that go to the path as ->

C:\Program Files\MongoDB\Server\3.2\bin and click on the mongod.exe file to start MongoDB server.

Command in Windows to Export

  • Command to export MongoDB database in Windows from "remote-server" to the local machine in directory C:/Users/Desktop/temp-folder from the remote server with the internal IP address and port.
C:\> mongodump --host remote_ip_address:27017 --db <db-name> -o C:/Users/Desktop/temp-folder

Command in Windows to Import

  • Command to import MongoDB database in Windows to "remote-server" from local machine directory C:/Users/Desktop/temp-folder/db-dir
C:\> mongorestore --host=ip --port=27017 -d <db-name> C:/Users/Desktop/temp-folder/db-dir

Solution 23 - Mongodb

> I dump all collection on robo3t. > I run the command below on vagrant/homestead. It's work for me

mongodump --host localhost --port 27017 --db db_name --out db_path

Solution 24 - Mongodb

If you have this issue: Failed: can't create session: could not connect to server: connection() : auth error: sasl conversation error: unable to authenticate using mechanism "SCRAM-SHA-1": (AuthenticationFailed) Authentication failed.

then add --authenticationDatabase admin

eg:

mongodump -h 192.168.20.30:27018 --authenticationDatabase admin -u dbAdmin -p dbPassword -d dbName -o path/to/folder

Solution 25 - Mongodb

Some of the options are now deprecated, in version 4.4.5 here is how I have done it

mongodump --archive="my-local-db" --db=my


mongorestore --archive="my-local-db" --nsFrom='my.*' --nsTo='mynew.*'

Read more about restore here: https://docs.mongodb.com/database-tools/mongorestore/

Solution 26 - Mongodb

#mongodump using sh script 
#!/bin/bash
TIMESTAMP=`date +%F-%H%M`
APP_NAME="folder_name"
BACKUPS_DIR="/xxxx/tst_file_bcup/$APP_NAME"
BACKUP_NAME="$APP_NAME-$TIMESTAMP"
/usr/bin/mongodump -h 127.0.0.1 -d <dbname> -o $BACKUPS_DIR/$APP_NAME/$BACKUP_NAME
tar -zcvf $BACKUPS_DIR/$BACKUP_NAME.tgz $BACKUPS_DIR/$APP_NAME/$BACKUP_NAME
rm -rf /home/wowza_analytics_bcup/wowza_analytics/wowza_analytics
### 7 days old backup delete automaticaly using given command

find /home/wowza_analytics_bcup/wowza_analytics/ -mindepth 1 -mtime +7 -delete

Solution 27 - Mongodb

There are multiple options depending on what you want to do

  1. If you want to export your database to another mongo database, you should use mongodump. This creates a folder of BSON files which have metadata that JSON wouldn't have.
mongodump
mongorestore --host mongodb1.example.net --port 37017 dump/
  1. If you want to export your database into JSON you can use mongoexport except you have to do it one collection at a time (this is by design). However I think it's easiest to export the entire database with mongodump and then convert to JSON.
# -d is a valid option for both mongorestore and mongodump

mongodump -d <DATABASE_NAME>
for file in dump/*/*.bson; do bsondump $file > $file.json; done

Solution 28 - Mongodb

Even in mongo version 4 there is no way to export all collections at once. Export the specified collection to the specified output file from a local MongoDB instance running on port 27017 you can do with the following command:

.\mongoexport.exe --db=xstaging --collection=products --out=c:/xstaging.products.json

Solution 29 - Mongodb

  1. Open the Connection
  2. Start the server
  3. open new Command prompt

Export:

mongo/bin> mongoexport -d webmitta -c domain -o domain-k.json

Import:

mongoimport -d dbname -c newCollecionname --file domain-k.json

Where

webmitta(db name)
domain(Collection Name)
domain-k.json(output file name)

Solution 30 - Mongodb

For dump, your DB fallow the below CMD

   mongodump -d <your d name> -o <dump path>
Ex:mongodump -d qualetics -o D:\dbpackup\qualetics

Solution 31 - Mongodb

This is the bash script I used to achieve the result. The script is generalized to 4 inputs (host url, database, username, and password), so it can be used on any mongo database.

dburl=$1
username=$3
password=$4
db=$2

mongoAccess=mongodb+srv://$username:$password@$dburl/$db

Collections=$(mongo $mongoAccess --quiet --eval "db.getCollectionNames()" | sed 's/,/ /g' | tail +6)

#echo $Collections

for col in $Collections
do
    if [ "$col" = "[" ] || [ "$col" = "]" ]
    then
        continue
    else
        echo "Exporting $col"
        mongoexport --uri $mongoAccess --collection=$col --type json --out output-$col.json
    fi
    
done

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