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insert

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  • Definition
  • Compatibility
  • Syntax
  • Command Fields
  • Behavior
  • Examples
  • Output
insert

The insert command inserts one or more documents and returns a document containing the status of all inserts. The insert methods provided by the MongoDB drivers use this command internally.

Tip

In mongosh, this command can also be run through the db.collection.insertOne() and db.collection.insertMany() helper methods.

Helper methods are convenient for mongosh 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.

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

This command is available in deployments hosted in the following environments:

  • MongoDB Atlas: The fully managed service for MongoDB deployments in the cloud

Note

This command is supported in all MongoDB Atlas clusters. For information on Atlas support for all commands, see Unsupported Commands.

The command has the following syntax:

db.runCommand(
{
insert: <collection>,
documents: [ <document>, <document>, <document>, ... ],
ordered: <boolean>,
maxTimeMS: <integer>,
writeConcern: { <write concern> },
bypassDocumentValidation: <boolean>,
comment: <any>
}
)

The command takes the following fields:

Field
Type
Description
insert
string
The name of the target collection.
documents
array
An array of one or more documents to insert into the named collection.
ordered
boolean
Optional. If true, then when an insert of a document fails, return without inserting any remaining documents listed in the inserts array. If false, then when an insert of a document fails, continue to insert the remaining documents. Defaults to true.
maxTimeMS
non-negative integer

Optional.

Specifies a time limit in milliseconds. If you do not specify a value for maxTimeMS, operations will not time out. A value of 0 explicitly specifies the default unbounded behavior.

MongoDB terminates operations that exceed their allotted time limit using the same mechanism as db.killOp(). MongoDB only terminates an operation at one of its designated interrupt points.

writeConcern
document

Optional. A document that expresses the write concern of the insert 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.

bypassDocumentValidation
boolean
Optional. Enables insert to bypass document validation during the operation. This lets you insert documents that do not meet the validation requirements.
comment
any

Optional. A user-provided comment to attach to this command. Once set, this comment appears alongside records of this command in the following locations:

A comment can be any valid BSON type (string, integer, object, array, etc).

The total size of all the documents array elements must be less than or equal to the maximum BSON document size.

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

The insert command adds support for the bypassDocumentValidation option, which lets you bypass document validation when inserting or updating documents in a collection with validation rules.

insert can be used inside distributed transactions.

Important

In most cases, a distributed transaction incurs a greater performance cost over single document writes, and the availability of distributed 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 distributed transactions.

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

You can create collections and indexes inside a distributed transaction if the transaction is not a cross-shard write transaction.

If you specify an insert on a non-existing collection in a transaction, MongoDB creates the collection implicitly.

Tip

See also:

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.

Even if you encounter a server error during an insert, some documents may have been inserted.

After a successful insert, the system returns insert.n, the number of documents inserted into the collection. If the insert operation is interrupted by a replica set state change, the system may continue inserting documents. As a result, insert.n may report fewer documents than actually inserted.

Insert a document into the users collection:

db.runCommand(
{
insert: "users",
documents: [ { _id: 1, user: "abc123", status: "A" } ]
}
)

The returned document shows that the command successfully inserted a document. See Output for details.

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

Insert three documents into the users collection:

db.runCommand(
{
insert: "users",
documents: [
{ _id: 2, user: "ijk123", status: "A" },
{ _id: 3, user: "xyz123", status: "P" },
{ _id: 4, user: "mop123", status: "P" }
],
ordered: false,
writeConcern: { w: "majority", wtimeout: 5000 }
}
)

The returned document shows that the command successfully inserted the three documents. See Output for details.

{ "ok" : 1, "n" : 3 }

If schema validation validationActions are set to error, inserts to a collection return errors for documents that violate the schema validation rules. To insert documents which would violate these rules set bypassDocumentValidation: true.

Create the user collection with a validation rule on the status fields.

The validation rule validates that the status must be "Unknown" or "Incomplete":

db.createCollection("users", {
validator:
{
status: {
$in: [ "Unknown", "Incomplete" ]
}
}
})

Attempt to insert a document which violates the validation rule:

db.runCommand({
insert: "users",
documents: [ {user: "123", status: "Active" } ]
})

The insert returns a write error message:

{
n: 0,
writeErrors: [
{
index: 0,
code: 121,
errInfo: {
failingDocumentId: ObjectId('6197a7f2d84e85d1cc90d270'),
details: {
operatorName: '$in',
specifiedAs: { status: { '$in': [Array] } },
reason: 'no matching value found in array',
consideredValue: 'Active'
}
},
errmsg: 'Document failed validation'
}
],
ok: 1
}

Set bypassDocumentValidation : true and rerun the insert:

db.runCommand({
insert: "users",
documents: [ {user: "123", status: "Active" } ],
bypassDocumentValidation: true
})

The operation succeeds.

To check for documents that violate schema validation rules, use the validate command.

The returned document contains a subset of the following fields:

insert.ok

The status of the command.

insert.n

The number of documents inserted.

insert.writeErrors

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

Each error document contains the following fields:

insert.writeErrors.index

An integer that identifies the document in the documents array, which uses a zero-based index.

insert.writeErrors.code

An integer value identifying the error.

insert.writeErrors.errmsg

A description of the error.

insert.writeConcernError

Document describing errors that relate to the write concern.

Changed in version 7.1: When insert executes on mongos, write concern errors are always reported, even when one or more write errors occur.

In previous releases, the occurrence of write errors could cause the insert to not report write concern errors.

The writeConcernError documents contain the following fields:

insert.writeConcernError.code

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

insert.writeConcernError.errmsg

A description of the cause of the write concern error.

insert.writeConcernError.errInfo.writeConcern

The write concern object used for the corresponding operation. For information on write concern object fields, see Write Concern Specification.

The write concern object may also contain the following field, indicating the source of the write concern:

insert.writeConcernError.errInfo.writeConcern.provenance

A string value indicating where the write concern originated (known as write concern provenance). The following table shows the possible values for this field and their significance:

Provenance
Description
clientSupplied
The write concern was specified in the application.
customDefault
The write concern originated from a custom defined default value. See setDefaultRWConcern.
getLastErrorDefaults
The write concern originated from the replica set's settings.getLastErrorDefaults field.
implicitDefault
The write concern originated from the server in absence of all other write concern specifications.

The following is an example document returned for a successful insert of a single document:

{ ok: 1, n: 1 }

The following is an example document returned for an insert of two documents that successfully inserted one document but encountered an error with the other document:

{
"ok" : 1,
"n" : 1,
"writeErrors" : [
{
"index" : 1,
"code" : 11000,
"errmsg" : "insertDocument :: caused by :: 11000 E11000 duplicate key error index: test.users.$_id_ dup key: { : 1.0 }"
}
]
}

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