listCollections
On this page
Definition
listCollections
Retrieves information, including the names and creation options, for the collections and views in a database.
The
listCollections
command returns a document that contains information you can use to create a cursor on the collection.mongosh
provides thedb.getCollectionInfos()
and thedb.getCollectionNames()
helper methods.
Compatibility
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.
MongoDB Enterprise: The subscription-based, self-managed version of MongoDB
MongoDB Community: The source-available, free-to-use, and self-managed version of MongoDB
Syntax
The command has the following syntax:
db.runCommand( { listCollections: 1, filter: <document>, nameOnly: <boolean>, authorizedCollections: <boolean>, comment: <any> } )
Command Fields
The command can take the following optional fields:
Field | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
filter | document | Optional. A query predicate to filter the list of collections. You can specify a query predicate on any of the fields
returned by |
nameOnly | boolean | Optional. A flag to indicate whether the command should return just the
name and type ( The default value is When |
authorizedCollections | boolean | Optional. A flag, when set to When both The default value is For a user who has When used without |
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). Any comment set on a |
Behavior
Filter
Use a filter to limit the results of listCollections
. You
can specify a filter
on any of the fields returned in the listCollections
result
set.
Locks
listCollections
lock behavior:
Earlier than MongoDB 5.0,
listCollections
takes an intent shared lock lock on each collection in the database whenlistCollections
holds an intent shared lock on the database.Starting in MongoDB 5.0,
listCollections
doesn't take an intent shared lock on a collection or database.listCollections
isn't blocked by operations holding an exclusive write lock on a collection.
To learn about locks, see FAQ: Concurrency.
Client Disconnection
Starting in MongoDB 4.2, if the client that issued listCollections
disconnects before the operation completes, MongoDB marks listCollections
for termination using killOp
.
Replica Set Member State Restriction
To run on a replica set member, listCollections
operations require the member
to be in PRIMARY
or SECONDARY
state. If the member
is in another state, such as STARTUP2
, the
operation errors.
Required Access
The listCollections
command requires the
listCollections
action when access control is enforced.
Users must have privileges that grant the listCollections
action
on the database to run listCollections
.
For example, the following command grants the privilege to run
db.getCollectionInfos()
against the test
database:
{ resource: { db: "test", collection: "" }, actions: [ "listCollections" ] }
The built-in role read
provides the privilege to run
listCollections
for a specific database.
Users without the required read
privilege can run
listCollections
when authorizedCollections
and nameOnly
are both set to true
. In this case, the command returns the names
and types for collection(s) where the user has privileges.
For example, consider a user with a role that grants the following
find
privilege:
{ resource: { db: "sales", collection: "currentQuarter" }, actions: [ "find" ] }
The user can run listCollections
if authorizedCollections
and nameOnly
are both set to true
.
db.runCommand( { listCollections: 1.0, authorizedCollections: true, nameOnly: true } )
The operation returns the name and type of the currentQuarter
collection.
However, the following operations return an error if the user does not have the required access authorization:
db.runCommand( { listCollections: 1.0, authorizedCollections: true } ) db.runCommand( { listCollections: 1.0, nameOnly: true } )
show collections
The mongosh
method show collections
is similar to:
db.runCommand( { listCollections: 1.0, authorizedCollections: true, nameOnly: true } )
For users with the required access,
show collections
lists the non-system collections for the database.For users without the required access,
show collections
lists only the collections for which the users has privileges.
Output
listCollections.cursor
A document that contains information with which to create a cursor to documents that contain collection names and options. The cursor information includes the cursor id, the full namespace for the command, as well as the first batch of results. Each document in the batch output contains the following fields:
FieldTypeDescriptionnameStringName of the collection.typeStringType of data store. Returnscollection
for collections,view
for views, andtimeseries
for time series collection.optionsDocumentCollection options.
These options correspond directly to the options available in
db.createCollection()
. For the descriptions on the options, seedb.createCollection()
.infoDocumentLists the following fields related to the collection:
- readOnly
boolean
. Iftrue
the data store is read only.- uuid
- UUID. Once established, the collection UUID does not change. The collection UUID remains the same across replica set members and shards in a sharded cluster.
idIndexDocumentProvides information on the_id
index for the collection.
Example
List All Collections
The music
database contains three collections, motorhead
,
taylorSwift
, and ramones
.
To list the collections in the database, you can use the built-in
mongosh
command, show collections.
show collections
The output is:
motorhead ramones taylorSwift
To get a similar list with the listCollections
collections command,
use the nameOnly
option.
db.runCommand( { listCollections: 1.0, nameOnly: true } )
The output is:
{ cursor: { id: Long("0"), ns: 'music.$cmd.listCollections', firstBatch: [ { name: 'motorhead', type: 'collection' }, { name: 'taylorSwift', type: 'collection' }, { name: 'ramones', type: 'collection' } ] }, ok: 1 }
To get more detailed information, remove the nameOnly
option.
db.runCommand( { listCollections: 1.0 } )
The output is:
{ cursor: { id: Long("0"), ns: 'music.$cmd.listCollections', firstBatch: [ { name: 'motorhead', type: 'collection', options: {}, info: { readOnly: false, uuid: new UUID("09ef1858-2831-47d2-a3a7-9a29a9cfeb94") }, idIndex: { v: 2, key: { _id: 1 }, name: '_id_' } }, { name: 'taylorSwift', type: 'collection', options: {}, info: { readOnly: false, uuid: new UUID("6c46c8b9-4999-4213-bcef-9a36b0cff228") }, idIndex: { v: 2, key: { _id: 1 }, name: '_id_' } }, { name: 'ramones', type: 'collection', options: {}, info: { readOnly: false, uuid: new UUID("7e1925ba-f2f9-4e42-90e4-8cafd434a6c4") }, idIndex: { v: 2, key: { _id: 1 }, name: '_id_' } } ] }, ok: 1 }
Learn More
For collection options:
For collection information: