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Retryable Writes

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  • Prerequisites
  • Retryable Writes and Multi-Document Transactions
  • Enabling Retryable Writes
  • Retryable Write Operations
  • Behavior

Retryable writes allow MongoDB drivers to automatically retry certain write operations a single time if they encounter network errors, or if they cannot find a healthy primary in the replica set or sharded cluster.

Retryable writes have the following requirements:

Supported Deployment Topologies
Retryable writes require a replica set or sharded cluster, and do not support standalone instances.
Supported Storage Engine
Retryable writes require a storage engine supporting document-level locking, such as the WiredTiger or in-memory storage engines.
3.6+ MongoDB Drivers

Clients require MongoDB drivers updated for MongoDB 3.6 or greater:

Java 3.6+

Python 3.6+

C 1.9+

Go 1.8+

C# 2.5+

Node 3.0+

Ruby 2.5+

Rust 2.1+

Swift 1.2+

Perl 2.0+

PHPC 1.4+

Scala 2.2+

C++ 3.6.6+

MongoDB Version
The MongoDB version of every node in the cluster must be 3.6 or greater, and the featureCompatibilityVersion of each node in the cluster must be 3.6 or greater. See setFeatureCompatibilityVersion for more information on the featureCompatibilityVersion flag.
Write Acknowledgment
Write operations issued with a Write Concern of 0 are not retryable.

The transaction commit and abort operations are retryable write operations. If the commit operation or the abort operation encounters an error, MongoDB drivers retry the operation a single time regardless of whether retryWrites is set to false.

The write operations inside the transaction are not individually retryable, regardless of value of retryWrites.

For more information on transactions, see Transactions.

MongoDB Drivers
Drivers compatible with MongoDB 4.2 and higher enable Retryable Writes by default. Earlier drivers require the retryWrites=true option. The retryWrites=true option can be omitted in applications that use drivers compatible with MongoDB 4.2 and higher.

To disable retryable writes, applications that use drivers compatible with MongoDB 4.2 and higher must include retryWrites=false in the connection string.
mongosh

Retryable writes are enabled by default in mongosh. To disable retryable writes, use the --retryWrites=false command line option:

mongosh --retryWrites=false

The following write operations are retryable when issued with acknowledged write concern; e.g., Write Concern cannot be {w: 0}.

Note

The write operations inside the transactions are not individually retryable.

Methods
Descriptions
Insert operations
Single-document update operations
Single document delete operations
findAndModify operations. All findAndModify operations are single document operations.

db.collection.bulkWrite() with the following write operations:

Bulk write operations that only consist of the single-document write operations. A retryable bulk operation can include any combination of the specified write operations but cannot include any multi-document write operations, such as updateMany.
Bulk write operations that only consist of the single-document write operations. A retryable bulk operation can include any combination of the specified write operations but cannot include any multi-document write operations, such as update which specifies true for the multi option.

Note

Updates to Shard Key Values

Starting in MongoDB 4.2, you can update a document's shard key value (unless the shard key field is the immutable _id field) by issuing single-document update/findAndModify operations either as a retryable write or in a transaction. For details, see Change a Document's Shard Key Value.

MongoDB retryable writes make only one retry attempt. This helps address transient network errors and replica set elections, but not persistent network errors.

If the driver cannot find a healthy primary in the destination replica set or sharded cluster shard, the drivers wait serverSelectionTimeoutMS milliseconds to determine the new primary before retrying. Retryable writes do not address instances where the failover period exceeds serverSelectionTimeoutMS.

Warning

If the client application becomes temporarily unresponsive for more than the localLogicalSessionTimeoutMinutes after issuing a write operation, there is a chance that when the client applications starts responding (without a restart), the write operation may be retried and applied again.

The serverStatus command, and its mongosh shell helper db.serverStatus() includes statistics on retryable writes in the transactions section.

The official MongoDB drivers enable retryable writes by default. Applications which write to the local database will encounter write errors unless retryable writes are explicitly disabled.

To disable retryable writes, specify retryWrites=false in the connection string for the MongoDB cluster.

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Bulk Write