Upgrade MongoDB to 3.2
On this page
Before you attempt any upgrade, please familiarize yourself with the content of this document.
If you need guidance on upgrading to 3.2, MongoDB offers 3.2 upgrade services to help ensure a smooth transition without interruption to your MongoDB application.
Upgrade Recommendations and Checklists
When upgrading, consider the following:
Upgrade Requirements
To upgrade an existing MongoDB deployment to 3.2, you must be running a 3.0-series release.
To upgrade from a 2.6-series release, you must upgrade to the latest 3.0-series release before upgrading to 3.2. For the procedure to upgrade from the 2.6-series to a 3.0-series release, see Upgrade to 3.0.
Preparedness
Before beginning your upgrade, see the Compatibility Changes in MongoDB 3.2 document to ensure that your applications and deployments are compatible with MongoDB 3.2. Resolve the incompatibilities in your deployment before starting the upgrade.
Before upgrading MongoDB, always test your application in a staging environment before deploying the upgrade to your production environment.
Upgrade Standalone mongod
Instance to MongoDB 3.2
The following steps outline the procedure to upgrade a standalone
mongod
from version 3.0 to 3.2. To upgrade from version
2.6 to 3.2, upgrade to the latest
3.0-series release
first, and then use the following procedure to upgrade from 3.0 to 3.2.
Upgrade with Package Manager
If you installed MongoDB from the MongoDB apt
, yum
, dnf
, or
zypper
repositories, you should upgrade to 3.2 using your package
manager. Follow the appropriate installation instructions for your Linux system. This will
involve adding a repository for the new release, then performing the
actual upgrade.
Manual Upgrade
Otherwise, you can manually upgrade MongoDB:
Download 3.2 binaries.
Download binaries of the latest release in the 3.2 series from the MongoDB Download Page. See Install MongoDB for more information.
Note
MongoDB 3.2 generates core dumps on some mongod
failures. For production environments, you may prefer to turn off core
dumps for the operating system, if not already.
Upgrade a Replica Set to 3.2
Prerequisites
All replica set members must be running version 3.0 before you can upgrade them to version 3.2. To upgrade a replica set from an earlier MongoDB version, upgrade all members of the replica set to the latest 3.0-series release first, and then follow the procedure to upgrade from MongoDB 3.0 to 3.2.
Upgrade Binaries
You can upgrade from MongoDB 3.0 to 3.2 using a "rolling" upgrade to minimize downtime by upgrading the members individually while the other members are available:
Avoid reconfiguring replica sets that contain members of different MongoDB versions as validation rules may differ across MongoDB versions.
Upgrade secondary members of the replica set.
Upgrade the secondary members of the replica set one at a time:
Shut down the
mongod
instance and replace the 3.0 binary with the 3.2 binary.Restart the member and wait for the member to recover to
SECONDARY
state before upgrading the next secondary member. To check the member's state, issuers.status()
in themongo
shell.
Step down the replica set primary.
Connect a mongo
shell to the primary and use
rs.stepDown()
to step down the primary and force an
election of a new primary:
Upgrade the primary.
When rs.status()
shows that the primary has stepped down and another member
has assumed PRIMARY
state, upgrade the stepped-down primary:
Shut down the stepped-down primary and replace the
mongod
binary with the 3.2 binary.Restart.
Replica set failover is not instant and will render the set unavailable to accept writes until the failover process completes. This may take 30 seconds or more: schedule the upgrade procedure during a scheduled maintenance window.
Note
MongoDB 3.2 generates core dumps on some mongod
failures. For production environments, you may prefer to turn off core
dumps for the operating system, if not already.
Upgrade a Sharded Cluster to 3.2
Prerequisites
- Version 3.0 or Greater
- To upgrade a sharded cluster to 3.2, all members of the cluster must be at least version 3.0. The upgrade process checks all components of the cluster and will produce warnings if any component is running version earlier than 3.0.
- Stop Metadata Changes during the Upgrade
During the upgrade, ensure that clients do not make changes to the collection metadata. For example, during the upgrade, do not perform any of the following operations:
any operation that creates a database
any other operation that modifies the cluster metadata in any way.
See the Sharding Reference for a complete list of sharding commands. Not all commands on the Sharding Reference page modify the cluster metadata.
- Back up the
config
Database - Optional but Recommended. As a precaution, take a backup of the
config
database before upgrading the sharded cluster.
- Back up the
Upgrade Binaries
Disable the Balancer.
Disable the balancer as described in Disable the Balancer.
Upgrade the shards.
Upgrade the shards one at a time. If the shards are replica sets, for each shard:
Upgrade the secondary members of the replica set one at a time:
Shut down the
mongod
instance and replace the 3.0 binary with the 3.2 binary.Restart the member and wait for the member to recover to
SECONDARY
state before upgrading the next secondary member. To check the member's state, issuers.status()
in themongo
shell.
Step down the replica set primary.
Connect a
mongo
shell to the primary and users.stepDown()
to step down the primary and force an election of a new primary:rs.stepDown() When
rs.status()
shows that the primary has stepped down and another member has assumedPRIMARY
state, upgrade the stepped-down primary:Shut down the stepped-down primary and replace the
mongod
binary with the 3.2 binary.Restart.
Upgrade the config servers.
Upgrade the config servers one at a time in reverse order of the
configDB
or --configdb
setting for the
mongos
. That is, if the mongos
has the
following --configdb
listing:
mongos --configdb confserver1:port1,confserver2:port2,confserver3:port2
Upgrade first confserver3
, then confserver2
, and lastly
confserver1
.
Starting with the last config server listed in the
configDB
setting:
Stop the config server and replace with the 3.2 binary.
Start the 3.2 binary with both the
--configsvr
and--port
options:mongod --configsvr --port <port> --dbpath <path> If using a configuration file, specify
sharding.clusterRole: configsvr
andnet.port
in the file:sharding: clusterRole: configsvr net: port: <port> storage: dbpath: <path>
Repeat for the config server listed second in the
configDB
setting, and finally the config server
listed first in the configDB
setting.
Upgrade the mongos
instances.
Replace each mongos
instance with the 3.2 binary and
restart.
mongos --configdb <cfgsvr1:port1>,<cfgsvr2:port2>,<cfgsvr3:port3>
Re-enable the balancer.
Re-enable the balancer as described in Enable the Balancer.
Note
MongoDB 3.2 generates core dumps on some mongod
failures.
For production environments, you may prefer to turn off core dumps
for the operating system, if not already.
Once the sharded cluster binaries have been upgraded to 3.2, existing
config servers will continue to run as mirrored mongod
instances. For instructions on upgrading existing config servers to a
replica set, see Upgrade Config Servers to Replica Set (requires MongoDB
version 3.2.4 or later versions).