Docs Menu
Docs Home
/
MongoDB Manual

Introduction to MongoDB

On this page

  • Document Database
  • Key Features

Important

MongoDB 6.3.1 is a rapid release and is only supported for MongoDB Atlas. MongoDB 6.3.1 is not supported for use on-premises. For more information, see MongoDB Versioning.

A record in MongoDB is a document, which is a data structure composed of field and value pairs. MongoDB documents are similar to JSON objects. The values of fields may include other documents, arrays, and arrays of documents.

A MongoDB document.

The advantages of using documents are:

  • Documents correspond to native data types in many programming languages.

  • Embedded documents and arrays reduce need for expensive joins.

  • Dynamic schema supports fluent polymorphism.

MongoDB stores documents in collections. Collections are analogous to tables in relational databases.

In addition to collections, MongoDB supports:

MongoDB provides high performance data persistence. In particular,

  • Support for embedded data models reduces I/O activity on database system.

  • Indexes support faster queries and can include keys from embedded documents and arrays.

The MongoDB Query API supports read and write operations (CRUD) as well as:

Tip

See also:

  • SQL to MongoDB Mapping Chart

  • SQL to Aggregation Mapping Chart

  • Learn about the latest query language features with the MongoDB Query Language: What's New presentation from MongoDB.live 2020.

MongoDB's replication facility, called replica set, provides:

  • automatic failover

  • data redundancy.

A replica set is a group of MongoDB servers that maintain the same data set, providing redundancy and increasing data availability.

MongoDB provides horizontal scalability as part of its core functionality:

  • Sharding distributes data across a cluster of machines.

  • Starting in 3.4, MongoDB supports creating zones of data based on the shard key. In a balanced cluster, MongoDB directs reads and writes covered by a zone only to those shards inside the zone. See the Zones manual page for more information.

MongoDB supports multiple storage engines:

In addition, MongoDB provides pluggable storage engine API that allows third parties to develop storage engines for MongoDB.

Back

What is MongoDB?