Run a Database Command
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Overview
In this guide, you can learn how to use the .NET/C# Driver to run a database command. You can use database commands to perform a variety of administrative and diagnostic tasks, such as fetching server statistics, initializing a replica set, or running an aggregation pipeline.
Important
Prefer Driver Methods to Database Commands
The driver provides wrapper methods for many database commands. If possible, we recommend using these methods instead of executing database commands.
To perform administrative tasks, use the MongoDB Shell instead of the .NET/C# Driver. The shell provides helper methods that might not be available in the driver.
If there are no available helpers in the driver or the shell, you
can use the db.runCommand()
shell method or the driver's
RunCommand()
and RunCommandAsync()
methods, which are described in this
guide.
Sample Data
The examples in this guide use the sample_restaurants.restaurants
collection
from the Atlas sample datasets. To learn how to create a
free MongoDB Atlas cluster and load the sample datasets, see the Quick Start.
Execute a Command
To run a database command, create a BsonDocument
object that specifies
the command and pass it as a parameter to the RunCommand()
or RunCommandAsync()
method. You can specify the type returned by these methods by specifying the type parameter.
You can use the BsonDocument
type to return the command response, or you can specify your
own strongly typed class to deserialize the command response.
The following example runs the hello
command on a database, which returns information
about the server. Select the Asynchronous or Synchronous
tab to see the corresponding code.
var command = new BsonDocument("hello", 1); var result = await database.RunCommandAsync<BsonDocument>(command);
var command = new BsonDocument("hello", 1); var result = database.RunCommand<BsonDocument>(command);
Tip
To view a full list of database commands and their corresponding parameters, see Database Commands in the MongoDB Server manual.
Set a Read Preference
The RunCommand()
method does not inherit the read preference you might
have set on your MongoDatabase
instance. By default, RunCommand()
uses the primary
read preference.
You can set a read preference for the command execution by passing a
ReadPreference
instance as a parameter to RunCommand()
, as
shown in the following example. Select the Asynchronous or Synchronous
tab to see the corresponding code.
var command = new BsonDocument("hello", 1); var result = await database.RunCommandAsync<BsonDocument>(command, ReadPreference.Secondary);
var command = new BsonDocument("hello", 1); var result = database.RunCommand<BsonDocument>(command, ReadPreference.Secondary);
Tip
To learn more about read preference options, see Read Preference in the MongoDB Server manual.
Response
The raw command response document returned by the RunCommand()
method contains the
following fields:
Field | Description |
---|---|
<command result> | Fields specific to the database command. For example,
the hello command returns the topologyVersion field. |
ok | Indicates whether the command has succeeded ( 1.0 ) or failed (0.0 ). The
driver raises a MongoCommandException if the ok
value is 0.0 . |
$clusterTime | A document that contains the signed cluster time. Cluster time is a
logical time used for the ordering of operations. This field only
applies to commands run on replica sets or sharded clusters. |
operationTime | The logical time of the operation execution. This field only
applies to commands run on replica sets or sharded clusters. |
Tip
To learn more about logical time, see the Wikipedia entry on the logical clock.
Example
The following example runs the dbStats
command to retrieve
storage statistics for the sample_restaurants
database, then prints the
command results by using the ToJson()
method on the returned BsonDocument
object.
Select the Asynchronous or Synchronous tab to see the corresponding
code.
var command = new BsonDocument("dbStats", 1); var result = await database.RunCommandAsync<BsonDocument>(command); Console.WriteLine(result.ToJson());
var command = new BsonDocument("dbStats", 1); var result = database.RunCommand<BsonDocument>(command); Console.WriteLine(result.ToJson());
The output of this command includes information about the data stored in the database, as shown in the result returned by the previous example:
{ "db" : "sample_restaurants", "collections" : 2, "views" : 0, "objects" : NumberLong(25438), "avgObjSize" : 548.95172576460413, "dataSize" : NumberLong(13964234), "storageSize" : NumberLong(8056832), "totalFreeStorageSize" : NumberLong(0), "numExtents" : NumberLong(0), "indexes" : 2, "indexSize" : NumberLong(1044480), "indexFreeStorageSize" : NumberLong(0), "fileSize" : NumberLong(0), "nsSizeMB" : 0, "ok" : 1 }
Additional Information
For more information about the concepts in this guide, see the following documentation in the MongoDB Server manual:
API Documentation
To learn more about any of the methods or types discussed in this guide, see the following API documentation: