Install MongoDB Community with Docker
You can run MongoDB community Edition as a Docker container using the official MongoDB Community image. Using a Docker image for running your MongoDB deployment is useful to:
Stand up a deployment quickly.
Help manage configuration files.
Test different features on multiple versions of MongoDB.
About This Task
This page describes the Docker install instructions for MongoDB Community edition. The MongoDB Enterprise Docker image in conjunction with the MongoDB Kubernetes Operator are recommended for production deployments. For enterprise instructions, see Install MongoDB Enterprise with Docker.
This procedure uses the official mongo community image, which is maintained by MongoDB.
A full description of Docker is beyond the scope of this documentation. This page assumes prior knowledge of Docker.
Before You Begin
Before you can run a MongoDB Community Docker container, you must install Docker .
Procedure
Run the Image as a Container
docker run --name mongo -d mongodb/mongodb-community-server:latest
Note
Install a Specific Version of MongoDB
To install a specific version of MongoDB, specify the version
after the :
in the Docker run command. Docker pulls and
runs the specified version.
For example, to run MongoDB 5.0:
docker run --name mongo -d mongodb/mongodb-community-server:5.0-ubi8
For a full list of available MongoDB Community Server images, see: the official Docker Hub page.
Check that the Container is Running
To check the status of your Docker container, run the following command:
docker container ls
The output from the ls
command lists the following fields that
describe the running container:
Container ID
Image
Command
Created
Status
Port
Names
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES c29db5687290 mongodb/mongodb-community-server:5.0-ubi8 "docker-entrypoint.s…" 4 seconds ago Up 3 seconds 27017/tcp mongo
Validate Your Deployment
To confirm your MongoDB instance is running, run the Hello
command:
db.runCommand( { hello: 1 } )
The result of this command returns a document describing your
mongod
deployment:
{ isWritablePrimary: true, topologyVersion: { processId: ObjectId("63c00e27195285e827d48908"), counter: Long("0") }, maxBsonObjectSize: 16777216, maxMessageSizeBytes: 48000000, maxWriteBatchSize: 100000, localTime: ISODate("2023-01-12T16:51:10.132Z"), logicalSessionTimeoutMinutes: 30, connectionId: 18, minWireVersion: 0, maxWireVersion: 20, readOnly: false, ok: 1 }
Next Steps (Optional)
You can use Cosign to verify MongoDB's signature for container images.
This procedure is optional. You do not need to verify MongoDB's signature to run MongoDB on Docker or any other containerized platform.
To verify MongoDB's container signature, perform the following steps:
Download and install Cosign
For installation instructions, see the Cosign GitHub repository.