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ObjectId()

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  • Description
  • Compatibility
  • Syntax
  • Methods
  • Behavior
  • Examples
ObjectId(<value>)

Returns a new ObjectId. The 12-byte ObjectId consists of:

  • A 4-byte timestamp, representing the ObjectId's creation, measured in seconds since the Unix epoch.

  • A 5-byte random value generated once per process. This random value is unique to the machine and process.

  • A 3-byte incrementing counter, initialized to a random value.

For timestamp and counter values, the most significant bytes appear first in the byte sequence (big-endian). This is unlike other BSON values, where the least significant bytes appear first (little-endian).

If an integer value is used to create an ObjectId, the integer replaces the timestamp.

You can use ObjectId() for deployments hosted in the following environments:

  • MongoDB Atlas: The fully managed service for MongoDB deployments in the cloud

ObjectId() can accept one of the following inputs:

Input Type
Description
hexadecimal
Optional. A 24 character hexadecimal string value for the new ObjectId.
integer

ObjectId() has the following methods:

Methods
Description
Returns the timestamp portion of the object as a Date.
Returns the ObjectId as a hexadecimal string.
Returns ObjectId.self.

Starting in MongoDB 5.0, mongosh replaces the legacy mongo shell. The ObjectId() methods work differently in mongosh than in the legacy mongo shell. For more information on the legacy methods, see Legacy mongo Shell.

To generate a new ObjectId, use ObjectId() with no argument:

newObjectId = ObjectId()

In this example, the value of newObjectId is:

ObjectId("507f1f77bcf86cd799439011")

To return the ObjectId as a hexadecimal string, use the toString() method.

ObjectId("507f191e810c19729de860ea").toString()

The method returns:

507f191e810c19729de860ea

If you want to adjust the ObjectId timestamp, use an integer to generate a new ObjectId.

newObjectId = ObjectId(32)

The ObjectId value resembles:

ObjectId("00000020f51bb4362eee2a4d")

The example ObjectId consists of:

  • A four byte time stamp, 00000020

  • A five byte random element, f51bb4362e

  • A three byte counter, ee2a4d

The first four bytes of the ObjectId are the number of seconds since the Unix epoch. In this example, the ObjectId timestamp is 00000020 which is 32 in hexadecimal.

If you want to use a hexadecimal string to specify an ObjectId, pass a unique, 24 character hexadecimal value when you call ObjectId():

newObjectId = ObjectId("507f191e810c19729de860ea")

Tip

See also:

Back

Date() and Datetime