rs.add()
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Definition
rs.add(host, arbiterOnly)
Adds a member to a replica set. To run the method, you must connect to the primary of the replica set.
ParameterTypeDescriptionhost
string or documentThe new member to add to the replica set. Specify either as a string or a configuration document:
If a document, specify a replica set member configuration document as found in the
members
array. You must specify thehost
field in the member configuration document.{ _id: <int>, host: <string>, // required arbiterOnly: <boolean>, buildIndexes: <boolean>, hidden: <boolean>, priority: <number>, tags: <document>, secondaryDelaySecs: <int>, votes: <number> } For a description of the configuration field, refer to
members
.If a string, specify the hostname and optionally the port number for the new member.
arbiterOnly
booleanOptional. Applies only if the<host>
value is a string. Iftrue
, the added host is an arbiter.rs.add()
provides a wrapper around some of the functionality of thereplSetReconfig
database command and the correspondingmongosh
helperrs.reconfig()
. See the Replica Set Configuration document for full documentation of all replica set configuration options.
IP Binding
Warning
Before you bind your instance to a publicly-accessible IP address, you must secure your cluster from unauthorized access. For a complete list of security recommendations, see Security Checklist. At minimum, consider enabling authentication and hardening network infrastructure.
MongoDB binaries, mongod
and mongos
, bind
to localhost by default. If the net.ipv6
configuration file
setting or the --ipv6
command line option is set for the binary,
the binary additionally binds to the localhost IPv6 address.
By default mongod
and mongos
that are
bound to localhost only accept connections from clients that are
running on the same computer. This binding behavior includes
mongosh
and other members of your replica set or sharded
cluster. Remote clients cannot connect to binaries that are bound only
to localhost.
To override the default binding and bind to other IP addresses, use the
net.bindIp
configuration file setting or the --bind_ip
command-line option to specify a list of hostnames or IP addresses.
Warning
Starting in MongDB 5.0, split horizon DNS nodes that are
only configured with an IP address fail startup validation and
report an error. See disableSplitHorizonIPCheck
.
For example, the following mongod
instance binds to both
the localhost and the hostname My-Example-Associated-Hostname
, which is
associated with the IP address 198.51.100.1
:
mongod --bind_ip localhost,My-Example-Associated-Hostname
In order to connect to this instance, remote clients must specify
the hostname or its associated IP address 198.51.100.1
:
mongosh --host My-Example-Associated-Hostname mongosh --host 198.51.100.1
Important
To avoid configuration updates due to IP address changes, use DNS hostnames instead of IP addresses. It is particularly important to use a DNS hostname instead of an IP address when configuring replica set members or sharded cluster members.
Use hostnames instead of IP addresses to configure clusters across a split network horizon. Starting in MongoDB 5.0, nodes that are only configured with an IP address fail startup validation and do not start.
Behavior
rs.add()
can, in some cases, trigger an election for primary
which will disconnect the shell (such as adding a new member with
a higher priority than the current primary). In such cases,
mongosh
may display an error even if the operation
succeeds.
Warning
Before MongoDB 5.0, a newly added secondary still counts as a voting
member even though it can neither serve reads nor become primary until
its data is consistent. If you are running a MongoDB version earlier
than 5.0 and add a secondary with its votes
and priority
settings greater than zero, this can
lead to a case where a majority of the voting members are
online but no primary can be elected. To avoid such situations,
consider adding the new secondary initially with
priority :0
and votes :0
. Then, run rs.status()
to ensure the
member has transitioned into SECONDARY
state. Finally, use
rs.reconfig()
to update its priority and votes.
Example
Add a Secondary to a New Replica Set
To add a new secondary member with default vote and priority settings
to a new replica set, you can call the rs.add()
method with:
Member Configuration Document
rs.add( { host: "mongodbd4.example.net:27017" } ) Host name
rs.add( "mongodbd4.example.net:27017" )
Add a Secondary to an Existing Replica Set
Add a new secondary member with default vote and priority settings to an existing replica set:
rs.add( { host: "mongodbd4.example.net:27017" } )
Warning
Before MongoDB 5.0, a newly added secondary still counts as a voting
member even though it can neither serve reads nor become primary until
its data is consistent. If you are running a MongoDB version earlier
than 5.0 and add a secondary with its votes
and priority
settings greater than zero, this can
lead to a case where a majority of the voting members are
online but no primary can be elected. To avoid such situations,
consider adding the new secondary initially with
priority :0
and votes :0
. Then, run rs.status()
to ensure the
member has transitioned into SECONDARY
state. Finally, use
rs.reconfig()
to update its priority and votes.
Add a Priority 0 Member to a Replica Set
The following operation adds a mongod
instance, running on
the host mongodb4.example.net
and accessible on the default port
27017
, as a priority 0
secondary member:
rs.add( { host: "mongodbd4.example.net:27017", priority: 0 } )
You must specify the members[n].host
field in the member
configuration document.
See the members
for the available replica set member
configuration settings.
Add an Arbiter to a Replica Set
The following operation adds a mongod
instance, running on
the host mongodb3.example.net
and accessible on the default port
27017
as an arbiter:
Member Configuration Document
rs.add( { host: "mongodb3.example.net:27017", arbiterOnly: true } ) Host name
rs.add("mongodb3.example.net:27017", true)
For the following MongoDB versions, pv1
increases the likelihood
of w:1
rollbacks compared to pv0
(no longer supported in MongoDB 4.0+) for replica sets with arbiters:
MongoDB 3.4.1
MongoDB 3.4.0
MongoDB 3.2.11 or earlier
See Replica Set Protocol Version.
See also: