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db.collection.initializeOrderedBulkOp()

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  • Definition
  • Compatibility
  • Behavior
  • Examples

Tip

MongoDB also provides the db.collection.bulkWrite() method for performing bulk write operations.

db.collection.initializeOrderedBulkOp()

Important

mongosh Method

This page documents a mongosh method. This is not the documentation for a language-specific driver, such as Node.js.

For MongoDB API drivers, refer to the language-specific MongoDB driver documentation.

Initializes and returns a new Bulk() operations builder for a collection. The builder constructs an ordered list of write operations that MongoDB executes in bulk.

Returns:new Bulk() operations builder object.

This command is available in deployments hosted in the following environments:

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

Note

This command is supported in all MongoDB Atlas clusters. For information on Atlas support for all commands, see Unsupported Commands.

With an ordered operations list, MongoDB executes the write operations in the list serially.

When executing an ordered list of operations, MongoDB groups the operations by the operation type and contiguity; i.e. contiguous operations of the same type are grouped together. For example, if an ordered list has two insert operations followed by an update operation followed by another insert operation, MongoDB groups the operations into three separate groups: first group contains the two insert operations, second group contains the update operation, and the third group contains the last insert operation. This behavior is subject to change in future versions.

Bulk() operations in mongosh and comparable methods in the drivers do not have a limit for the number of operations in a group. To see how the operations are grouped for bulk operation execution, call Bulk.getOperations() after the execution.

Executing an ordered list of operations on a sharded collection will generally be slower than executing an unordered list since with an ordered list, each operation must wait for the previous operation to finish.

If an error occurs during the processing of one of the write operations, MongoDB will return without processing any remaining write operations in the list.

The following initializes a Bulk() operations builder on the users collection, adds a series of write operations, and executes the operations:

var bulk = db.users.initializeOrderedBulkOp();
bulk.insert( { user: "abc123", status: "A", points: 0 } );
bulk.insert( { user: "ijk123", status: "A", points: 0 } );
bulk.insert( { user: "mop123", status: "P", points: 0 } );
bulk.find( { status: "D" } ).delete();
bulk.find( { status: "P" } ).update( { $set: { comment: "Pending" } } );
bulk.execute();

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Bulk Operations