$out (aggregation)
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Definition
$out
Takes the documents returned by the aggregation pipeline and writes them to a specified collection. Starting in MongoDB 4.4, you can specify the output database.
The
$out
stage must be the last stage in the pipeline. The$out
operator lets the aggregation framework return result sets of any size.
Syntax
The $out
stage has the following syntax:
Starting in MongoDB 4.4,
$out
can take a document to specify the output database as well as the output collection:{ $out: { db: "<output-db>", coll: "<output-collection>" } } FieldDescriptionThe output database name.
For a replica set or a standalone, if the output database does not exist,
$out
also creates the database.For a sharded cluster, the specified output database must already exist.
The output collection name.
$out
can take a string to specify only the output collection (i.e. output to a collection in the same database):{ $out: "<output-collection>" } // Output collection is in the same database
Important
You cannot specify a sharded collection as the output collection. The input collection for a pipeline can be sharded. To output to a sharded collection, see
$merge
(Available starting in MongoDB 4.2).The
$out
operator cannot write results to a capped collection.If you modify a collection with an Atlas Search index, you must first delete and then re-create the search index. Consider using
$merge
instead.
Comparison with $merge
With the introduction of $merge
in version 4.2, MongoDB
provides two stages, $merge
and $out
, for
writing the results of the aggregation pipeline to a collection. The
following summarizes the capabilities of the two stages:
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Behaviors
$out Read Operations Run on Secondary Replica Set Members
Starting in MongoDB 4.4, $out
can run on
replica set secondary nodes if all the nodes in
cluster have featureCompatibilityVersion set
to 4.4
or higher and the Read Preference is set to
secondary.
Read operations of the $out
statement occur on the
secondary nodes, while the write operations occur only on the
primary nodes.
Not all driver versions support targeting of $out
operations to replica set secondary nodes. Check your
driver documentation to see when your driver added
support for $out
running on a secondary.
Create New Collection
The $out
operation creates a new collection if one does not
already exist.
The collection is not visible until the aggregation completes. If the aggregation fails, MongoDB does not create the collection.
Replace Existing Collection
If the collection specified by the $out
operation already
exists, then upon completion of the aggregation, the $out
stage atomically replaces the existing collection with the new results
collection. Specifically, the $out
operation:
Creates a temp collection.
Copies the indexes from the existing collection to the temp collection.
Inserts the documents into the temp collection.
Calls the
renameCollection
command withdropTarget: true
to rename the temp collection to the destination collection.
The $out
operation does not change any indexes that existed on the
previous collection. If the aggregation fails, the $out
operation
makes no changes to the pre-existing collection.
Index Constraints
The pipeline will fail to complete if the documents produced by the
pipeline would violate any unique indexes, including the index on the
_id
field of the original output collection.
If the $out
operation modifies a collection with an
Atlas Search index, you must delete and
re-create the search index. Consider using $merge
instead.
majority
Read Concern
Starting in MongoDB 4.2, you can specify read concern level "majority"
for an
aggregation that includes an $out
stage.
Interaction with mongodump
A mongodump
started with --oplog
fails if a client issues an aggregation pipeline
that includes $out
during the dump process. See
mongodump --oplog
for more information.
Restrictions
Restrictions | Description |
---|---|
An aggregation pipeline cannot use $out inside
transactions. | |
The $out stage is not allowed as part of a
view definition. If the view definition
includes nested pipeline (e.g. the view definition includes
$lookup or $facet stage), this
$out stage restriction applies to the nested
pipelines as well. | |
$lookup stage | |
$facet stage | |
$unionWith stage | |
"linearizable" read concern | Starting in MongoDB 4.2, the |
Examples
In the test
database, create a collection books
with the
following documents:
db.getSiblingDB("test").books.insertMany([ { "_id" : 8751, "title" : "The Banquet", "author" : "Dante", "copies" : 2 }, { "_id" : 8752, "title" : "Divine Comedy", "author" : "Dante", "copies" : 1 }, { "_id" : 8645, "title" : "Eclogues", "author" : "Dante", "copies" : 2 }, { "_id" : 7000, "title" : "The Odyssey", "author" : "Homer", "copies" : 10 }, { "_id" : 7020, "title" : "Iliad", "author" : "Homer", "copies" : 10 } ])
If the test
database does not already exist, the insert operation
creates the database as well as the books
collection.
Output to Same Database
The following aggregation operation pivots the data in the books
collection in the test
database to have titles grouped by authors and then writes
the results to the authors
collection, also in the test
database.
db.getSiblingDB("test").books.aggregate( [ { $group : { _id : "$author", books: { $push: "$title" } } }, { $out : "authors" } ] )
- First Stage (
$group
): The
$group
stage groups by theauthors
and uses$push
to add the titles to abooks
array field:{ "_id" : "Dante", "books" : [ "The Banquet", "Divine Comedy", "Eclogues" ] } { "_id" : "Homer", "books" : [ "The Odyssey", "Iliad" ] } - Second Stage (
$out
): - The
$out
stage outputs the documents to theauthors
collection in thetest
database.
To view the documents in the output collection, run the following operation:
db.getSiblingDB("test").authors.find()
The collection contains the following documents:
{ "_id" : "Homer", "books" : [ "The Odyssey", "Iliad" ] } { "_id" : "Dante", "books" : [ "The Banquet", "Divine Comedy", "Eclogues" ] }
Output to a Different Database
Note
For a replica set or a standalone, if the
output database does not exist, $out
also creates
the database.
For a sharded cluster, the specified output database must already exist.
Starting in MongoDB 4.4, $out
can output to a collection in
a database different from where the aggregation is run.
The following aggregation operation pivots the data in the books
collection to have titles grouped by authors and then writes the
results to the authors
collection in the reporting
database:
db.getSiblingDB("test").books.aggregate( [ { $group : { _id : "$author", books: { $push: "$title" } } }, { $out : { db: "reporting", coll: "authors" } } ] )
- First Stage (
$group
): The
$group
stage groups by theauthors
and uses$push
to add the titles to abooks
array field:{ "_id" : "Dante", "books" : [ "The Banquet", "Divine Comedy", "Eclogues" ] } { "_id" : "Homer", "books" : [ "The Odyssey", "Iliad" ] } - Second Stage (
$out
): - The
$out
stage outputs the documents to theauthors
collection in thereporting
database.
To view the documents in the output collection, run the following operation:
db.getSiblingDB("reporting").authors.find()
The collection contains the following documents:
{ "_id" : "Homer", "books" : [ "The Odyssey", "Iliad" ] } { "_id" : "Dante", "books" : [ "The Banquet", "Divine Comedy", "Eclogues" ] }