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killCursors
Definition
killCursors
Kills the specified cursor or cursors for a collection. MongoDB drivers use the
killCursors
command as part of the client-side cursor implementation.Note
In general, applications should not use the
killCursors
command directly.The
killCursors
command must be run against the database of the collection whose cursors you wish to kill.To run killCursors, use the
db.runCommand( { <command> } )
method.The command has the following form:
db.runCommand( { "killCursors": <collection>, "cursors": [ <cursor id1>, ... ], comment: <any> } ) FieldTypeDescriptionkillCursors
stringThe name of the collection.cursors
arrayThe ids of the cursors to kill.comment
anyOptional. A user-provided comment to attach to this command. Once set, this comment appears alongside records of this command in the following locations:
mongod log messages, in the
attr.command.cursor.comment
field.Database profiler output, in the
command.comment
field.currentOp
output, in thecommand.comment
field.
A comment can be any valid BSON type (string, integer, object, array, etc).
New in version 4.4.
Required Access
Kill Own Cursors
In MongoDB 4.2 and later, users can always kill their own cursors, regardless of whether the users have the privilege to
killCursors
. Cursors are associated with the users at the time of cursor creation.In MongoDB 3.6.3 through MongoDB 4.0.x, users require
killCursors
privilege to kill their own cursors. Cursors are associated with the users at the time of cursor creation.
Kill Any Cursor
If a user possesses the killAnyCursor
privilege, that
user may kill any cursor, even cursors created by other users.
killCursors
and Transactions
Starting in MongoDB 4.2, you cannot specify killCursors
as
the first operation in a transaction.
Example
Consider the following find
operation on the
test.restaurants
collection:
use test db.runCommand( { find: "restaurants", filter: { stars: 5 }, projection: { name: 1, rating: 1, address: 1 }, sort: { name: 1 }, batchSize: 5 } )
which returns the following:
{ "waitedMS" : NumberLong(0), "cursor" : { "firstBatch" : [ { "_id" : ObjectId("57506d63f578028074723dfd"), "name" : "Cakes and more" }, { "_id" : ObjectId("57506d63f578028074723e0b"), "name" : "Pies and things" }, { "_id" : ObjectId("57506d63f578028074723e1d"), "name" : "Ice Cream Parlour" }, { "_id" : ObjectId("57506d63f578028074723e65"), "name" : "Cream Puffs" }, { "_id" : ObjectId("57506d63f578028074723e66"), "name" : "Cakes and Rolls" } ], "id" : NumberLong("18314637080"), "ns" : "test.restaurants" }, "ok" : 1 }
To kill this cursor, use the killCursors
command.
use test db.runCommand( { killCursors: "restaurants", cursors: [ NumberLong("18314637080") ] } )
killCursors
returns the following operation details:
{ "cursorsKilled" : [ NumberLong("18314637080") ], "cursorsNotFound" : [ ], "cursorsAlive" : [ ], "cursorsUnknown" : [ ], "ok" : 1 }