Docs Menu
Docs Home
/
MongoDB Manual
/ / /

Change Hostnames in a Self-Managed Replica Set

On this page

  • Overview
  • Assumptions
  • Change Hostnames while Maintaining Replica Set Availability
  • Change All Hostnames at the Same Time

For most replica sets, the hostnames in the members[n].host field never change. However, if organizational needs change, you might need to migrate some or all host names.

Note

Always use resolvable hostnames for the value of the members[n].host field in the replica set configuration to avoid confusion and complexity.

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.

This document provides two separate procedures for changing the hostnames in the members[n].host field. Use either of the following approaches:

  • Change hostnames without disrupting availability. This approach ensures your applications will always be able to read and write data to the replica set, but the approach can take a long time and may incur downtime at the application layer.

    If you use the first procedure, you must configure your applications to connect to the replica set at both the old and new locations, which often requires a restart and reconfiguration at the application layer and which may affect the availability of your applications. Re-configuring applications is beyond the scope of this document.

  • Stop all members running on the old hostnames at once. This approach has a shorter maintenance window, but the replica set will be unavailable during the operation.

Tip

See also:

Given a replica set with three members:

  • database0.example.com:27017 (the primary)

  • database1.example.com:27017

  • database2.example.com:27017

And with the following rs.conf() output:

{
"_id" : "rs",
"version" : 3,
"members" : [
{
"_id" : 0,
"host" : "database0.example.com:27017"
},
{
"_id" : 1,
"host" : "database1.example.com:27017"
},
{
"_id" : 2,
"host" : "database2.example.com:27017"
}
]
}

The following procedures change the members' hostnames as follows:

  • mongodb0.example.net:27017 (the primary)

  • mongodb1.example.net:27017

  • mongodb2.example.net:27017

Use the most appropriate procedure for your deployment.

This procedure uses the above assumptions.

  1. For each secondary in the replica set, perform the following sequence of operations:

    1. Stop the secondary.

    2. Restart the secondary at the new location.

    3. Connect mongosh to the replica set's primary. In our example, the primary runs on port 27017 so you would issue the following command:

      mongosh --port 27017
    4. Use rs.reconfig() to update the replica set configuration document with the new hostname.

      For example, the following sequence of commands updates the hostname for the secondary at the array index 1 of the members array (i.e. members[1]) in the replica set configuration document:

      cfg = rs.conf()
      cfg.members[1].host = "mongodb1.example.net:27017"
      rs.reconfig(cfg)

      For more information on updating the configuration document, see Examples.

    5. Make sure your client applications are able to access the set at the new location and that the secondary has a chance to catch up with the other members of the set.

      Repeat the above steps for each non-primary member of the set.

  2. Connect mongosh to the primary and step down the primary using the rs.stepDown() method:

    rs.stepDown()

    The replica set elects another member to the become primary.

  3. When the step down succeeds, shut down the old primary.

  4. Start the mongod instance that will become the new primary in the new location.

  5. Connect to the current primary, which was just elected, and update the replica set configuration document with the hostname of the node that is to become the new primary.

    For example, if the old primary was at position 0 and the new primary's hostname is mongodb0.example.net:27017, you would run:

    cfg = rs.conf()
    cfg.members[0].host = "mongodb0.example.net:27017"
    rs.reconfig(cfg)
  6. Connect mongosh to the new primary.

  7. To confirm the new configuration, call rs.conf() in mongosh.

    Your output should resemble:

    {
    "_id" : "rs",
    "version" : 4,
    "members" : [
    {
    "_id" : 0,
    "host" : "mongodb0.example.net:27017"
    },
    {
    "_id" : 1,
    "host" : "mongodb1.example.net:27017"
    },
    {
    "_id" : 2,
    "host" : "mongodb2.example.net:27017"
    }
    ]
    }

This procedure uses the above assumptions.

The following procedure reads and updates the system.replset collection in the local database.

If your deployment enforces access control, the user performing the procedure must have find and update privilege actions on the system.replset collection.

To create a role that provides the necessary privileges:

  1. Log in as a user with privileges to manage users and roles, such as a user with userAdminAnyDatabase role. The following procedure uses the myUserAdmin created in Enable Access Control on Self-Managed Deployments.

    mongosh --port 27017 -u myUserAdmin --authenticationDatabase 'admin' -p
  2. Create a user role that provides the necessary privileges on the system.replset collection in the local database:

    db.adminCommand( {
    createRole: "systemreplsetRole",
    privileges: [
    { resource: { db: "local", collection: "system.replset" }, actions: ["find","update"] }
    ],
    roles: []
    } );
  3. Grant the role to the user who will be performing the rename procedure. For example, the following assumes an existing user "userPerformingRename" in the admin database.

    use admin
    db.grantRolesToUser( "userPerformingRename", [ { role: "systemreplsetRole", db: "admin" } ] );
  1. Stop all members in the replica set.

  2. Restart each member on a different port and without using the --replSet run-time option. Changing the port number during maintenance prevents clients from connecting to this host while you perform maintenance. Use the member's usual --dbpath, which in this example is /data/db1. Use a command that resembles the following:

    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 for Self-Managed Deployments. At minimum, consider enabling authentication and hardening network infrastructure.

    mongod --dbpath /data/db1/ --port 37017 --bind_ip localhost,<hostname(s)|ip address(es)>

    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.

  3. For each member of the replica set, perform the following sequence of operations:

    1. Connect mongosh to the mongod running on the new, temporary port. For example, for a member running on a temporary port of 37017, you would issue this command:

      mongosh --port 37017

      If running with access control, connect as a user with appropriate privileges. See Prerequisites.

      mongosh --port 37017 -u userPerformingRename --authenticationDatabase=admin -p
    2. Edit the replica set configuration manually. The replica set configuration is the only document in the system.replset collection in the local database.


      To change the hostnames, edit the replica set configuration to provide the new hostnames and ports for all members of the replica set.

      1. Switch to the local database.

        use local
      2. Create a JavaScript variable for the configuration document. Modify the value of the _id field to match your replica set.

        cfg = db.system.replset.findOne( { "_id": "rs0" } )
      3. Provide new hostnames and ports for each member of the replica set. Modify the hostnames and ports to match your replica set.

        cfg.members[0].host = "mongodb0.example.net:27017"
        cfg.members[1].host = "mongodb1.example.net:27017"
        cfg.members[2].host = "mongodb2.example.net:27017"
      4. Update the hostnames and ports in the system.replset collection:

        db.system.replset.updateOne( { "_id": "rs0" }, { $set: cfg } )
      5. Verify the changes:

        db.system.replset.find( {}, { "members.host": 1 } )
    3. Stop the mongod process on the member.

  4. After re-configuring all members of the set, start each mongod instance in the normal way: use the usual port number and use the --replSet option. For example:

    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 for Self-Managed Deployments. At minimum, consider enabling authentication and hardening network infrastructure.

    mongod --dbpath /data/db1/ --port 27017 --replSet rs0 --bind_ip localhost,<hostname(s)|ip address(es)>
  5. Connect to one of the mongod instances using mongosh. For example:

    mongosh --port 27017
  6. To confirm the new configuration, call rs.conf() in mongosh.

    Your output should resemble:

    {
    "_id" : "rs0",
    "version" : 4,
    "members" : [
    {
    "_id" : 0,
    "host" : "mongodb0.example.net:27017"
    },
    {
    "_id" : 1,
    "host" : "mongodb1.example.net:27017"
    },
    {
    "_id" : 2,
    "host" : "mongodb2.example.net:27017"
    }
    ]
    }

Back

Self-Managed Chained Replication