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Delete everything in a MongoDB database

I'm doing development on MongoDB. For totally non-evil purposes, I sometimes want to blow away everything in a database—that is, to delete every single collection, and whatever else might be lying around, and start from scratch. Is there a single line of code that will let me do this? Bonus points for giving both a MongoDB console method and a MongoDB Ruby driver method.


R
Rimian

In the mongo shell:

use [database];
db.dropDatabase();

And to remove the users:

db.dropAllUsers();

@connorbode Thanks for this. I've read it and immediately though: "B-But OP doesn't wants to remove the database!". Very misleading command !!
Use with caution: if you're in a sharded environment using wiredTiger and you have no user database and you invoke dropDatabase, the database will be deleted and could re-appear as primary on a different shard when new records are added.
This won't delete the user that is attached to related database. So you may want to delete it manually. db.dropAllUsers();
Note that the database will not show after using the "use dbs" command. However, it is there. So, no worries.
@StepanYakovenko Probably need to authenticate with the MongoDB instance
A
Alexander Mistakidis

Also, from the command line:

mongo DATABASE_NAME --eval "db.dropDatabase();"

I don't believe this works in 2.4.6. My records still exist.
Will this remote the users on the database as well?
G
Gering

I had the same problem, when I needed to reset all the collections but didn't want to loose any database users. Use the following line of code, if you would like to save the user configuration for the database:

use <whichever database>
db.getCollectionNames().forEach(function(c) { if (c.indexOf("system.") == -1) db[c].drop(); })

This code will go through all collection names from one database and drop those which do not start with "system.".


As mentioned by @DanH you may find it more reliable to use remove in place of drop. The remove option appears to maintain constraints on fields the the collections that you are clearing. When we employed the drop method, the unique constraint on one of our fields was not honoured following the drop.
@Scottymac - better yet, add an else branch (to the if (c.indexOf("system.") == -1)) that does remove instead of drop. That way you're not left with empty collections if you're not using them anymore
Better than db[c], use db.getCollection(c) which avoids errors when collection names are digits.
According to the docs, since MongoDB 2.6, a dropDatabase command won't delete users, so the accepted answer is probably preferable.
If the collection name is numeric, then this should work instead: db.getCollectionNames().forEach(function(c) { if (c.indexOf("system.") == -1) db.getCollection(c).drop(); })
P
Patrick Goley

I followed the db.dropDatabase() route for a long time, however if you're trying to use this for wiping the database in between test cases you may eventually find problems with index constraints not being honored after the database drop. As a result, you'll either need to mess about with ensureIndexes, or a simpler route would be avoiding the dropDatabase alltogether and just removing from each collection in a loop such as:

db.getCollectionNames().forEach(
  function(collection_name) {
    db[collection_name].remove()
  }
);

In my case I was running this from the command-line using:

mongo [database] --eval "db.getCollectionNames().forEach(function(n){db[n].remove()});"

Thank you for this suggestion, we were using db[collection_name].drop() and it was exhibiting the same issues you described with the db.dropDatabase() method. Switching the s/drop/remove/ worked brilliantly !
I found that remove() doesn't work well on MongoDB for Windows, and instead I needed to do remove({}) which works on both OSX and Windows.
Thanks for the tip, we are on a Linux platform, but this is worth looking into a bit further.
I noticed an error for the delete - since db[collection_name].remove() doesn't have a query! So it actually needs to be: db[collection_name].remove({})
S
Selvakumar Ponnusamy
db.getCollectionNames().forEach(c=>db[c].drop())

C
Community

By compiling answers from @Robse and @DanH (kudos!), I've got the following solution which completely satisfies me:

db.getCollectionNames().forEach( function(collection_name) { 
  if (collection_name.indexOf("system.") == -1) 
       db[collection_name].drop();
  else  
       db[collection_name].remove({});
});

It cleans the database by dropping the user collections and emptying the system collections.


This script cleans everything within only one particular Mongo database. It erases all collections in this database.
A
Atul Chandra

Here are some useful delete operations for mongodb using mongo shell

To delete particular document in collections: db.mycollection.remove( {name:"stack"} )

To delete all documents in collections: db.mycollection.remove()

To delete any particular collection : db.mycollection.drop()

to delete database : first go to that database by use mydb command and then

db.dropDatabase()

s
sjas

in case you'd need to drop everything at once: (drop all databases at once)

mongo --quiet --eval 'db.getMongo().getDBNames().forEach(function(i){db.getSiblingDB(i).dropDatabase()})'

d
dove

Use

[databaseName]
db.Drop+databaseName();

drop collection 

use databaseName 
db.collectionName.drop();

S
Stéphane Bruckert

if you want to delete only a database and its sub-collections use this :

use ;

db.dropDatabase();

if you want to delete all the databases in mongo then use this :

db.adminCommand("listDatabases").databases.forEach(function(d)
             {
              if(d.name!="admin" && d.name!="local" && d.name!="config")
                {
                 db.getSiblingDB(d.name).dropDatabase();
                }
             }
          );

Great answer... this is probably what the user was getting at
S
Sergio Tulentsev

I prefer

db.your_collection.remove({})

over

db.your_collection.drop()

If your collection was a special collection i.e a capped collection or a collection with one field marked as unique, dropping will clear the collection itself and when collection is again created it will be an ordinary collection. You will have to define the properties again. So use remove() to clear the documents without removing the collection and affecting the behavior of the collection.


Good points. It's worth mentioning, though, that drop() is near-instantaneous and remove({}) locks up your db for minutes or tens of minutes (depending on collection size).
S
Shalabh Raizada

Simplest way to delete a database say blog:

> use blog
switched to db blog
> db.dropDatabase();
{ "dropped" : "blog", "ok" : 1 }

C
Community

For Meteor developers.

Open a second terminal window while running your app in localhost:3000. In your project's folder run, meteor mongo. coolName = new Mongo.Collection('yourCollectionName'); Then simply enter db.yourCollectionName.drop(); You'll automatically see the changes in your local server.

For everybody else.

db.yourCollectionName.drop();


m
mfpinheiro

To delete all DBs use:

for i in $(mongo --quiet --host $HOSTNAME --eval "db.getMongo().getDBNames()" | tr "," " ");

do mongo $i --host $HOSTNAME --eval "db.dropDatabase()";

done 

p
priya raj

List out all available dbs show dbs Choose the necessary db use Drop the database db.dropDatabase() //Few additional commands List all collections available in a db show collections Remove a specification collection db.collection.drop()

Hope that helps


A
Antonio Bardazzi
use <dbname>
db.dropAllUsers()
db.dropAllRoles()
db.dropDatabase()

MongoDB db.dropDatabase() documentation explaining the modification introduced in 2.6:

Changed in version 2.6: This command does not delete the users associated with the current database.


k
kevinadi

In MongoDB 3.2 and newer, Mongo().getDBNames() in the mongo shell will output a list of database names in the server:

> Mongo().getDBNames()
[ "local", "test", "test2", "test3" ]

> show dbs
local  0.000GB
test   0.000GB
test2  0.000GB
test3  0.000GB

A forEach() loop over the array could then call dropDatabase() to drop all the listed databases. Optionally you can opt to skip some important databases that you don't want to drop. For example:

Mongo().getDBNames().forEach(function(x) {
  // Loop through all database names
  if (['admin', 'config', 'local'].indexOf(x) < 0) {
    // Drop if database is not admin, config, or local
    Mongo().getDB(x).dropDatabase();
  }
})

Example run:

> show dbs
admin   0.000GB
config  0.000GB
local   0.000GB
test    0.000GB
test2   0.000GB
test3   0.000GB

> Mongo().getDBNames().forEach(function(x) {
...   if (['admin', 'config', 'local'].indexOf(x) < 0) {
...     Mongo().getDB(x).dropDatabase();
...   }
... })

> show dbs
admin   0.000GB
config  0.000GB
local   0.000GB