Database Methods
Collection
Return a single collection:
db._collection(collection-name)
Returns the collection with the given name, or null if no such collection
exists.
db._collection(collection-identifier)
Returns the collection with the given identifier or null if no such
collection exists. Accessing collections by identifier is discouraged for
end users. End users should access collections using the collection name.
Examples
Get a collection by name:
arangosh> db._collection("demo");
[ArangoCollection 91, "demo" (type document, status loaded)]
Get a collection by id:
arangosh> db._collection(123456);
[ArangoCollection 123456, "demo" (type document, status loaded)]
Unknown collection:
arangosh> db._collection("unknown");
null
Create
Create a new document or edge collection:
db._create(collection-name)
Creates a new document collection named collection-name.
If the collection name already exists or if the name format is invalid, an
error is thrown. For more information on valid collection names please refer
to the naming conventions.
db._create(collection-name, properties)
properties must be an object with the following attributes:
-
waitForSync(optional, defaultfalse): Iftrue, creating a document only returns after the data is synced to disk. -
isSystem(optional, default isfalse): Iftrue, create a system collection. In this casecollection-nameshould start with an underscore. End users should normally create non-system collections only. API implementors may be required to create system collections in very special occasions, but normally a regular collection is sufficient. keyOptions(optional): additional options for key generation. If specified, thenkeyOptionsshould be a JSON object containing the following attributes (note: some of them are optional):type: specifies the type of the key generator. The available generators aretraditional,autoincrement,uuidandpadded.- The
traditionalkey generator generates numerical keys in ascending order. The sequence of keys is not guaranteed to be gap-free. - The
autoincrementkey generator generates numerical keys in ascending order, the initial offset and the spacing can be configured (note:autoincrementis only supported for non-sharded or single-sharded collections). The sequence of generated keys is not guaranteed to be gap-free, because a new key is generated on every document insert attempt, not just for successful inserts. - The
paddedkey generator generates keys of a fixed length (16 bytes) in ascending lexicographical sort order. This is ideal for usage with the RocksDB engine, which slightly benefits keys that are inserted in lexicographically ascending order. The key generator can be used in a single-server or cluster. The sequence of generated keys is not guaranteed to be gap-free. - The
uuidkey generator generates universally unique 128 bit keys, which are stored in hexadecimal human-readable format. This key generator can be used in a single-server or cluster to generate “seemingly random” keys. The keys produced by this key generator are not lexicographically sorted.
Please note that keys are only guaranteed to be truly ascending in single server deployments and for collections that only have a single shard (that includes collections in a OneShard database). The reason is that for collections with more than a single shard, document keys are generated on Coordinator(s). For collections with a single shard, the document keys are generated on the leader DB-Server, which has full control over the key sequence.
- The
allowUserKeys: if set totrue, then it is allowed to supply own key values in the_keyattribute of a document. If set tofalse, then the key generator is solely responsible for generating keys and supplying own key values in the_keyattribute of documents is considered an error.increment: increment value forautoincrementkey generator. Not used for other key generator types.offset: initial offset value forautoincrementkey generator. Not used for other key generator types.
-
schema(optional, default:null): Object that specifies the collection level document schema for documents. The attribute keysrule,levelandmessagemust follow the rules documented in Document Schema Validation -
computedValues(optional, default:null): An array of objects, each representing a Computed Value. -
numberOfShards(optional, default1): in a cluster, this value determines the number of shards to create for the collection. In a single server setup, this option is meaningless. -
shardKeys(optional, default is[ "_key" ]): in a cluster, this attribute determines which document attributes are used to determine the target shard for documents. Documents are sent to shards based on the values they have in their shard key attributes. The values of all shard key attributes in a document are hashed, and the hash value is used to determine the target shard. Note that values of shard key attributes cannot be changed once set. This option is meaningless in a single server setup.When choosing the shard keys, you must be aware of the following rules and limitations: In a sharded collection with more than one shard it is not possible to set up a unique constraint on an attribute that is not the one and only shard key given in
shardKeys. This is because enforcing a unique constraint would otherwise make a global index necessary or need extensive communication for every single write operation. Furthermore, if_keyis not the one and only shard key, then it is not possible to set the_keyattribute when inserting a document, provided the collection has more than one shard. Again, this is because the database has to enforce the unique constraint on the_keyattribute and this can only be done efficiently if this is the only shard key by delegating to the individual shards. -
replicationFactor(optional, default1): in a cluster, this attribute determines how many copies of each shard are kept on different DB-Servers. The value 1 means that only one copy (no synchronous replication) is kept. A value of k means that k-1 replicas are kept. Any two copies reside on different DB-Servers. Replication between them is synchronous, that is, every write operation to the “leader” copy is replicated to all “follower” replicas, before the write operation is reported successful.If a server fails, this is detected automatically and one of the servers holding copies take over, usually without an error being reported.
When using the Enterprise Edition of ArangoDB the replicationFactor may be set to “satellite” making the collection locally joinable on every DB-Server. This reduces the number of network hops dramatically when using joins in AQL at the costs of reduced write performance on these collections.
-
writeConcern(optional, default1): in a cluster, this attribute determines how many copies of each shard are required to be in sync on the different DB-Servers. If there are less then these many copies in the cluster, a shard refuses to write. The value ofwriteConcerncan not be larger thanreplicationFactor. Please note: during server failures this might lead to writes not being possible until the failover is sorted out and might cause write slow downs in trade for data durability. -
distributeShardsLike: distribute the shards of this collection cloning the shard distribution of another. If this value is set, it copies the attributesreplicationFactor,numberOfShardsandshardingStrategyfrom the other collection. -
shardingStrategy(optional): specifies the name of the sharding strategy to use for the collection. Since ArangoDB 3.4 there are different sharding strategies to select from when creating a new collection. The selectedshardingStrategyvalue remains fixed for the collection and cannot be changed afterwards. This is important to make the collection keep its sharding settings and always find documents already distributed to shards using the same initial sharding algorithm.The available sharding strategies are:
community-compat: default sharding used by ArangoDB Community Edition before version 3.4enterprise-compat: default sharding used by ArangoDB Enterprise Edition before version 3.4enterprise-smart-edge-compat: default sharding used by smart edge collections in ArangoDB Enterprise Edition before version 3.4hash: default sharding used for new collections starting from version 3.4 (excluding smart edge collections)enterprise-hash-smart-edge: default sharding used for new smart edge collections starting from version 3.4
If no sharding strategy is specified, the default is
hashfor all collections, andenterprise-hash-smart-edgefor all smart edge collections (requires the Enterprise Edition of ArangoDB). Manually overriding the sharding strategy does not yet provide a benefit, but it may later in case other sharding strategies are added.In single-server mode, the
shardingStrategyattribute is meaningless and is ignored. -
smartJoinAttribute: in an Enterprise Edition cluster, this attribute determines an attribute of the collection that must contain the shard key value of the referred-to SmartJoin collection. Additionally, the sharding key for a document in this collection must contain the value of this attribute, followed by a colon, followed by the actual primary key of the document.This feature can only be used in the Enterprise Edition and requires the
distributeShardsLikeattribute of the collection to be set to the name of another collection. It also requires theshardKeysattribute of the collection to be set to a single shard key attribute, with an additional:at the end. A further restriction is that whenever documents are stored or updated in the collection, the value stored in thesmartJoinAttributemust be a string.
db._create(collection-name, properties, type)
Specifies the optional type of the collection, it can either be document
or edge. On default it is document. Instead of giving a type you can also use
db._createEdgeCollection() or db._createDocumentCollection().
db._create(collection-name, properties[, type], options)
As an optional third (if the type string is being omitted) or fourth
parameter you can specify an optional options map that controls how the
cluster creates the collection. These options are only relevant at
creation time and are not persisted:
-
waitForSyncReplication(default:true) If enabled, the server only reports success back to the client if all replicas have created the collection. Set tofalseif you want faster server responses and don’t care about full replication. -
enforceReplicationFactor(default:true) If enabled, the server checks if there are enough replicas available at creation time and bails out otherwise. Set tofalseto disable this extra check.
Examples
With defaults:
With properties:
With a key generator:
With a special key option:
Create a new edge collection:
db._createEdgeCollection(collection-name)
Creates a new edge collection named collection-name. If the
collection name already exists an error is thrown. The default value
for waitForSync is false.
db._createEdgeCollection(collection-name, properties)
properties must be an object with the following attributes:
waitForSync(optional, default:false): Iftrue, creating a document only returns after the data is synced to disk.
Create a new document collection:
db._createDocumentCollection(collection-name)
Creates a new document collection named collection-name. If the
document name already exists and error is thrown.
All Collections
Return all collections:
db._collections()
Returns all collections of the given database.
Examples
Collection Name
Select a collection from the database:
db.collection-name
Returns the collection with the given collection-name. If no such
collection exists, create a collection named collection-name with the
default properties.
Examples
arangosh> db.example;
[ArangoCollection 72859, "example" (type document, status loaded)]
Drop
Drop a collection:
db._drop(collection)
Drops a collection and all its indexes and data.
db._drop(collection-identifier)
Drops a collection identified by collection-identifier with all its
indexes and data. No error is thrown if there is no such collection.
db._drop(collection-name)
Drops a collection named collection-name and all its indexes. No error
is thrown if there is no such collection.
db._drop(collection-name, options)
In order to drop a system collection, you must specify an options object
with attribute isSystem set to true. Otherwise it is not possible to
drop system collections.
Cluster collection, which are prototypes for collections with distributeShardsLike parameter, cannot be dropped.
Examples
Drops a collection:
arangosh> col = db.example; arangosh> db._drop(col); arangosh> col;
[ArangoCollection 72904, "example" (type document, status loaded)]
[ArangoCollection 72904, "example" (type document, status loaded)]
Drops a collection identified by name:
arangosh> col = db.example;
arangosh> db._drop("example");
arangosh> col;
[ArangoCollection 72911, "example" (type document, status loaded)]
[ArangoCollection 72911, "example" (type document, status deleted)]
Drops a system collection
arangosh> col = db._example;
arangosh> db._drop("_example", { isSystem: true });
arangosh> col;
[ArangoCollection 72918, "_example" (type document, status loaded)]
[ArangoCollection 72918, "_example" (type document, status deleted)]
Truncate
Truncate a collection:
db._truncate(collection)
Truncates a collection, removing all documents but keeping all its
indexes.
db._truncate(collection-identifier)
Truncates a collection identified by collection-identified. No error is
thrown if there is no such collection.
db._truncate(collection-name)
Truncates a collection named collection-name. No error is thrown if
there is no such collection.
Examples
Truncates a collection:
Truncates a collection identified by name: