db.killOp()
Description
db.killOp(opid)Terminates an operation as specified by the operation ID. To find operations and their corresponding IDs, see
$currentOpordb.currentOp().The
db.killOp()method has the following parameter:ParameterTypeDescriptionopnumber
An operation ID.
Warning
Terminate running operations with extreme caution. Only use
db.killOp()to terminate operations initiated by clients and do not terminate internal database operations.
Compatibility
This method is available in deployments hosted in the following environments:
MongoDB Atlas: The fully managed service for MongoDB deployments in the cloud
Important
MongoDB Atlas limits the use of this method to the MongoDB user who ran the operation. For information on Atlas support for all commands, see Unsupported Commands.
MongoDB Enterprise: The subscription-based, self-managed version of MongoDB
MongoDB Community: The source-available, free-to-use, and self-managed version of MongoDB
Sharded Cluster
Kill Read Operations
The db.killOp() method can be run on a
mongos and can kill queries (read operations) that are running
on more than one shard in a cluster.
For example, to kill a query operation on a sharded cluster:
On the same
mongoswhere the client issued the query, find the opid of the query operation to kill by running the aggregation pipeline$currentOpwith thelocalOps: true:use admin db.aggregate( [ { $currentOp : { allUsers: true, localOps: true } }, { $match : <filter condition> } // Optional. Specify the condition to find the op. // e.g. { op: "getmore", "command.collection": "someCollection" } ] ) Important
You must issue this aggregation operation on the same
mongoswhere the client issued the query.Once you find the query operation to kill, issue
db.killOp()with the opid on themongos:db.killOp(<opid of the query to kill>)
See also:
The localOps parameter in $currentOp.
Alternatively, you can find and kill the read operation from a
shard member where the operation is running. MongoDB
propagates the kill operation to the other shards and
mongos instances:
On one of the shards where the operation is running, find the opid of the query operation to kill:
use admin db.aggregate( [ { $currentOp : { allUsers: true } }, { $match : <filter condition> } // Optional. Specify the condition to find the op. // e.g. { op: "getmore", "command.collection": "someCollection" } ] ) Once you find the query operation to kill, issue
db.killOp()with the opid on the shard member:db.killOp(<opid of the query to kill>) MongoDB propagates the kill operation to the other shards and
mongosinstances.
Kill Write Operations
- Within a Session
MongoDB drivers associate all operations with a server session, with the exception of unacknowledged writes.
If the write operation is associated with a session, you can use the
killSessionscommand on themongosto kill the write operation across shards.Run the aggregation pipeline
$currentOpon themongosto find thelsid(logical session id).use admin db.aggregate( [ { $currentOp : { allUsers: true, localOps: true } }, { $match : <filter condition> } // Optional. Specify the condition to find the op. // e.g. { "op" : "update", "ns": "mydb.someCollection" } ] ) Using the returned
lsidinformation, issue thekillSessionscommand on themongosto kill the operation on the shards.db.adminCommand( { killSessions: [ { "id" : UUID("80e48c5a-f7fb-4541-8ac0-9e3a1ed224a4"), "uid" : BinData(0,"47DEQpj8HBSa+/TImW+5JCeuQeRkm5NMpJWZG3hSuFU=") } ] } )
- Without a Session
If the write operation is not associated with a session, you must find and kill the operation on all the shards associated with the write.
From a
mongos, run the aggregation pipeline$currentOpto find the opid(s) of the query operation on the shards:use admin db.aggregate( [ { $currentOp : { allUsers: true } }, { $match : <filter condition> } // Optional. Specify the condition to find the op. ] ) When run on a
mongos,$currentOpreturns the opids in the format of"<shardName>:<opid on that shard>"; e.g.{ "shard" : "shardB", .. "opid" : "shardB:79214", ... }, { "shard" : "shardA", .. "opid" : "shardA:100913", ... }, Using the opid information, issue
db.killOp()on themongosto kill the operation on the shards.db.killOp("shardB:79014"); db.killOp("shardA:100813");
Access Control
On systems running with authorization, to kill
operations not owned by the user, the user must have access that
includes the killop privilege action.
On mongod instances, users can kill their own operations
even without the killop privilege action.
See also: