146

I am using Robo 3T (formerly RoboMongo) which I connect to a MongoDB. What I need to do is this: There is a collection in that MongoDB. I want to export the data from that collection so that I can save it into a file.

I used the interface to open the data from the collection as text and did a Ctrl + A and pasted into a text file. However, I found that not all data is copied and also that there were many comments in the text data which naturally breaks the JSON.

I am wondering if Robo 3T has a "Export As JSON" facility so that I can do a clean export.

Any pointers are appreciated!

5
  • You want to export particular collections or full db? Feb 26, 2015 at 5:24
  • 1
    This isn't a current feature of Robomongo, but I've added a feature suggestion in the github issue queue: Add JSON export. There's a general suggestion that import/export should be integrated, but more detailed/practical use cases would be helpful. For example, should this support exporting JSON from a collection, a find query, an aggregation pipeline? Currently your best option is to use the standard mongoexport command line tool.
    – Stennie
    Feb 26, 2015 at 5:35
  • 2
    @Stennie - thank you for your comment. I guess in answer to your question - from a customer experience viewpoint, it does not really matter. In most other DB interfaces, the flow is that you run a query (with or without critera), get a set of results. Right click and say "export results as..." So the same should be applicable here. Does not matter if I am exporting an entire collection or a find query. If the result can get displayed in the panel, then it should be exportable. Feb 26, 2015 at 6:46
  • 1
    Simply you can do this mongoexport --uri='mongodb://[email protected]:27017/marketing' --collection=contacts --out=contacts.json
    – Naren
    Jun 8, 2020 at 10:40
  • @Naren Right click -> "Export as JSON" would be simple. This is not. Feb 9, 2022 at 13:16

16 Answers 16

136

A quick and dirty way: Just write your query as db.getCollection('collection').find({}).toArray() and right click Copy JSON. Paste the data in the editor of your choice.

enter image description here

6
  • 7
    Neat! Not dirty at all considering lack of export functionality in robo3t. Much easier for small sets of data comparing to other suggested solutions. Mar 8, 2020 at 20:04
  • 1
    Awesome, It helps me lot, Just a little expectation, can we export whole collection in single time. this answer helps to export single single tables. Jan 31, 2021 at 12:17
  • 1
    The dates will come out as ISODate instead of 8601 JSON dates though
    – jcollum
    Jun 30, 2021 at 18:50
  • 2
    Awesome! Just a reminder - don't run it on large collections or result sets :-)
    – Yuki
    Oct 12, 2021 at 7:22
  • 1
    For medium or small results sets, its really great! Thanks.
    – cem çetin
    Dec 21, 2021 at 12:31
74

You can use tojson to convert each record to JSON in a MongoDB shell script.

Run this script in RoboMongo:

var cursor = db.getCollection('foo').find({}, {});
while(cursor.hasNext()) {
    print(tojson(cursor.next()))
}

This prints all results as a JSON-like array.

The result is not really JSON! Some types, such as dates and object IDs, are printed as JavaScript function calls, e.g., ISODate("2016-03-03T12:15:49.996Z").

Might not be very efficient for large result sets, but you can limit the query. Alternatively, you can use mongoexport.

11
  • 4
    It outputs not valid json. Just json-serialized records one by one
    – ruX
    Aug 23, 2016 at 16:53
  • For many use-cases, one can use tojson(db.getCollection(...).find(...)["_batch"]) to output the entirety of the current batch obtained from the server.
    – Yuval
    Aug 30, 2018 at 14:22
  • @Yuval You mean literally ["_batch"]? Can you give an example how to use this? I tried this with Robo 3T 1.2.1, but it only says "Script executed successfully, but there are no results to show". Aug 30, 2018 at 14:46
  • 7
    @FlorianWinter That was just from random findings from fiddling around. A better solution is tojson(db.getCollection(...).find(...).toArray()).
    – Yuval
    Aug 31, 2018 at 1:33
  • @Yuval Nice! That's the easiest solution then, much better than mine. Consider posting it as an answer. (Or edit mine, but then I would get all the credit that you deserve, which would be somewhat unfair...) Aug 31, 2018 at 8:36
42

Robomongo's shell functionality will solve the problem. In my case I needed couple of columns as CSV format.

var cursor = db.getCollection('Member_details').find({Category: 'CUST'},{CustomerId :1,Name :1,_id:0})

while (cursor.hasNext()) {
    var record = cursor.next();   
    print(record.CustomerID + "," + record.Name)
}

Output : -------

334, Harison
433, Rechard
453, Michel
533, Pal
4
  • 1
    Is it possible to write the output of this script into a csv locally whithin Robomongo shell ? Aug 22, 2016 at 15:19
  • This gives me "Script executed successfully, but there are no results to show" Oct 4, 2019 at 4:12
  • Error: Line 10: Invalid left-hand side in assignment
    – EugenSunic
    Dec 29, 2019 at 10:56
  • 1
    This was the best way to get more than 50 records at a time. I just switched the print to print(record) and then was able to copy the json from the text view.
    – emragins
    May 30, 2021 at 15:27
29

you say "export to file" as in a spreadsheet? like to a .csv?

IMO this is the EASIEST way to do this in Robo 3T (formerly robomongo):

  1. In the top right of the Robo 3T GUI there is a "View Results in text mode" button, click it and copy everything

  2. paste everything into this website: https://json-csv.com/

  3. click the download button and now you have it in a spreadsheet.

hope this helps someone, as I wish Robo 3T had export capabilities

2
  • This actually helped solve my problem while my IntelliJ data connection is broken. Sad I have to jump through hoops like this in the year 2021, but hey, it works. Thank you!
    – craastad
    May 4, 2021 at 12:52
  • This will also include comments between the objects and you need to manually insert a [ at the beginning and a ] at the end. Also, you need to replace ObjectID and ISODate functions.
    – santamanno
    Nov 9, 2021 at 14:32
19

There are a few MongoDB GUIs out there, some of them have built-in support for data exporting. You'll find a comprehensive list of MongoDB GUIs at http://mongodb-tools.com

You've asked about exporting the results of your query, and not about exporting entire collections. Give 3T MongoChef MongoDB GUI a try, this tool has support for your specific use case.

2
  • Studio 3T totally did the job easier than expected! :+1:
    – vinyll
    Feb 15, 2018 at 1:58
  • 1
    Studio 3T is perfect but it has an excesive cost for a solo developer like me. Absurd the cost.
    – realtebo
    Feb 12, 2021 at 9:12
12

Don't run this command on shell, enter this script at a command prompt with your database name, collection name, and file name, all replacing the placeholders..

mongoexport --db (Database name) --collection (Collection Name) --out (File name).json

It works for me.

8

I don't think robomongo have such a feature. So you better use mongodb function as mongoexport for a specific Collection.

http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/program/mongoexport/#export-in-json-format

But if you are looking for a backup solution is better to use

mongodump / mongorestore
6

Expanding on Anish's answer, I wanted something I can apply to any query to automatically output all fields vs. having to define them within the print statement. It can probably be simplified but this was something quick & dirty that works great:

var cursor = db.getCollection('foo').find({}, {bar: 1, baz: 1, created_at: 1, updated_at: 1}).sort({created_at: -1, updated_at: -1});

while (cursor.hasNext()) {
    var record = cursor.next();
    var output = "";
    for (var i in record) {
      output += record[i] + ",";
    };
    output = output.substring(0, output.length - 1);
    print(output);
}
6

If you want to use mongoimport, you'll want to export this way:

db.getCollection('tables')
  .find({_id: 'q3hrnnoKu2mnCL7kE'})
  .forEach(function(x){printjsononeline(x)});
3

Using a robomongo shell script:

//on the same db
var cursor = db.collectionname.find();

while (cursor.hasNext()) {
    var record = cursor.next();   
    db.new_collectionname.save(record);
}

Using mongodb's export and import command

You can add the --jsonArray parameter / flag to your mongoexport command, this exports the result as single json array.

Then just specify the --jsonArray flag again when importing.

Or remove the starting and ending array brackets [] in the file, then your modified & exported file will import with the mongoimport command without the --jsonArray flag.

More on Export here: https://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/program/mongoexport/#cmdoption--jsonArray

Import here: https://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/program/mongoimport/#cmdoption--jsonArray

0
2

Solution:

mongoexport --db test --collection traffic --out traffic.json<br><br>

enter image description here

Where:
database -> mock-server
collection name -> api_defs
output file name -> childChoreRequest.json

2

An extension to Florian Winter answer for people looking to generate ready to execute query.

drop and insertMany query using cursor:

{
    // collection name
    var collection_name = 'foo';

    // query
    var cursor = db.getCollection(collection_name).find({});

    // drop collection and insert script
    print('db.' + collection_name + '.drop();');
    print('db.' + collection_name + '.insertMany([');

    // print documents
    while(cursor.hasNext()) {
        print(tojson(cursor.next()));

        if (cursor.hasNext()) // add trailing "," if not last item
            print(',');
    }

    // end script
    print(']);');
}

Its output will be like:

db.foo.drop();
db.foo.insertMany([
{
    "_id" : ObjectId("abc"),
    "name" : "foo"
}
,
{
    "_id" : ObjectId("xyz"),
    "name" : "bar"
}
]);
1

I had this same issue, and running script in robomongo (Robo 3T 1.1.1) also doesn't allow to copy values and there was no export option either. The best way I could achieve this is to use mongoexport, if mongodb is installed on your local, you can use mongoexport to connect to database on any server and extract data

To connect to Data on remote server, and csv output file, run the following mongoexport in your command line

mongoexport --host HOSTNAME --port PORT --username USERNAME --password "PASSWORD" --collection COLLECTION_NAME --db DATABASE_NAME --out OUTPUTFILE.csv --type=csv --fieldFile fields.txt

fieldFile: helps to extract the desired columns, ex: contents of fields.txt can be just:

userId

to only extract values of the column 'userId'

Data on remote server, json output file:

mongoexport --host HOST_NAME --port PORT --username USERNAME --password "PASSWORD" --collection COLECTION_NAME --db DATABASE_NAME --out OUTPUT.json

this extracts all fields into the json file

data on localhost (mongodb should be running on localhost)

mongoexport --db DATABASE_NAME --collection COLLECTION --out OUTPUT.json

Reference: https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/program/mongoexport/#use

0

Simple solution:

tostrictjson(db.getCollection(collection_name).find({}))

Note: Other solutions are fine but might cause errors during import when your collection has types like Date, ObjectId etc...

Happy Hacking :)

0

I export using Mongodb Compass, you can export to csv or json. On the menu of Mongo Compass select Collection-> export collection, and you can select the fields to export, and the file to export the result, previously you can specify the query.

Regards

-2
  1. make your search
  2. push button view results in JSON mode
  3. copy te result to word
  4. print the result from word
2
  • When I have dates in my document it returns ISODate elements which are not valid json format. Feb 27, 2020 at 22:22
  • 3
    Why would you use a Word document to store a database export? And why in the world would anyone want to print a database export?
    – maesk
    Jul 1, 2020 at 10:12

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