1

I try to connect to mongodb based on the instructions provided here,I get this error instead:

    vamsiampolu1@takenote:~/workspace (master) $ ./mongod
2014-11-17T09:00:10.101+0000 ** WARNING: --rest is specified without --httpinterface,
2014-11-17T09:00:10.101+0000 **          enabling http interface
warning: bind_ip of 0.0.0.0 is unnecessary; listens on all ips by default
2014-11-17T09:00:10.106+0000 [initandlisten] MongoDB starting : pid=2274 port=27017 dbpath=data 64-bit host=vamsiampolu1-takenote-1084968
2014-11-17T09:00:10.106+0000 [initandlisten] db version v2.6.5
2014-11-17T09:00:10.106+0000 [initandlisten] git version: e99d4fcb4279c0279796f237aa92fe3b64560bf6
2014-11-17T09:00:10.106+0000 [initandlisten] build info: Linux build8.nj1.10gen.cc 2.6.32-431.3.1.el6.x86_64 #1 SMP Fri Jan 3 21:39:27 UTC 2014 x86_64 BOOST_LIB_VERSION=1_49
2014-11-17T09:00:10.106+0000 [initandlisten] allocator: tcmalloc
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] options: { net: { bindIp: "0.0.0.0", http: { RESTInterfaceEnabled: true, enabled: true } }, storage: { dbPath: "data", journal: { enabled: false } } }
************** 
Unclean shutdown detected.
Please visit http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/repair for recovery instructions.
*************
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] exception in initAndListen: 12596 old lock file, terminating
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] dbexit: 
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] shutdown: going to close listening sockets...
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] shutdown: going to flush diaglog...
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] shutdown: going to close sockets...
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] shutdown: waiting for fs preallocator...
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] shutdown: closing all files...
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] closeAllFiles() finished
2014-11-17T09:00:10.107+0000 [initandlisten] dbexit: really exiting now

EDIT:

I have tried with the mongod --repair flag.I have also tried to execute this script,which is what I do in case I shut my local machine down without closing mongod properly:

   #!/bin/sh
  sudo rm /var/lib/mongodb/mongod.lock
  sudo -u mongodb mongod -f /etc/mongodb.conf --repair
  sudo service mongodb start

It says that the file /var/lib/mongodb/mongod.lock was not found.I have tried to start mongodb as a service:

  sudo service mongod start

wherein,it asks me to use mongod start which also fails with the same message.I have read about net.http.enabled which should be left switched off because it could increase network exposure.

I used a Ubuntu 12.04 based vagrant box once,so I tried with:

 mongodb start

which tells me that mongodb is not a valid command.

I have also tried mongo which tells me that:

 vamsiampolu1@takenote:~/workspace (master) $ mongo
 MongoDB shell version: 2.6.5
 connecting to: test
 2014-11-17T11:51:44.752+0000 warning: Failed to connect to 127.0.0.1:27017, reason: errno:111     Connection refused
 2014-11-17T11:51:44.753+0000 Error: couldn't connect to server 127.0.0.1:27017 (127.0.0.1),   connection attempt failed at src/mongo/shell/mongo.js:146
 exception: connect failed

I believed that I might have mistakenly closed the terminal window running mongod and thus am unable to start it.But it wont let me do what I usually do and continue working.

I have also tried to run this to find if mongod was already running:

  vamsiampolu1@takenote:~/workspace (master) $ ps ax | grep mongod
  2504 pts/2    S+     0:00 grep --color=auto mongod 

I tried to stop it from running using the following:

   stop mongod

Then I ran that again to find if mongod was still running:

   vamsiampolu1@takenote:~/workspace (master) $ ps ax | grep mongod
   2524 pts/2    S+     0:00 grep --color=auto mongod

When I tried to run this:

      vamsiampolu1@takenote:~/workspace (master) $ mongod --shutdown
      There doesn't seem to be a server running with dbpath: /data/db

When I tried to set the dbpath manually:

  vamsiampolu1@takenote:~/workspace (master) $ ./mongod --dbpath /data/db
  Error parsing command line:  Multiple occurrences of option "--dbpath"
2
  • Ok, mind to show us some effort? What did you try, what is the outcome of your investigations, so far? Nov 17, 2014 at 11:31
  • @MarkusWMahlberg Edited the question to reflect some of the things that I tried to get it up and running,I was afraid,it might sound like a lot of noise obscuring the question. Nov 17, 2014 at 11:57

4 Answers 4

7

It looks to me like you have done a lot of things criss cross without really understanding what you are doing.

But basic understanding is necessary. So, here is a step by step guide to sanitize the environment and hopefully repair the database, annotated. You do have a backup, don't you?

  1. Decide wether you want to use mongod as your own user vamsiampolu1 or root or a dedicated user. Contrary to popular belief, the sudo command is not the Linux/UNIX equivalent of "I really want you to execute this command!" and a foot stomp. The sudo without the -u parameter executes it's parameters with root privileges – the effective user id of the process will be root's. Files and directories will be created for the user and group root (except the process in questions drops root privileges). Usually, it is best to have a dedicated user for any daemon, so you should use mongodb as this is the user created by the ubuntu and 10gen packages.

  2. Now we need to make sure that there is no mongod running:

    vamsiampolu1@takenote:~ $ sudo killall mongod
    

    (We want to kill all mongod processes, and since the only user capable of killing processes which might belong to a different user than himself is root, we tell the system to execute this command with root privileges)

  3. We make sure that all the files and directories belong to the proper user

    vamsiampolu1@takenote:~ $ sudo chown mongodb.mongodb -r /var/lib/mongodb
    

    (We want to change the owner and the group of all directories below /var/lib/mongodb recursively to user mongodb and group mongodb and we need the according privileges to do so)

  4. We remove the lockfile as user mongodb

    vamsiampolu1@takenote:~ $ sudo -u mongodb rm /var/lib/mongodb/mongod.lock
    
  5. Next, we will run the repair command as user mongodb

    vamsiampolu1@takenote:~ $ sudo -u mongodb mongod -f /etc/mongod.conf --repair
    

    Note that the -u mongodb is crucial for your system to work properly after the repair.

    This might take a while. Watch the log file carefully with

     vamsiampolu1@takenote:~ $ tail -n 100 -f /var/log/mongodb/mongod.log
    

    If it says [initandlisten] dbexit: really exiting now, then …

  6. Start mongod with

    vamsiampolu1@takenote:~ $ sudo -u mongodb mongod -f /etc/mongod.conf 
    

    It should work now. If not please add the part of the log file from the last occurrence of

    [initandlisten] repairDatabase local
    

    all the way to the end to your question.

2
  • When i type [sudo -u mongodb rm /var/lib/mongodb/mongod.lock] command It asks me password for ubuntu. Please can you suggest me something?
    – NZMAI
    Mar 1, 2017 at 17:08
  • @NZMAI It should be the password for the user you are executing the sudo command as. For example, if you execute this command as user "nzmai", it would be the password for "nzmai". Mar 1, 2017 at 22:53
4

If you have setup mongodb according to this method, go to the data folder in your directory. Inside it there is a file mongod.lock. Delete it (you wont require root privileges) just use rm mongod.lock. Come back to main directory and enter ./mongod. hope this will solve the p

1
  • Worked like a charm on my case! Thanks. Aug 26, 2016 at 18:48
3

Personally, I have experienced this and I found a quick fix which retains all your data as well. I am a new developer and my answer will work for you if you are coding on cloud9 and using mongoDB.

Step 1: Navigate to the directory where you installed mongoDB in your terminal, you will find the file mongod* You can navigate to this directory using $ cd ~

Step 2: cd into the data directory $ cd data/

Step 3: View all files and folders in this directory ls. You will find a file mongod.lock*.

Step 4: Delete this file using $ rm mongod.lock NB: DO NOT INCLUDE *

Step 5: cd back to the root directory $ cd ~ and startup mongo as usual ./mongod with all your data safe.

Goodluck.

0
1

For free users of Cloud9 it is caused due to lack of space, because you only have 2GB available and MongoDB requires a large amount.

Here is a solution:

mongod --port 27017 --smallfiles

Note: you may lose some of your files

1
  • Can you explain exactly why someone might lose files? If there is a dowbnside, you should at least be clear what that is.
    – user1531971
    Sep 8, 2017 at 21:03

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