Earlier i was storing all the mongodb data files in /var/lib/mongodb directory..and the dbpath entry in /etc/mongodb.conf was /var/lib/mongodb..

Now i want to change the data directory to /vol/db..so I created the directory /vol/db and changed the permissions using sudo chown -R id -u /vol/db and changed the db path entry to /vol/db in /etc/mongodb.conf

now when i start the mongodb using sudo service mongodb start..i am getting this error in /var/log/mongodb/mongodb.log

http://pastebin.com/C0tv8HQN

i need help..where I am wrong?

share|improve this question
    
i am using sudo chown -R id -u /vol/db and sudo chown -R username:username /vol/db – Mark Gill May 12 '11 at 5:58
1  
Can you paste the output of ls -altrh /vol and ls -altrh /vol/db? – lobster1234 May 12 '11 at 6:06
    
I am having the same problem, can you reply back if you have solved this? – zubinmehta Aug 3 '11 at 15:59

I was having the same problem, but was able to solve it thanks to a similar question. You need to make sure that /vol/db/ is owned by mongodb.

sudo chown mongodb:mongodb /vol/db/

If you get the error chown: invalid user: 'mongodb:mongodb', check /etc/passwd to see if there is a similar user that exists (ex. mongod).

share|improve this answer
2  
what if I get an invalid user error and there isn't anything in /etc/passwd that is similar – TMin Apr 9 '16 at 20:51
    
in case my service name is mongod, what will be my user:group? – Darpan Jul 25 '16 at 14:33
    
probably mongod, try: groups mongod – igorludi Jan 23 '17 at 15:33

The easiest would be

sudo chmod 777 /data/db
share|improve this answer
    
this worked for me.. when I ran sudo chown mongodb:mongoDB /vol/db i received : "illegal group name"... this solution worked – hanzolo Jan 27 '16 at 22:50
    
I got the same as hanzolo. This one worked for me. – MLyck Apr 10 '16 at 1:38
8  
This command will give very open permissions to the directory in question. The answer from @Kaezarrex (sudo chown mongodb:mongodb /data/db) should have the desired effect without opening the permissions so widely. – Nabil Boag May 26 '16 at 8:59

If after changing permissions and ownership of the new db path, you're still seeing this issue, run getenforce to see if you are using a system with SELinux running in enforce mode. If getenforce returns 'enforcing', it's likely selinux is the cause of the permissions error, since mongodb is now running outside it's original context scope since the db location changed out of /var/lib/...

I don't know the details, but a brute force way then to resolve the issue without writing your own selinux policy for the new context is to simply turn off selinux :-/

sudo setenforce 0

Ideally, you'd figure out how to update the selinux policy if you're planning to run in production.

share|improve this answer

I suggest to check what is the error by reading mongo log

tail -50 /var/log/mongodb/mongodb.log

you can immediately find the problem(including permission ones)

share|improve this answer

Try the following:

$ sudo chmod 755 /vol/db && sudo chown $USER /vol/db
share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.