In the MongoDB shell, how do I list all collections for the current database that I'm using?
23 Answers
You can do...
JavaScript (shell):
db.getCollectionNames()
Node.js:
db.listCollections()
Non-JavaScript (shell only):
show collections
The reason I call that non-JavaScript is because:
$ mongo prodmongo/app --eval "show collections"
MongoDB shell version: 3.2.10
connecting to: prodmongo/app
2016-10-26T19:34:34.886-0400 E QUERY [thread1] SyntaxError: missing ; before statement @(shell eval):1:5
$ mongo prodmongo/app --eval "db.getCollectionNames()"
MongoDB shell version: 3.2.10
connecting to: prodmongo/app
[
"Profiles",
"Unit_Info"
]
If you really want that sweet, sweet show collections
output, you can:
$ mongo prodmongo/app --eval "db.getCollectionNames().join('\n')"
MongoDB shell version: 3.2.10
connecting to: prodmongo/app
Profiles
Unit_Info
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Nice feature. You can iterate through the array of names to do something else (e.g. remove all items from the collections). Apr 27, 2015 at 15:34
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20
db.getCollectionNames()
was removed in favor ofdb.listCollections()
May 18, 2015 at 15:07 -
8Can we please get
db.listCollections()
as the answer shown here and checked in green? Otherwise people are making the same mistake I did countless times when they come to this answer - and attempt to usedb.getCollectionNames
and the error comes backdb.collectionNames is not a function
.– user3586413Dec 17, 2015 at 20:20 -
28@niftylettuce This question is about the MongoDB shell, not the node.js driver.
db.getCollectionNames()
is still the right answer for the shell.– JohnnyHKJan 18, 2016 at 20:51 -
1@JohnnyHK I do not agree that the
node
answer here is not well placed! Please look at the google result rank and people like me come here with a node env wanting to have a quick solution. Node is widely used with mongo. But nevertheless, the node solution here does not work for me;(– TimoJun 9, 2022 at 6:18
> show collections
will list all the collections in the currently selected DB, as stated in the command line help (help
).
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2You can't use the show collections output in a script, but one can do x=db.getCollectionNames() to get an array of all the names.– ceterasApr 5, 2013 at 11:43
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1What do the two numbers listed after every collection mean? Two types of sizes?
content 1145.586MB / 1506.855MB
for example. Jun 20, 2014 at 1:37 -
1@Dan: I haven't used MongoDB in a while, but my best guess is that it's the size of the data stored in the collection vs. the total amount allocated to that collection (to handle minor updates and growth without having to constantly reallocate new space for the entire collection's contents).– CameronSep 16, 2014 at 17:34
How do I list all collections for the current database that I'm using?
Three methods
show collections
show tables
db.getCollectionNames()
To list all databases:
show dbs
To enter or use a given database:
use databasename
To list all collections:
show collections
Output:
collection1 collection2 system.indexes
(or)
show tables
Output:
collection1 collection2 system.indexes
(or)
db.getCollectionNames()
Output:
[ "collection1", "collection2", "system.indexes" ]
To enter or use given collection
use collectionname
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12
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2
Apart from the options suggested by other people:
show collections // Output every collection
show tables
db.getCollectionNames() // Shows all collections as a list
There is also another way which can be really handy if you want to know how each of the collections was created (for example, it is a capped collection with a particular size):
db.system.namespaces.find()
First you need to use a database to show all collection/tables inside it.
>show dbs
users 0.56787GB
test (empty)
>db.test.help() // this will give you all the function which can be used with this db
>use users
>show tables //will show all the collection in the db
Try:
help // To show all help methods
show dbs // To show all dbs
use dbname // To select your db
show collections // To show all collections in selected db
You can use show tables
or show collections
.
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3@LalitKumarB: How come is that? Based on other answers, that is suitable answer for this that actually might work. At least it is an attempt to answer. What it is, is an answer to very old question that already has multiple correct answers posted. Apr 16, 2015 at 9:27
1. show collections; // Display all collections
2. show tables // Display all collections
3. db.getCollectionNames(); // Return array of collection. Example :[ "orders", "system.profile" ]
Detailed information for every collection:
db.runCommand( { listCollections: 1.0, authorizedCollections: true, nameOnly: true } )
- For users with the required access (privileges that grant listCollections action on the database), the method lists the names of all collections for the database.
- For users without the required access, the method lists only the collections for which the users has privileges. For example, if a user has find on a specific collection in a database, the method would return just that collection.
To list collections list based on a search string.
db.getCollectionNames().filter(function (CollectionName) { return /<Search String>/.test(CollectionName) })
Example: Find all collection having "import" in the name
db.getCollectionNames().filter(function (CollectionName) { return /import/.test(CollectionName) })
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Can I get the list of collection which contains some name like filter– ParveenApr 27, 2020 at 12:04
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@Praveen - I've updated my answer to include answer to you case. Hope that helps Apr 28, 2020 at 9:40
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Thanks Amitesh. I wrote my script db.getCollectionNames().forEach(function(collName) { if (collName.startsWith("TestCollection_")) { print("droping index for " + collName); db.getCollection(collName).dropIndex("ts_1"); } });– ParveenApr 30, 2020 at 15:10
I think one of the biggest confusions is the difference between what you can do with mongo
(or an interactive/hybrid shell) vs. mongo --eval
(or a pure JavaScript shell). I keep these helpful documents handy:
Here is an example of scripting what you might otherwise do with show
commands:
# List all databases and the collections in them
mongo --eval "
db.getMongo().getDBNames().forEach(
function(v, i){
print(
v + '\n\t' +
db.getSiblingDB(v).getCollectionNames().join('\n\t')
)
}
)
"
Note: That works really well as a one-liner. (But it looks terrible on Stack Overflow.)
mongo --eval "db.getMongo().getDBNames().forEach(function(v, i){print(v+'\n\t'+db.getSiblingDB(v).getCollectionNames().join('\n\t'))})"
The following commands on mongoshell are common.
show databases
show collections
Also,
show dbs
use mydb
db.getCollectionNames()
Sometimes it's useful to see all collections as well as the indexes on the collections which are part of the overall namespace:
Here's how you would do that:
db.getCollectionNames().forEach(function(collection) {
indexes = db[collection].getIndexes();
print("Indexes for " + collection + ":");
printjson(indexes);
});
Between the three commands and this snippet, you should be well covered!
The command used for displaying all the collections in the MongoDB database is
show collections
Before running the show collections
command you have to select the database:
use mydb // mydb is the name of the database being selected
To see all the databases, you can use the command
show dbs // Shows all the database names present
For more information, visit see Getting Started.
If you want to show all collections from the MongoDB shell (command line), use the shell helper,
show collections
that shows all collections for the current database. If you want to get all collection lists from your application then you can use the MongoDB database method
db.getCollectionNames()
For more information about the MongoDB shell helper, you can see mongo
Shell Quick Reference.
> show dbs
anuradhfirst 0.000GB
local 0.000GB
> use anuradhfirst
switched to db anuradhfirst
> show collections
record
- connect with the MongoDB database using
mongo
. This will start the connection. - then run
show dbs
command. This will show you all exiting/available databases. - then select the
database
you want. In the above it isanuradhfirst
. Then runuse anuradhfirst
. This will switch to the database you want. - then run
show collections
command. This will show all thecollections
inside your selected database.
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1This answer is showing the correct steps to get to the list of collections. Jun 22, 2021 at 4:17
For switching to the database.
By:
use {your_database_name} example:
use friends
where friends
is the name of your database.
Then write:
db.getCollectionNames()
show collections
This will give you the name of collections.
On >=2.x, you can do
db.listCollections()
On 1.x you can do
db.getCollectionNames()
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1as @JohnnyHK pointed out this only applies to the node driver and not the mongo shell per OP question May 3, 2016 at 21:06
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@JeffPuckettII I don't use Node. This works perfectly for me inside mongo shell. I wonder why it would not?– AniruddhMay 7, 2016 at 8:10
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1I'm running MongoDB shell version: 3.2.6, and when I run
db.getCollectionNames()
I get[ "users" ]
because I have a users collection. If I trydb.listCollections()
then it results in[thread1] TypeError: db.listCollections is not a function : @(shell):1:1
May 7, 2016 at 20:29
List all collections from the mongo
shell:
- db.getCollectionNames()
- show collections
- show tables
Note: Collections will show from current database where you are in currently
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2
show collections
This command usually works on the MongoDB shell once you have switched to the database.
For MongoDB 3.0 deployments using the WiredTiger storage engine, if you run
db.getCollectionNames()
from a version of the mongo shell before 3.0 or a version of the driver prior to 3.0 compatible version,db.getCollectionNames()
will return no data, even if there are existing collections.
For further details, please refer to this.
Use the following command from the mongo
shell:
show collections
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2
I use listCollections
(supports MongoDB 3.0 and up) for this purpose.
Example:
db.runCommand({ listCollections: 1, filter: {}, nameOnly: true });
To fetch more information like the index of the collection:
db.runCommand({ listCollections: 1, filter: {}, nameOnly: false });
To print just the collection names:
db.runCommand({ listCollections: 1, filter: {}, nameOnly: true }).cursor.firstBatch.forEach(v => {print(v.name)})
I feel this provides more flexibility.
Read more: listCollections
show collections
or
show tables
or
db.getCollectionNames();
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2