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Before you attempt any downgrade, familiarize yourself with the content of this document.
Once upgraded to 4.2, if you need to downgrade, we recommend downgrading to the latest patch release of 4.0.
Tip
If you downgrade,
Optional but Recommended. Create a backup of your database.
If your deployment has access control enabled, your downgrade user privileges must include privileges to list and manage indexes across databases. A user with root role has the required privileges.
To downgrade from 4.2 to 4.0, you must remove incompatible features that are persisted and/or update incompatible configuration settings. These include:
To downgrade the featureCompatibilityVersion of your sharded cluster:
mongo shell to the mongod instance.featureCompatibilityVersion to "4.0".
The setFeatureCompatibilityVersion command performs writes to an internal system collection and is idempotent. If for any reason the command does not complete successfully, retry the command on the mongod instance.
The following steps are necessary only if fCV has ever been set to "4.2".
Remove all persisted 4.2 features that are incompatible with 4.0. These include:
Starting in MongoDB 4.2, for featureCompatibilityVersion (fCV)
set to "4.2" or greater, MongoDB removes the Index Key Limit. For fCV set to "4.0", the limit still applies.
If you have an index with keys that exceed the Index Key Limit once fCV is set to "4.0", consider changing the index to a hashed index or to indexing a computed value. You can also temporarily use failIndexKeyTooLong set to false before resolving the problem. However, with failIndexKeyTooLong set to false, queries that use these indexes can return incomplete results.
Starting in MongoDB 4.2, for featureCompatibilityVersion (fCV)
set to "4.2" or greater, MongoDB removes the Index Name Length. For fCV set to "4.0", the limit still applies.
If you have an index with a name that exceeds the Index Name Length once fCV is set to "4.0", drop and recreate the index with a shorter name.
With featureCompatibilityVersion (fCV) "4.2", MongoDB uses a new internal format for unique indexes that is incompatible with MongoDB 4.0. The new internal format applies to both existing unique indexes as well as newly created/rebuilt unique indexes.
If fCV has ever been set to "4.2", use the following script to drop and recreate all unique indexes.
Tip
Perform this operation after you have resolved any index key size and index name length issues first.
user_1_db_1 System Unique Index¶In addition, if you have enabled access control, you must also remove the system unique index user_1_db_1 on the admin.system.users collection.
If fCV has ever been set to "4.2", use the following command to drop the user_1_db_1 system unique index:
The user_1_db_1 index will automatically be rebuilt when starting the server with the 4.0 binary in the procedure below.
For featureCompatibilityVersion (fCV) set to "4.2", MongoDB supports creating Wildcard Indexes. You must drop all wildcard indexes before downgrading to fCV "4.0".
Use the following script to drop and recreate all wildcard indexes:
Important
Downgrading to fCV "4.0" during an in-progress wildcard index build does not automatically drop or kill the index build. The index build can complete after downgrading to fcv "4.0", resulting in a valid wildcard index on the collection. Starting the 4.0 binary against against that data directory will result in startup failures.
Use db.currentOp() to check for any in-progress wildcard index builds. Once any in-progress wildcard index builds complete, run the script to drop them before downgrading to fCV "4.0".
Before downgrading the binaries, modify read-only view definitions and collection validation definitions that include the 4.2 operators, such as $set, $unset, $replaceWith.
$set stage, use the $addFields stage instead.$replaceWith stage, use the $replaceRoot stage instead.$unset stage, use the $project stage instead.You can modify a view either by:
db.myview.drop() method) and recreating the view (db.createView() method) orcollMod command.You can modify the colleciton validation expressions by:
collMod command.tls-Prefixed Configuration¶Starting in MongoDB 4.2, MongoDB adds "tls"-prefixed options as aliases for the "ssl"-prefixed options.
If your deployments or clients use the "tls"-prefixed options, replace with the corresponding "ssl"-prefixed options for the mongod, the mongos, and the mongo shell and drivers.
zstd Compression¶zstd Data Compression¶The zstd compression library is available starting in version 4.2.
If your standalone has any data using zstd compression:
Tip
Perform this step after all the other prerequisite steps have been performed.
mongodump of your database before starting the downgrade; mongodump outputs uncompressed data.
Include any other options, such as --username, --password, and --authenticationDatabase if your standalone enforces access control.
data directory for the mongod instance. This directory will be used in the downgrade procedure below.
Important
Ensure that the user account running mongod has read and write permissions for the new directory.
storage.wiredTiger.collectionConfig.blockCompressor to use the default compressor (snappy) or set to another 4.0 supported compressor.storage.dbPath to the new data directory.zstd Journal Compression¶The zstd compression library is available for journal data compression starting in version 4.2.
If the mongod instance uses zstd library for its journal compressor:
storage.wiredTiger.engineConfig.journalCompressor to use the default compressor (snappy) or set to another 4.0 supported compressor.zstd Network Compression¶The zstd compression library is available for network message compression starting in version 4.2.
To prepare for the downgrade:
mongod instance that uses zstd for network message compression and uses a configuration file, update the net.compression.compressors setting to prepare for the restart during the downgrade procedure.
zstd in its URI connection string, update to remove zstd from the list.mongo shell that specifies zstd in its --networkMessageCompressors, update to remove zstd from the list.Important
Messages are compressed when both parties enable network compression. Otherwise, messages between the parties are uncompressed.
Important
Remove client-side field level encryption code in applications prior to downgrading the server.
MongoDB 4.2 adds support for enforcing client-side field level encryption as part of a collection’s JSON Schema document validation. Specifically, the $jsonSchema object supports the encrypt and encryptMetadata keywords. MongoDB 4.0 does not support these keywords and fails to start if any collection specifies those keywords as part of its validation $jsonSchema.
Use db.getCollectionInfos() on each database to identify collections specifying automatic field level encryption rules as part of the $jsonSchema validator. To prepare for downgrade, do either of the following operations for each collection using the 4.0-incompatible keywords:
collMod to modify the collection’s validator and replace the $jsonSchema with a schema that contains only 4.0-compatible document validation syntax:
-or-
collMod to remove the validator object entirely:
Warning
Before proceeding with the downgrade procedure, ensure that the prerequisites have been completed.
Using either a package manager or a manual download, get the latest release in the 4.0 series. If using a package manager, add a new repository for the 4.0 binaries, then perform the actual downgrade process.
Once upgraded to 4.2, if you need to downgrade, we recommend downgrading to the latest patch release of 4.0.
mongod instance.¶mongod instance. To safely terminate the mongod process, you can connect a mongo shell to the instance and run:
For additional methods to safely terminate your mongod instance, see Stop mongod Processes.
mongod binary and restart.
Note
If you use command-line options instead of a configuration file, update the command-line options as appropriate during the restart.
mongod instance used zstd data compression,--dbpath to the new directory (created during the prerequisites).--wiredTigerCollectionBlockCompressor to use the default snappy compressor (or, alternatively, explicitly set to a 4.0 supported compressor).mongod instance used zstd journal compression,--wiredTigerJournalCompressor to use the default snappy compressor (or, alternatively, explicitly set to a 4.0 supported compressor).mongod instance included zstd network message compression,--networkMessageCompressors to enable message compression using the default snappy,zlib compressors. Alternatively, explicitly specify the compressor(s).zstd compression, restore data.¶Skip this step if you have not downgraded from a standalone that used zstd compression.
If you have downgraded from a standalone that used zstd, you have created a dump of your data as a prerequisite. Use mongorestore to restore that data to your 4.0 standalone.