mlaunch#
This tool lets you quickly spin up and monitor MongoDB environments on your local machine. It supports various configurations of stand-alone servers, replica sets and sharded clusters. Individual nodes or groups of nodes can easily be stopped and started again.
In addition to all the listed parameters of mlaunch below, you can pass in
any arbitrary options that a mongos
or mongod
binary would understand,
and mlaunch will pass them on to the correct binary. This includes the
-f
option to read further options from a MongoDB configuration file.
Usage#
mlaunch [-h] [--version] [--no-progressbar]
{init,start,stop,restart,list,kill} ...
General Parameters#
The following parameters work with all commands.
Help#
-h, --help
shows the help text and exits.
Version#
--version
shows the version number and exits.
Verbosity#
--verbose
This will print additional information, depending on each of the commands.
Data directory#
--dir DIR
This parameter changes the directory where mlaunch stores its data and log files. By default, the directory is the local directory
./data
, below the current working directory.
Commands#
mlaunch
uses different commands to initialize, stop, start and list test
environments. The general syntax is:
mlaunch <command> [--parameters ...]
where <command>
is one of the following choices:
init
: creates an initial environment and starts all nodesstop
: stops some or all nodes in the current environmentstart
: starts some or all nodes in the current environmentlist
: shows a list of the current environmentkill
: sends a kill (or other) signal to the nodes in the current environment
For a given environment (specified by its data directory with the --dir
argument, the default is ./data
), the init
command only needs to be
called once. mlaunch
stores the configuration in a config file within the
data directory, called .mlaunch_startup
. With this file, mlaunch remembers
the configuration and can start
and stop
nodes when required.
init#
This command initializes and starts MongoDB stand-alone instances, replica
sets, or sharded clusters. It only needs to be called once for each environment
(specified by its data directory with the --dir
argument, the default is
./data
).
Usage#
mlaunch init [-h] (--single | --replicaset) [--nodes NUM] [--arbiter]
[--name NAME] [--priority] [--sharded N [N ...]]
[--config NUM] [--csrs] [--mongos NUM] [--verbose]
[--port PORT] [--binarypath PATH] [--dir DIR]
[--hostname HOSTNAME] [--auth] [--username USERNAME]
[--password PASSWORD] [--auth-db DB]
[--auth-roles [ROLE [ROLE ...]]] [--auth-role-docs]
[--no-initial-user] [--sslCAFile SSLCAFILE]
[--sslCRLFile SSLCRLFILE] [--sslAllowInvalidHostnames]
[--sslAllowInvalidCertificates]
[--sslMode {disabled,allowSSL,preferSSL,requireSSL}]
[--sslPEMKeyFile SSLPEMKEYFILE]
[--sslPEMKeyPassword SSLPEMKEYPASSWORD]
[--sslClusterFile SSLCLUSTERFILE]
[--sslClusterPassword SSLCLUSTERPASSWORD]
[--sslDisabledProtocols SSLDISABLEDPROTOCOLS]
[--sslAllowConnectionsWithoutCertificates] [--sslFIPSMode]
[--sslClientCertificate SSLCLIENTCERTIFICATE]
[--sslClientPEMKeyFile SSLCLIENTPEMKEYFILE]
[--sslClientPEMKeyPassword SSLCLIENTPEMKEYPASSWORD]
For convenience and backwards compatibility, the init
command is the
default command and can be omitted.
Required Parameters#
The init
command requires exactly one of the following two parameters
to run: --single
or --replicaset
. They are mutually exclusive and one
must be specified for each mlaunch init
execution.
--single
This parameter will create a single stand-alone node. If
--sharded
is also specified, this parameter will create each shard as a single stand-alone node.For example, to start a single
mongod
instance on port 27017:mlaunch --single
--replicaset
This parameter will create a replica set rather than a single node. Other Replica Set Parameters apply and can modify the properties of the replica set to launch. If
--sharded
is also specified, this parameter will create one such replica sets for each shard.For example, to start a replica set with (by default) 3 nodes on ports 27017, 27018, 27019:
mlaunch --replicaset
Replica Set Parameters#
The following parameters change how a replica set is set up. These parameters
require that you picked the --replicaset
option from the required
parameters.
--nodes N
Specifies the number of data-bearing nodes (arbiters not included) for this replica set. The default value is 3.
For example:
mlaunch --replicaset --nodes 5
This command starts 5 mongod instances and configures them to one replica set.
--arbiter
If this parameter is present, an additional arbiter is added to the replica set. Currently, mlaunch only supports adding one arbiter. Additional arbiters can be started and added to the replica set manually.
For example:
mlaunch --replicaset --nodes 2 --arbiter
This command starts 2 data-bearing mongod instances and adds one arbiter to the replica set, for a total of 3 voting nodes.
--name NAME
This option lets you modify the name of the replica set. This will change both the name and the sub-directory of the
dbpath
. This option is only allowed for a single replica sets and will not work in sharded setups, where replica set names are equivalent to the shard names. The default name isreplset
.For example:
mlaunch --replicaset --name "my_rs_1"
This command will create a replica set with the name
my_rs_1
and will also store the dbpath and log files under./data/my_rs_1
.
Sharding Parameters#
The following parameters influence the setup of a sharded environment. Each shard will be a copy of the previously specified setup, be it a single instance or a replica set.
--sharded S [S ...]
If this parameter is provided, sharding is enabled and mlaunch will create the specified number of shards and add the shards together to a sharded cluster. The parameter can work in two ways: Either by specifying a single number, which is the number of shards, or by specifying a list of shard names.
For example:
mlaunch --single --sharded 3
This command will create an environment of 3 shards, each consisting of a single stand-alone node. The shard names are
shard0001
,shard0002
,shard0003
. It will also create 1 config server and 1 mongos per default.For example:
mlaunch --replicaset --sharded tic tac toe
This command will create 3 shards, named
tic
,tac
andtoe
. Each shard will consist of a replica set of (per default) 3 nodes. It will also create 1 config server and 1 mongos per default.--config N
This parameter determines, how many config servers are launched in a sharded environment. The default number is 1. The only valid options for
N
are 1 or 3.--csrs
This parameter has
mlaunch
use Config Servers as a Replica Set (CSRS) rather than the older Sync Cluster Connection Config (SCCC).The CSRS deployment option is supported by MongoDB 3.2+, and as of MongoDB 3.4 is the default (and only) supported option.
If you are using MongoDB 3.4 and greater,
mlaunch
will use CSRS by default.Changed in version 1.2.3
CSRS config servers will no longer include incompatible settings, such as:
--storageEngine
– CSRS config servers will always use WiredTiger.--arbiter
– CSRS config servers cannot have any arbiter.
--mongos N
This parameter determines, how many
mongos
instances are launched in a sharded environment. The default number is 1. With this setting, the default can be changed toN
mongos instances.
Authentication Parameters#
--auth
This parameter enables authentication on your setup. It will transparently work with single instances (that require
--auth
) as well as replica sets and sharded environments (that require--keyFile
). There is no need to additionally specify a keyfile, a random keyfile will be generated for you.A username and password will also be set up, either on the mongos for sharded environments, or on the primary node for replica sets or on a single node.
--username
This parameter changes the default username
user
to the specified user.--password
This parameter changes the default password
password
to the specified password.Note
The default password is chosen deliberately to be easy to remember or guess.
mlaunch
is meant for testing and issue reproduction, not for production use. Even a strong password will not guarantee security with mlaunch-generated environments, because the username and password are included in thedata/.mlaunch_startup
file in clear text.--auth-db
This parameter changes the default database, from
admin
, in which the user will be created.Note
If you change the database, it may not be possible for
mlaunch
to execute certain commands due to missing privileges. This may lead to unexpected behavior for somemlaunch
operations, like for examplemlaunch stop
, which uses the internalshutdown
command. If this is the case, usemlaunch kill
instead.--auth-roles
This parameter changes the initial default roles that the user will receive. The default roles are
dbAdminAnyDatabase
,readWriteAnyDatabase
,userAdminAnyDatabase
andclusterAdmin
. You can provide different roles with this parameter, separated by spaces.Note
If you change the default roles, it may not be possible for
mlaunch
to execute certain commands due to missing privileges. This may lead to unexpected behavior for somemlaunch
operations, like for examplemlaunch stop
, which uses the internalshutdown
command. If this is the case, usemlaunch kill
instead.For example:
mlaunch --sharded 2 --single --auth --username thomas --password my_s3cr3t_p4ssw0rd
This command would start a sharded cluster with 2 single shards, 1 config server, 1 mongos, and create the user
thomas
with passwordmy_s3cr3t_p4ssw0rd
. It will use the default roles and place the user in theadmin
database.mlaunch
will--auth-role-docs
Use with
--auth-roles
to interpret roles specified as JSON documents.--no-initial-user
Do not create an initial user if auth is enabled.
Optional Parameters#
--port PORT
Uses
PORT
as the start port number for the first instance, and increases the number by one for each additional instance (mongod/mongos). By default, the start port value is MongoDB’s standard port 27017. Use this parameter to start several setups in parallel on different port ranges.For example:
mlaunch --replicaset --nodes 3 --port 30000
This command would start a replica set of 3 nodes using ports 30000, 30001 and 30002.
--binarypath PATH
Will set the path where mlaunch looks for the binaries of
mongod
andmongos
to the providedPATH
. By default, the $PATH environment variable is used to determine which binary is started. You can use this option to overwrite the default setting. This is useful for example if you compile your own source code and want mlaunch to use the compiled version.For example:
mlaunch --single --binarypath ./build/bin
This command will look for the
mongod
binary in./build/bin/mongod
instead of the default location.
TLS/SSL options#
--sslCAFile SSLCAFILE
Certificate Authority file for TLS/SSL.
--sslCRLFile SSLCRLFILE
Certificate Revocation List file for TLS/SSL.
--sslAllowInvalidHostnames
Allow client and server certificates to provide non-matching hostnames.
--sslAllowInvalidCertificates
Allow client or server connections with invalid certificates.
Server TLS/SSL options#
--sslMode {disabled,allowSSL,preferSSL,requireSSL}
Set the TLS/SSL operation mode.
--sslPEMKeyFile SSLPEMKEYFILE
PEM file for TLS/SSL.
--sslPEMKeyPassword SSLPEMKEYPASSWORD
PEM file password.
--sslClusterFile SSLCLUSTERFILE
Key file for internal TLS/SSL authentication.
--sslClusterPassword SSLCLUSTERPASSWORD
Internal authentication key file password.
--sslDisabledProtocols SSLDISABLEDPROTOCOLS
Comma separated list of TLS protocols to disable [TLS1_0,TLS1_1,TLS1_2].
--sslAllowConnectionsWithoutCertificates
Allow client to connect without presenting a certificate.
--sslFIPSMode
Activate FIPS 140-2 mode.
Client TLS/SSL options#
--sslClientCertificate SSLCLIENTCERTIFICATE
Client certificate file for TLS/SSL.
--sslClientPEMKeyFile SSLCLIENTPEMKEYFILE
Client PEM file for TLS/SSL.
--sslClientPEMKeyPassword SSLCLIENTPEMKEYPASSWORD
Client PEM file password.
kill#
The kill
command stops some or all running nodes in the current
environment, depending on the specified tags, by sending the processes the
SIGTERM
(15) signal.
If no tags are specified, mlaunch kill
will kill all nodes. If one or more
tags are specified, mlaunch kill
will only kill the nodes that have all of
the given tags (set intersection). This works even if there is no admin
user with the clusterAdmin
role.
Instead of the SIGTERM
signal, other signals can be specified with the
--signal
parameter. (not available on Windows)
Usage#
mlaunch kill [TAG [TAG ...]] [--signal S] [--dir DIR] [--verbose]
Tag Parameters#
The following tags are used with mlaunch, although not all tags are present in every environment:
all
: all nodes in the environment.running
: all currently running nodes.down
: all currently down nodes.mongos
: all mongos processes carry this tag.mongod
: all mongod processes (including arbiters and config servers).config
: all config serversshard
: this tag is only used to identify a specific shard number (see below).<shard name>
: for sharded environments, each member of a shard carries the shard name as a tag, e.g. “shard-a”.primary
: all running primary nodes.secondary
: all running secondary nodes.arbiter
: all arbiters.<port number>
: each node carries its port number as a tag.
If a single tag is specified for the kill
command, the nodes matching this
tag will be killed. If multiple tags are specified, only the nodes matching
all tags are killed. Each tag will narrow down the set of matches further.
For example:
mlaunch kill
This command kills all running nodes in the current environment.
For example:
mlaunch kill mongos
This command kills all running mongos processes in the current environment.
For example:
mlaunch kill shard-a secondary
This command kills all running secondary nodes of the shard called ‘shard-a’ in the current environment.
For example:
mlaunch kill config primary
This command would not kill any nodes, because there is no node with both tags
config
and primary
.
For example:
mlaunch kill 27017
This command would kill the node running on port 27017.
In addition, some tags can be combined with a succeeding number. These tags
are: mongos
, shard
, config
, secondary
.
For example:
mlaunch kill shard 1
This command kills all members of shard 1 in the current _sharded_ environment.
For example:
mlaunch kill shard 2 primary
This command kills the primary of the second shard in the current _sharded_ environment.
For example:
mlaunch kill secondary 1
This command kills the first secondary node of all shards if the environment is _sharded_. If the environment is a _replicaset_, it only applies to the first secondary.
For example:
mlaunch kill
This command sends signal SIGTERM
(15) to all running processes in the
current environment.
For example:
mlaunch kill --signal SIGUSR1
This command sends signal SIGUSR1
(30) to all running processes in the
current environment, which in MongoDB causes a log rotation.
start#
The start
command starts some or all nodes that are currently down in the
current environment, depending on the specified tags. If no tags are specified,
mlaunch start
will start all nodes. If one or more tags are specified,
mlaunch start
will only start the nodes that have all of the given tags
(set intersection).
Usage#
mlaunch start [TAG [TAG ...]] [--dir DIR] [--verbose]
Tag Parameters#
The following tags are used with mlaunch, although not all tags are present in every environment:
all
: all nodes in the environment.running
: all currently running nodes.down
: all currently down nodes.mongos
: all mongos processes carry this tag.mongod
: all mongod processes (including arbiters and config servers).config
: all config serversshard
: this tag is only used to identify a specific shard number (see below).<shard name>
: for sharded environments, each member of a shard carries the shard name as a tag, e.g. “shard-a”.arbiter
: all arbiters.<port number>
: each node carries its port number as a tag.
Different to the stop
command, there tags for primary
and secondary
are not available for the start
command. This is because the replica set
state of a running node is undetermined.
For examples, see stop.
stop#
The stop
command stops some or all running nodes in the current
environment, depending on the specified tags, by sending the shutdown
command to the mongod or mongos instance.
If no tags are specified, mlaunch stop
will stop all nodes. If one or more
tags are specified, mlaunch stop
will only stop the nodes that have all of
the given tags (set intersection).
In authenticated environments, the stop
command requires a user in the
admin
database with the clusterAdmin
role. Otherwise the stop
command will not succeed. In that case, you can use the kill
command
instead.
Changed in version 1.2.3
As of version 1.2.3, the stop
command is an alias for the kill
command.
For examples, see kill.
Usage#
mlaunch stop [TAG [TAG ...]] [--dir DIR] [--verbose]
restart#
The restart
command stops, then restarts some or all nodes in the current
environment, depending on the specified tags. It is added for convenience and
behaves like a stop
and start
command in succession. If no tags are
specified, mlaunch restart
will restart all nodes. If one or more tags are
specified, mlaunch restart
will only restart the nodes that have all of the
given tags (set intersection).
Usage#
mlaunch restart [TAG [TAG ...]] [--dir DIR] [--verbose]
list#
The list
command shows an overview of all nodes in the current environment,
as well as their status (running/down) and port. With the optional
--verbose
flag, the list command also shows all tags for each node.
Usage#
mlaunch list [-h] [--dir DIR] [--json] [--tags] [--startup] [--verbose]
For example:
mlaunch list
PROCESS STATUS PORT
mongos running 27017
mongos running 27018
config server running 27025
config server running 27026
config server down 27027
shard01
primary running 27019
secondary running 27020
arbiter running 27021
shard02
mongod down 27022
mongod down 27023
mongod down 27024
This command displays a list of all nodes, their status and port number. In this case, the environment was started with:
mlaunch --sharded 2 --replicaset --nodes 2 --arbiter --config 3 --mongos 2
Optional Parameters#
--json
This option outputs the results in JSON format, which may be useful for integration with other tools or scripts.
--tags
This option additionally shows a column with all the tags that the instance can be addressed with. Tags can be used to target certain instances for
start
,stop
,kill
, etc. commands.For example:
mlaunch list --tags PROCESS STATUS PORT TAGS primary running 27017 27017, all, mongod, primary, running secondary running 27018 27018, all, mongod, running, secondary mongod down 27019 27019, all, down, mongod
This command displays a list of all nodes, their status and port number, and in addition, their tags. In this case, the environment was started with:
mlaunch --replicaset
--startup
This option additionally shows a column with the startup strings that was used to run the given instance. This is useful to if an instance needs to be started manually.
For example:
mlaunch list --startup PROCESS PORT STATUS PID STARTUP COMMAND secondary 27017 running 4264 mongod --replSet replset --dbpath /tmp/data/replset/rs1/db --logpath /tmp/data/replset/rs1/mongod.log --port 27017 --logappend --fork -vv mongod 27018 running 4267 mongod --replSet replset --dbpath /tmp/data/replset/rs2/db --logpath /tmp/data/replset/rs2/mongod.log --port 27018 --logappend --fork -vv mongod 27019 running 4270 mongod --replSet replset --dbpath /tmp/data/replset/rs3/db --logpath /tmp/data/replset/rs3/mongod.log --port 27019 --logappend --fork -vv
This command displays a list of all nodes, their status and port number, and in addition, their startup commands.
Disclaimer#
This software is not supported by MongoDB, Inc. under any of their commercial support subscriptions or otherwise. Any usage of mtools is at your own risk. Bug reports, feature requests and questions can be posted in the Issues section on GitHub.