The database profiler captures data information about read and write operations, cursor operations, and database commands. To configure the database profile and set the thresholds for capturing profile data, see the Analyze Performance of Database Operations section.
The database profiler writes data in the system.profile collection, which is a capped collection. To view the profiler’s output, use normal MongoDB queries on the system.profile collection.
Note
Because the database profiler writes data to the system.profile collection in a database, the profiler will profile some write activity, even for databases that are otherwise read-only.
The documents in the system.profile collection have the following form. This example document reflects an update operation:
{
"ts" : ISODate("2012-12-10T19:31:28.977Z"),
"op" : "update",
"ns" : "social.users",
"query" : {
"name" : "jane"
},
"updateobj" : {
"$set" : {
"likes" : [
"basketball",
"trekking"
]
}
},
"nscanned" : 8,
"moved" : true,
"nmoved" : 1,
"nupdated" : 1,
"keyUpdates" : 0,
"numYield" : 0,
"lockStats" : {
"timeLockedMicros" : {
"r" : NumberLong(0),
"w" : NumberLong(258)
},
"timeAcquiringMicros" : {
"r" : NumberLong(0),
"w" : NumberLong(7)
}
},
"millis" : 0,
"client" : "127.0.0.1",
"user" : ""
}
For any single operation, the documents created by the database profiler will include a subset of the following fields. The precise selection of fields in these documents depends on the type of operation.
The timestamp of the operation.
The type of operation. The possible values are:
The namespace the operation targets. Namespaces in MongoDB take the form of the database, followed by a dot (.), followed by the name of the collection.
The query document used.
The command operation.
The ID of the cursor accessed by a getmore operation.
Changed in version 2.2: In 2.0, MongoDB includes this field for query and command operations. In 2.2, this information MongoDB also includes this field for getmore operations.
The number of documents the operation specified to return. For example, the profile command would return one document (a results document) so the ntoreturn value would be 1. The limit(5) command would return five documents so the ntoreturn value would be 5.
If the ntoreturn value is 0, the command did not specify a number of documents to return, as would be the case with a simple find() command with no limit specified.
New in version 2.2.
The number of documents the skip() method specified to skip.
The number of documents that MongoDB scans in the index in order to carry out the operation.
In general, if nscanned is much higher than nreturned, the database is scanning many objects to find the target objects. Consider creating an index to improve this.
If moved has a value of true indicates that the update operation moved one or more documents to a new location on disk. These operations take more time than in-place updates, and typically occur when documents grow as a result of document growth.
New in version 2.2.
The number of documents moved on disk by the operation.
New in version 2.2.
The number of documents updated by the operation.
New in version 2.2.
The number of index keys the update changed in the operation. Changing an index key carries a small performance cost because the database must remove the old key and inserts a new key into the B-tree index.
New in version 2.2.
The number of times the operation yielded to allow other operations to complete. Typically, operations yield when they need access to data that MongoDB has not yet fully read into memory. This allows other operations that have data in memory to complete while MongoDB reads in data for the yielding operation. For more information, see the FAQ on when operations yield.
New in version 2.2.
The time in microseconds the operation spent acquiring and holding locks. This field reports data for the following lock types:
The time in microseconds the operation held a specific lock. For operations that require more than one lock, like those that lock the local database to update the oplog, then this value may be longer than the total length of the operation (i.e. millis.)
The time in microseconds the operation spent waiting to acquire a specific lock.
The number of documents returned by the operation.
The length in bytes of the operation’s result document. A large responseLength can affect performance. To limit the size of the result document for a query operation, you can use any of the following:
The time in milliseconds for the server to perform the operation. This time does not include network time nor time to acquire the lock.
The IP address or hostname of the client connection where the operation originates.
For some operations, such as db.eval(), the client is 0.0.0.0:0 instead of an actual client.
The authenticated user who ran the operation.