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Copy data from or to MongoDB using Azure Data Factory or Synapse Analytics

APPLIES TO: Azure Data Factory Azure Synapse Analytics

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This article outlines how to use the Copy Activity in Azure Data Factory Synapse Analytics pipelines to copy data from and to a MongoDB database. It builds on the copy activity overview article that presents a general overview of copy activity.

Important

The new MongoDB connector provides improved native MongoDB support. If you are using the legacy MongoDB connector in your solution, supported as-is for backward compatibility only, refer to MongoDB connector (legacy) article.

Supported capabilities

This MongoDB connector is supported for the following capabilities:

Supported capabilities IR
Copy activity (source/sink) ① ②

① Azure integration runtime ② Self-hosted integration runtime

For a list of data stores that are supported as sources/sinks, see the Supported data stores table.

Specifically, this MongoDB connector supports versions up to 4.2. If your work requires versions newer than 4.2, consider using MongoDB Atlas with the MongoDB Atlas connector, which provides more comprehensive support and features.

Prerequisites

If your data store is located inside an on-premises network, an Azure virtual network, or Amazon Virtual Private Cloud, you need to configure a self-hosted integration runtime to connect to it.

If your data store is a managed cloud data service, you can use the Azure Integration Runtime. If the access is restricted to IPs that are approved in the firewall rules, you can add Azure Integration Runtime IPs to the allow list.

You can also use the managed virtual network integration runtime feature in Azure Data Factory to access the on-premises network without installing and configuring a self-hosted integration runtime.

For more information about the network security mechanisms and options supported by Data Factory, see Data access strategies.

Getting started

To perform the Copy activity with a pipeline, you can use one of the following tools or SDKs:

Create a linked service to MongoDB using UI

Use the following steps to create a linked service to MongoDB in the Azure portal UI.

  1. Browse to the Manage tab in your Azure Data Factory or Synapse workspace and select Linked Services, then click New:

  2. Search for MongoDB and select the MongoDB connector.

    Select the MongoDB connector.

  3. Configure the service details, test the connection, and create the new linked service.

    Configure a linked service to MongoDB.

Connector configuration details

The following sections provide details about properties that are used to define Data Factory entities specific to MongoDB connector.

Linked service properties

The following properties are supported for MongoDB linked service:

Property Description Required
type The type property must be set to: MongoDbV2 Yes
connectionString Specify the MongoDB connection string e.g. mongodb://[username:password@]host[:port][/[database][?options]]. Refer to MongoDB manual on connection string for more details.

You can also put a connection string in Azure Key Vault. Refer to Store credentials in Azure Key Vault with more details.
Yes
database Name of the database that you want to access. Yes
connectVia The Integration Runtime to be used to connect to the data store. Learn more from Prerequisites section. If not specified, it uses the default Azure Integration Runtime. No

Example:

{
    "name": "MongoDBLinkedService",
    "properties": {
        "type": "MongoDbV2",
        "typeProperties": {
            "connectionString": "mongodb://[username:password@]host[:port][/[database][?options]]",
            "database": "myDatabase"
        },
        "connectVia": {
            "referenceName": "<name of Integration Runtime>",
            "type": "IntegrationRuntimeReference"
        }
    }
}

Dataset properties

For a full list of sections and properties that are available for defining datasets, see Datasets and linked services. The following properties are supported for MongoDB dataset:

Property Description Required
type The type property of the dataset must be set to: MongoDbV2Collection Yes
collectionName Name of the collection in MongoDB database. Yes

Example:

{
    "name": "MongoDbDataset",
    "properties": {
        "type": "MongoDbV2Collection",
        "typeProperties": {
            "collectionName": "<Collection name>"
        },
        "schema": [],
        "linkedServiceName": {
            "referenceName": "<MongoDB linked service name>",
            "type": "LinkedServiceReference"
        }
    }
}

Copy activity properties

For a full list of sections and properties available for defining activities, see the Pipelines article. This section provides a list of properties supported by MongoDB source and sink.

MongoDB as source

The following properties are supported in the copy activity source section:

Property Description Required
type The type property of the copy activity source must be set to: MongoDbV2Source Yes
filter Specifies selection filter using query operators. To return all documents in a collection, omit this parameter or pass an empty document ({}). No
cursorMethods.project Specifies the fields to return in the documents for projection. To return all fields in the matching documents, omit this parameter. No
cursorMethods.sort Specifies the order in which the query returns matching documents. Refer to cursor.sort(). No
cursorMethods.limit Specifies the maximum number of documents the server returns. Refer to cursor.limit(). No
cursorMethods.skip Specifies the number of documents to skip and from where MongoDB begins to return results. Refer to cursor.skip(). No
batchSize Specifies the number of documents to return in each batch of the response from MongoDB instance. In most cases, modifying the batch size will not affect the user or the application. Azure Cosmos DB limits each batch cannot exceed 40 MB in size, which is the sum of the batchSize number of documents' size, so decrease this value if your document size being large. No
(the default is 100)

Tip

The service supports consuming BSON document in Strict mode. Make sure your filter query is in Strict mode instead of Shell mode. More description can be found at MongoDB manual.

Example:

"activities":[
    {
        "name": "CopyFromMongoDB",
        "type": "Copy",
        "inputs": [
            {
                "referenceName": "<MongoDB input dataset name>",
                "type": "DatasetReference"
            }
        ],
        "outputs": [
            {
                "referenceName": "<output dataset name>",
                "type": "DatasetReference"
            }
        ],
        "typeProperties": {
            "source": {
                "type": "MongoDbV2Source",
                "filter": "{datetimeData: {$gte: ISODate(\"2018-12-11T00:00:00.000Z\"),$lt: ISODate(\"2018-12-12T00:00:00.000Z\")}, _id: ObjectId(\"5acd7c3d0000000000000000\") }",
                "cursorMethods": {
                    "project": "{ _id : 1, name : 1, age: 1, datetimeData: 1 }",
                    "sort": "{ age : 1 }",
                    "skip": 3,
                    "limit": 3
                }
            },
            "sink": {
                "type": "<sink type>"
            }
        }
    }
]

MongoDB as sink

The following properties are supported in the Copy Activity sink section:

Property Description Required
type The type property of the Copy Activity sink must be set to MongoDbV2Sink. Yes
writeBehavior Describes how to write data to MongoDB. Allowed values: insert and upsert.

The behavior of upsert is to replace the document if a document with the same _id already exists; otherwise, insert the document.

Note: The service automatically generates an _id for a document if an _id isn't specified either in the original document or by column mapping. This means that you must ensure that, for upsert to work as expected, your document has an ID.
No
(the default is insert)
writeBatchSize The writeBatchSize property controls the size of documents to write in each batch. You can try increasing the value for writeBatchSize to improve performance and decreasing the value if your document size being large. No
(the default is 10,000)
writeBatchTimeout The wait time for the batch insert operation to finish before it times out. The allowed value is timespan. No
(the default is 00:30:00 - 30 minutes)

Tip

To import JSON documents as-is, refer to Import or export JSON documents section; to copy from tabular-shaped data, refer to Schema mapping.

Example

"activities":[
    {
        "name": "CopyToMongoDB",
        "type": "Copy",
        "inputs": [
            {
                "referenceName": "<input dataset name>",
                "type": "DatasetReference"
            }
        ],
        "outputs": [
            {
                "referenceName": "<Document DB output dataset name>",
                "type": "DatasetReference"
            }
        ],
        "typeProperties": {
            "source": {
                "type": "<source type>"
            },
            "sink": {
                "type": "MongoDbV2Sink",
                "writeBehavior": "upsert"
            }
        }
    }
]

Import and export JSON documents

You can use this MongoDB connector to easily:

  • Copy documents between two MongoDB collections as-is.
  • Import JSON documents from various sources to MongoDB, including from Azure Cosmos DB, Azure Blob storage, Azure Data Lake Store, and other supported file-based stores.
  • Export JSON documents from a MongoDB collection to various file-based stores.

To achieve such schema-agnostic copy, skip the "structure" (also called schema) section in dataset and schema mapping in copy activity.

Schema mapping

To copy data from MongoDB to tabular sink or reversed, refer to schema mapping.

Upgrade the MongoDB linked service

Here are steps that help you upgrade your linked service and related queries:

  1. Create a new MongoDB linked service and configure it by referring to Linked service properties.

  2. If you use SQL queries in your pipelines that refer to the old MongoDB linked service, replace them with the equivalent MongoDB queries. See the following table for the replacement examples:

    SQL query Equivalent MongoDB query
    SELECT * FROM users db.users.find({})
    SELECT username, age FROM users db.users.find({}, {username: 1, age: 1})
    SELECT username AS User, age AS Age, statusNumber AS Status, CASE WHEN Status = 0 THEN "Pending" CASE WHEN Status = 1 THEN "Finished" ELSE "Unknown" END AS statusEnum LastUpdatedTime + interval '2' hour AS NewLastUpdatedTime FROM users db.users.aggregate([{ $project: { _id: 0, User: "$username", Age: "$age", Status: "$statusNumber", statusEnum: { $switch: { branches: [ { case: { $eq: ["$Status", 0] }, then: "Pending" }, { case: { $eq: ["$Status", 1] }, then: "Finished" } ], default: "Unknown" } }, NewLastUpdatedTime: { $add: ["$LastUpdatedTime", 2 * 60 * 60 * 1000] } } }])
    SELECT employees.name, departments.name AS department_name FROM employees LEFT JOIN departments ON employees.department_id = departments.id; db.employees.aggregate([ { $lookup: { from: "departments", localField: "department_id", foreignField: "_id", as: "department" } }, { $unwind: "$department" }, { $project: { _id: 0, name: 1, department_name: "$department.name" } } ])

For a list of data stores supported as sources and sinks by the copy activity, see supported data stores.