mongoc_read_prefs_t - Man Page

A read preference abstraction

Synopsis

mongoc_read_prefs_t provides an abstraction on top of the MongoDB connection read preferences. It allows for hinting to the driver which nodes in a replica set should be accessed first and how.

You can specify a read preference mode on connection objects, database objects, collection objects, or per-operation.  Generally, it makes the most sense to stick with the global default mode, MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY.  All of the other modes come with caveats that won't be covered in great detail here.

Read Modes

MONGOC_READ_PRIMARYDefault mode. All operations read from the current replica set primary.
MONGOC_READ_SECONDARYAll operations read from among the nearest secondary members of the replica set.
MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY_PREFERREDIn most situations, operations read from the primary but if it is unavailable, operations read from secondary members.
MONGOC_READ_SECONDARY_PREFERREDIn most situations, operations read from among the nearest secondary members, but if no secondaries are available, operations read from the primary.
MONGOC_READ_NEARESTOperations read from among the nearest members of the replica set, irrespective of the member's type.

Tag Sets

Tag sets allow you to specify custom read preferences and write concerns so that your application can target operations to specific members.

Custom read preferences and write concerns evaluate tags sets in different ways: read preferences consider the value of a tag when selecting a member to read from, while write concerns ignore the value of a tag when selecting a member, except to consider whether or not the value is unique.

You can specify tag sets with the following read preference modes:

Tags are not compatible with MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY and, in general, only apply when selecting a secondary member of a set for a read operation. However, the nearest read mode, when combined with a tag set, will select the nearest member that matches the specified tag set, which may be a primary or secondary.

Tag sets are represented as a comma-separated list of colon-separated key-value pairs when provided as a connection string, e.g. dc:ny,rack:1.

To specify a list of tag sets, using multiple readPreferenceTags, e.g.

readPreferenceTags=dc:ny,rack:1;readPreferenceTags=dc:ny;readPreferenceTags=

Note the empty value for the last one, which means "match any secondary as a last resort".

Order matters when using multiple readPreferenceTags.

Tag Sets can also be configured using mongoc_read_prefs_set_tags().

All interfaces use the same member selection logic to choose the member to which to direct read operations, basing the choice on read preference mode and tag sets.

Max Staleness

When connected to replica set running MongoDB 3.4 or later, the driver estimates the staleness of each secondary based on lastWriteDate values provided in server hello responses.

Max Staleness is the maximum replication lag in seconds (wall clock time) that a secondary can suffer and still be eligible for reads. The default is MONGOC_NO_MAX_STALENESS, which disables staleness checks. Otherwise, it must be a positive integer at least MONGOC_SMALLEST_MAX_STALENESS_SECONDS (90 seconds).

Max Staleness is also supported by sharded clusters of replica sets if all servers run MongoDB 3.4 or later.

Hedged Reads

When connecting to a sharded cluster running MongoDB 4.4 or later, reads can be sent in parallel to the two "best" hosts.  Once one result returns, any other outstanding operations that were part of the hedged read are cancelled.

When the read preference mode is MONGOC_READ_NEAREST and the sharded cluster is running MongoDB 4.4 or later, hedged reads are enabled by default.  Additionally, hedged reads may be explicitly enabled or disabled by calling mongoc_read_prefs_set_hedge() with a BSON document, e.g.

{
   enabled: true
}

Appropriate values for the enabled key are true or false.

Author

MongoDB, Inc

Info

Nov 07, 2024 1.29.0 libmongoc