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Learn MongoDB 4.x

You're reading from   Learn MongoDB 4.x A guide to understanding MongoDB development and administration for NoSQL developers

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789619386
Length 610 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Doug Bierer Doug Bierer
Author Profile Icon Doug Bierer
Doug Bierer
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Essentials
2. Introducing MongoDB 4.x FREE CHAPTER 3. Setting Up MongoDB 4.x 4. Essential MongoDB Administration Techniques 5. Section 2: Building a Database-Driven Web Application
6. Fundamentals of Database Design 7. Mission-Critical MongoDB Database Tasks 8. Using AJAX and REST to Build a Database-Driven Website 9. Section 3: Digging Deeper
10. Advanced MongoDB Database Design 11. Using Documents with Embedded Lists and Objects 12. Handling Complex Queries in MongoDB 13. Section 4: Replication, Sharding, and Security in a Financial Environment
14. Working with Complex Documents Across Collections 15. Administering MongoDB Security 16. Developing in a Secured Environment 17. Deploying a Replica Set 18. Replica Set Runtime Management and Development 19. Deploying a Sharded Cluster 20. Sharded Cluster Management and Development 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Document distribution within shards

For greater efficiency, the MongoDB sharded cluster balancer (the sharding mechanism) doesn't operate at the document level. Rather, documents are grouped into chunks. Which documents are placed into a given chunk is determined by the shard key range. Mongo shell helper methods exist that let you view the size of individual shards and manually move one or more chunks from one shard to another. This process is known as chunk migration (covered in the next chapter, Chapter 16, Sharded Cluster Management and Development).

Here is a diagram that illustrates the shard key's distributional role:

The overall diagram represents a sharded cluster. In this diagram, we're assuming the shard key is a field named X. Within each shard is a distribution of two chunks. Within each chunk is a group of documents. The key space for X ranges from its smallest value, labeled X:minKey,to its largest, labelled X:maxKey. The...

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