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- Replica Set Protocol Version
Replica Set Protocol Version¶
Starting in version 4.0, MongoDB only supports replica set protocol
version 1 (pv1
). pv1
is the default for
all new replica sets created with MongoDB 3.2 or later.
Preservation of Writes¶
w:1
Writes¶
With pv1
, you can use
catchUpTimeoutMillis
to prioritize between faster
failovers and preservation of w:1
writes.
w: "majority"
Writes¶
pv1
guarantees the preservation of confirmed w:
"majority"
writes.
Availability¶
pv1
is available in MongoDB version 3.2 or later and is the default
for all new replica sets created with version 3.2 or later.
Arbiters¶
For the following MongoDB versions, pv1
increases the likelihood
of w:1
rollbacks compared to pv0
(no longer supported in MongoDB 4.0+) for replica sets with arbiters:
- MongoDB 3.4.1
- MongoDB 3.4.0
- MongoDB 3.2.11 or earlier
For the other versions of MongoDB that support pv1
, pv1
does
not increase the likelihood of w:1
rollbacks for
replica sets with arbiters.
Priorities¶
For the following MongoDB versions, pv1
increases the likelihood
of w:1
rollbacks compared to pv0
(no longer supported in MongoDB 4.0+) for replica sets with different
members[n].priority
settings:
- MongoDB 3.4.1
- MongoDB 3.4.0
- MongoDB 3.2.11 or earlier
For the other versions of MongoDB that support pv1
, pv1
does
not increase the likelihood of w:1
rollbacks for
replica sets with different members[n].priority
settings.
Vetoes¶
pv1
does not use vetoes. Individual members can vote for or against
a candidate in a particular election, but cannot individually veto (abort)
an election unilaterally.
Detection of Simultaneous Primaries¶
In some circumstances, two nodes in a replica set
may transiently believe that they are the primary, but at most, one
of them will be able to complete writes with { w:
"majority" }
write concern. The node that can complete
{ w: "majority" }
writes is the current
primary, and the other node is a former primary that has not yet
recognized its demotion, typically due to a network partition.
When this occurs, clients that connect to the former primary may
observe stale data despite having requested read preference
primary
, and new writes to the former primary will
eventually roll back.
pv1
uses the concept of term. This allows for a faster
detection of simultaneous primaries and for multiple successful
elections in a short period of time.
Back to Back Elections¶
pv1
makes a “best-effort” attempt to have the secondary with the
highest priority
available call an election. This
could lead to back-to-back elections as eligible members with
higher priority can call an election.
However, in MongoDB 3.6+ (as well as MongoDB 3.4.2+ and 3.2.12+), for pv1
:
- Priority elections have been limited to occur only if the higher priority node is within 10 seconds of the current primary.
- Arbiters will vote no in elections if they detect a healthy primary of equal or greater priority to the candidate.
Double Voting¶
pv1
prevents double voting in one member’s call for election. This
is achieved through its use of terms.
Modify Replica Set Protocol Version¶
Starting in version 4.0, MongoDB only supports replica set protocol
version 1 (pv1
).
However, MongoDB 3.2 through MongoDB 3.6 support replica set protocol
version 1
and protocol version 0
.
Before changing the protocol version for MongoDB 3.2 through MongoDB
3.6, ensure that at least one oplog entry (generated from the current
protocol version) has replicated from the primary to all secondaries.
To check, on each secondary, check the optimes.lastCommittedOpTime.t
field returned from
rs.status()
. For example, connect a mongo
shell to each secondary and run:
- If the current replica set protocol version is
0
, thet
is equal to-1
. - If the current replica set protocol version is
1
, thet
is greater than-1
.
Once you have verified that at least one oplog entry (using the current protocol version) has replicated to all the secondaries, you can change the protocol version.
To change the replica set protocol version, reconfigure
(rs.reconfig
) the replica set with the new
protocolVersion
. For example, to upgrade to pv1
, connect
a mongo
shell to the current primary and perform the
following sequence of operations:
You can use catchUpTimeoutMillis
to prioritize
between faster failovers and preservation of w:1
writes.