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- Manage Users and Roles
Manage Users and Roles¶
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Overview¶
This tutorial provides examples for user and role management under the MongoDB’s authorization model. Add Users describes how to add a new user to MongoDB.
Prerequisites¶
Important
If you have enabled access control for your deployment, you must
authenticate as a user with the required privileges specified in each
section. A user administrator with the
userAdminAnyDatabase
role, or userAdmin
role
in the specific databases, provides the required privileges to perform
the operations listed in this tutorial. See
Enable Access Control for details on adding user
administrator as the first user.
Create a User-Defined Role¶
Roles grant users access to MongoDB resources. MongoDB provides a number of built-in roles that administrators can use to control access to a MongoDB system. However, if these roles cannot describe the desired set of privileges, you can create new roles in a particular database.
Except for roles created in the admin
database, a role can only
include privileges that apply to its database and can only inherit from
other roles in its database.
A role created in the admin
database can include privileges that
apply to the admin
database, other databases or to the
cluster resource, and can inherit from roles
in other databases as well as the admin
database.
To create a new role, use the db.createRole()
method,
specifying the privileges in the privileges
array and the inherited
roles in the roles
array.
MongoDB uses the combination of the database name and the role name to
uniquely define a role. Each role is scoped to the database in which
you create the role, but MongoDB stores all role information in the
admin.system.roles
collection in the admin
database.
Prerequisites¶
To create a role in a database, you must have:
- the
createRole
action on that database resource. - the
grantRole
action on that database to specify privileges for the new role as well as to specify roles to inherit from.
Built-in roles userAdmin
and
userAdminAnyDatabase
provide createRole
and
grantRole
actions on their respective resources.
To create a role with authenticationRestrictions
specified, you
must have the setAuthenticationRestriction
action on the
database resource which the role is
created.
Create a Role to Manage Current Operations¶
The following example creates a role named manageOpRole
which
provides only the privileges to run both db.currentOp()
and
db.killOp()
. [1]
Note
Changed in version 3.2.9: On mongod
instances, users do not need any
specific privileges to view or kill their own operations. See
db.currentOp()
and db.killOp()
for details.
Connect to MongoDB with the appropriate privileges.¶
Connect to mongod
or mongos
with the privileges
specified in the Prerequisites section.
The following procedure uses the myUserAdmin
created in
Enable Access Control.
The myUserAdmin
has privileges to create roles in the admin
as well as other databases.
Create a new role to manage current operations.¶
manageOpRole
has privileges that act on multiple databases as well
as the cluster resource. As such, you must
create the role in the admin
database.
The new role grants permissions to kill any operations.
Warning
Terminate running operations with extreme caution. Only use
the db.killOp()
method or killOp
command to terminate operations initiated by clients
and do not terminate internal database operations.
[1] | The built-in role clusterMonitor also provides the
privilege to run db.currentOp() along with other
privileges, and the built-in role hostManager provides
the privilege to run db.killOp() along with other
privileges. |
Create a Role to Run mongostat
¶
The following example creates a role named mongostatRole
that
provides only the privileges to run mongostat
.
[2]
Connect to MongoDB with the appropriate privileges.¶
Connect to mongod
or mongos
with the privileges
specified in the Prerequisites section.
The following procedure uses the myUserAdmin
created in
Enable Access Control.
The myUserAdmin
has privileges to create roles in the admin
as well as other databases.
Create a new role to manage current operations.¶
mongostatRole
has privileges that act on the cluster
resource. As such, you must create the role in
the admin
database.
[2] | The built-in role
clusterMonitor also provides the privilege to run
mongostat along with other
privileges. |
Create a Role to Drop system.views
Collection across Databases¶
The following example creates a role named
dropSystemViewsAnyDatabase
that provides the privileges to drop the
system.views
collection in any database.
Connect to MongoDB with the appropriate privileges.¶
Connect to mongod
or mongos
with the privileges
specified in the Prerequisites section.
The following procedure uses the myUserAdmin
created in
Enable Access Control.
The myUserAdmin
has privileges to create roles in the admin
as well as other databases.
Create a new role to drop the system.views
collection in any database.¶
For the role, specify a privilege that consists of:
- an
actions
array that contains thedropCollection
action, and - a resource document that
specifies an empty string (
""
) for the database and the string"system.views"
for the collection. See Specify Collections Across Databases as Resource for more information.
Modify Access for an Existing User¶
Prerequisites¶
- You must have the
grantRole
action on a database to grant a role on that database. - You must have the
revokeRole
action on a database to revoke a role on that database. - To view a role’s information, you must be either explicitly granted the
role or must have the
viewRole
action on the role’s database.
Procedure¶
Connect to MongoDB with the appropriate privileges.¶
Connect to mongod
or mongos
as a user with
the privileges specified in the prerequisite section.
The following procedure uses the myUserAdmin
created in
Enable Access Control.
Identify the user’s roles and privileges.¶
To display the roles and privileges of the user to be modified, use the
db.getUser()
and db.getRole()
methods.
For example, to view roles for reportsUser
created in
Examples, issue:
To display the privileges granted to the user by the
readWrite
role on the "accounts"
database, issue:
Identify the privileges to grant or revoke.¶
If the user requires additional privileges, grant to the user the role, or roles, with the required set of privileges. If such a role does not exist, create a new role with the appropriate set of privileges.
To revoke a subset of privileges provided by an existing role: revoke the original role and grant a role that contains only the required privileges. You may need to create a new role if a role does not exist.
Modify the user’s access.¶
Revoke a Role¶
Revoke a role with the db.revokeRolesFromUser()
method.
The following example operation removes the readWrite
role on the accounts
database from the reportsUser
:
Grant a Role¶
Grant a role using the db.grantRolesToUser()
method. For example, the following operation grants the
reportsUser
user the read
role on the
accounts
database:
For sharded clusters, the changes to the user are instant on the
mongos
on which the command runs. However, for other
mongos
instances in the cluster, the user cache may wait
up to 10 minutes to refresh. See
userCacheInvalidationIntervalSecs
.
Modify the Password for an Existing User¶
Prerequisites¶
To modify the password of another user on a database, you must have the
changeAnyPassword
action
on that database.
Procedure¶
Connect to MongoDB with the appropriate privileges.¶
Connect to the mongod
or mongos
with the privileges
specified in the Prerequisites section.
The following procedure uses the myUserAdmin
created in
Enable Access Control.
Change the password.¶
Pass the user’s username and the new password to the
db.changeUserPassword()
method.
The following operation changes the reporting
user’s password to
SOh3TbYhxuLiW8ypJPxmt1oOfL
:
See also
View a User’s Roles¶
Prerequisites¶
To view another user’s information, you must have the
viewUser
action on the
other user’s database.
Users can view their own information.
Procedure¶
Connect to MongoDB with the appropriate privileges.¶
Connect to mongod
or mongos
as a user with
the privileges specified in the prerequisite section.
The following procedure uses the myUserAdmin
created in
Enable Access Control.
Identify the user’s roles.¶
Use the usersInfo
command or db.getUser()
method to
display user information.
For example, to view roles for reportsUser
created in
Examples, issue:
In the returned document, the roles
field displays all roles for reportsUser
:
View a Role’s Privileges¶
Prerequisites¶
To view a role’s information, you must be either explicitly granted the
role or must have the viewRole
action on the role’s database.
Procedure¶
Connect to MongoDB with the appropriate privileges.¶
Connect to mongod
or mongos
as a user with
the privileges specified in the prerequisite section.
The following procedure uses the myUserAdmin
created in
Enable Access Control.
Identify the privileges granted by a role.¶
For a given role, use the db.getRole()
method, or the
rolesInfo
command, with the showPrivileges
option:
For example, to view the privileges granted by read
role on
the products
database, use the following operation, issue:
In the returned document, the privileges
and
inheritedPrivileges
arrays. The
privileges
lists the privileges directly
specified by the role and excludes those privileges inherited
from other roles. The inheritedPrivileges
lists all privileges granted by this role, both directly
specified and inherited. If the role does not inherit from other
roles, the two fields are the same.