'Mongodb v4.0 Transaction, MongoError: Transaction numbers are only allowed on a replica set member or mongos
I've installed MongoDB v4.0 for the most amazing feature of it Transaction in Nodejs with mongodb 3.1 as a driver.
When I try to use a transaction session I've faced this error:
MongoError: Transaction numbers are only allowed on a replica set member or mongos.
What's that and how can I get rid of it?
Any suggestion is appreciated.
Solution 1:[1]
I got the solution, and it's just three lines configuration inside the MongoDB config file.
After switching from MongoDB atlas and installing MongoDB v 4.4.0 on my CentOS 7 VPS with WHM, I faced that issue also.
the run-rs solution does not work for me, but I managed to solve this issue without any third-party tool, following these steps:
1. turn off mongod.
the most efficient way is by entering the MongoDB shell with the command mongo
checkout the method
db.shutdownServer()
You will be no ability to use the MongoDB server. For me, the shutdown process took too long, and then I killed the process with the command:
systemctl stop -f mongod
if you killed the mongod process,s probably you will need to run
mongod --dbpath /var/db --repair
The var/db should point to your database directory.
2. setting replicaSet configuration.
for the replicaSet settings step, check out the /etc/mongod.conf file,
look for the replication value line, and you should add the following lines as below:
replication:
oplogSizeMB: <int>
replSetName: <string>
enableMajorityReadConcern: <boolean>
use the replSetName value on the next step.
an example of those settings:
oplogSizeMB: 2000
replSetName: rs0
enableMajorityReadConcern: false
3. add your connection string URL.
add the value of replSetName to your connection URL &replicaSet=--YourReplicationSetName--
if you used the name rs0 from our example, then you should add to your DB connection URL query replicaSet=rs0
4. turn on mongod again
enter the command: systemctl start mongod
5. Access your replicaSet database
enter MongoDB shell with the command mongo, enter the command rs.initiate()
now you should be in your replicaSet database.
Solution 2:[2]
I faced the same issue recently. In my case it's because I'm connecting to a remote Mongo server with a different version than my local development environment.
To quickly solve the issue, I added the following param to my connection string:
?retryWrites=false
Solution 3:[3]
Possible solution for local development using docker
Create Dockerfile
FROM mongo:4.4.7
RUN echo "rs.initiate();" > /docker-entrypoint-initdb.d/replica-init.js
CMD [ "--replSet", "rs" ]
Build this Dockerfile
docker build ./ -t mongodb:4.7-replset
Run this created image
docker run --name mongodb-replset -p 27017:27017 -d mongodb:4.7-replset
Connect to database using this URI
mongodb://localhost:27017/myDB
Solution 4:[4]
In order to use transactions, you need a MongoDB replica set, and starting a replica set locally for development is an involved process.
You can use the run-rs npm module. Zero-config MongoDB runner. Starts a replica set with no non-Node dependencies, not even MongoDB.
Or you can simply create an account in MongoDB Atlas which gives you a limited resource MongoDB cluster and so you can run/test your application.
Solution 5:[5]
I've been fighting against this issue for weeks. I let you my conclusion. In order to be able to use transactions on a sharded cluster, you need to run at least MongoDB 4.2 on your cluster. If the cluster is not sharded, from 4.0. I was using a library that has as a sub-dependency mongodb NodeJS driver. This driver from version 3.3.x fails against the sharded MongoDB cluster with version 4.0.4. The solution for me was to update my cluster to 4.2 version.
Solution 6:[6]
Works for mongo:5.0.5-focal image.
Dockerfile:
FROM mongo:5.0.5-focal AS rs-mongo
# Make MongoDB a replica set to support transactions. Based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/68621185/1952977
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install patch
# How to create scripts/docker-entrypoint.sh.patch
# 1. Download the original file:
# wget https://github.com/docker-library/mongo/raw/master/5.0/docker-entrypoint.sh
# ( wget https://github.com/docker-library/mongo/raw/b5c0cd58cb5626fee4d963ce05ba4d9026deb265/5.0/docker-entrypoint.sh )
# 2. Make a copy of it:
# cp docker-entrypoint.sh docker-entrypoint-patched.sh
# 3. Add required modifications to docker-entrypoint-patched.sh
# 4. Create patch:
# diff -u docker-entrypoint.sh docker-entrypoint-patched.sh > scripts/docker-entrypoint.sh.patch
# 5. Clean up:
# rm docker-entrypoint.sh docker-entrypoint-patched.sh
COPY scripts/docker-entrypoint.sh.patch .
RUN patch /usr/local/bin/docker-entrypoint.sh docker-entrypoint.sh.patch
RUN mkdir -p /etc/mongo-key && chown mongodb:mongodb /etc/mongo-key
CMD ["--replSet", "rs", "--keyFile", "/etc/mongo-key/mongodb.key"]
scripts/docker-entrypoint.sh.patch:
--- docker-entrypoint.sh 2022-01-04 15:35:19.594435819 +0300
+++ docker-entrypoint-patched.sh 2022-01-06 10:16:26.285394681 +0300
@@ -288,6 +288,10 @@
fi
if [ -n "$shouldPerformInitdb" ]; then
+
+ openssl rand -base64 756 > /etc/mongo-key/mongodb.key
+ chmod 400 /etc/mongo-key/mongodb.key
+
mongodHackedArgs=( "$@" )
if _parse_config "$@"; then
_mongod_hack_ensure_arg_val --config "$tempConfigFile" "${mongodHackedArgs[@]}"
@@ -408,7 +412,14 @@
set -- "$@" --bind_ip_all
fi
- unset "${!MONGO_INITDB_@}"
+ echo 'Initiating replica set'
+ "$@" --logpath "/proc/$$/fd/1" --fork
+ echo 'rs.initiate({"_id":"rs","members":[{"_id":0,"host":"127.0.0.1:27017"}]});' | mongosh -u "$MONGO_INITDB_ROOT_USERNAME" -p "$MONGO_INITDB_ROOT_PASSWORD"
+ "$@" --logpath "/proc/$$/fd/1" --shutdown
+ echo 'Done initiating replica set'
+
+ unset "${!MONGO_INITDB_@}"
+
fi
rm -f "$jsonConfigFile" "$tempConfigFile"
docker-compose.yml:
version: '3.9'
services:
mongo:
image: rs-mongo:current
restart: always
env_file:
- .env
ports:
- 127.0.0.1:27017:27017
volumes:
- mongo-db:/data/db
- mongo-configdb:/data/configdb
- mongo-key:/etc/mongo-key
volumes:
mongo-db:
driver: local
mongo-configdb:
driver: local
mongo-key:
driver: local
UPDATED: 6th of Jan, 2022
Solution 7:[7]
When running MongoDB on a Linux Machine, you can simply use replication by updating connection string via editing service file
/lib/systemd/system/mongod.service
and update it with following
ExecStart=/usr/bin/mongod --config "/etc/mongod.conf" --replSet rs0
where --config "/etc/mongod.conf" is pointing to your MongoDB Configuration file and --replSet rs0 is telling it to use replication with the name of rs0
and then restart
sudo systemctl daemon-reload //<--To reload service units
sudo systemctl restart mongod //<--To Restart MongoDB Server
and then initiate replication through your mongod instance in terminal
$ mongosh
$ rs.initiate()
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
| Solution | Source |
|---|---|
| Solution 1 | |
| Solution 2 | Ricky |
| Solution 3 | Syao May |
| Solution 4 | Mohammad Rajabloo |
| Solution 5 | M. Gleria |
| Solution 6 | |
| Solution 7 | Airy |
