ArangoDB v3.9 reached End of Life (EOL) and is no longer supported.

This documentation is outdated. Please see the most recent version at docs.arangodb.com

Modifying a Collection

Load collection

loads a collection

PUT /_api/collection/{collection-name}/load

The load function is deprecated from version 3.8.0 onwards and is a no-op from version 3.9.0 onwards. It should no longer be used, as it may be removed in a future version of ArangoDB.

Accessing collections by their numeric ID is deprecated from version 3.4.0 on. You should reference them via their names instead.

Path Parameters

  • collection-name (string, required): The name of the collection.

Since ArangoDB version 3.9.0 this API does nothing. Previously it used to load a collection into memory.

The request body object might optionally contain the following attribute:

  • count: If set, this controls whether the return value should include the number of documents in the collection. Setting count to false may speed up loading a collection. The default value for count is true.

A call to this API returns an object with the following attributes for compatibility reasons:

  • id: The identifier of the collection.

  • name: The name of the collection.

  • count: The number of documents inside the collection. This is only returned if the count input parameters is set to true or has not been specified.

  • status: The status of the collection as number.

  • type: The collection type. Valid types are:
    • 2: document collection
    • 3: edge collection
  • isSystem: If true then the collection is a system collection.

Responses

HTTP 400: If the collection-name is missing, then a HTTP 400 is returned.

HTTP 404: If the collection-name is unknown, then a HTTP 404 is returned.

Examples

shell> curl -X PUT --header 'accept: application/json' --dump - http://localhost:8529/_api/collection/products/load

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
content-type: application/json
connection: Keep-Alive
content-length: 145
location: /_db/_system/_api/collection/products/load
server: ArangoDB
x-arango-queue-time-seconds: 0.000000
x-content-type-options: nosniff
Show response body

Unload collection

unloads a collection

PUT /_api/collection/{collection-name}/unload

The unload function is deprecated from version 3.8.0 onwards and is a no-op from version 3.9.0 onwards. It should no longer be used, as it may be removed in a future version of ArangoDB.

Accessing collections by their numeric ID is deprecated from version 3.4.0 on. You should reference them via their names instead.

Path Parameters

  • collection-name (string, required):

Since ArangoDB version 3.9.0 this API does nothing. Previously it used to unload a collection from memory, while preserving all documents. When calling the API an object with the following attributes is returned for compatibility reasons:

  • id: The identifier of the collection.

  • name: The name of the collection.

  • status: The status of the collection as number.

  • type: The collection type. Valid types are:
    • 2: document collection
    • 3: edges collection
  • isSystem: If true then the collection is a system collection.

Responses

HTTP 400: If the collection-name is missing, then a HTTP 400 is returned.

HTTP 404: If the collection-name is unknown, then a HTTP 404 is returned.

Examples

shell> curl -X PUT --header 'accept: application/json' --dump - http://localhost:8529/_api/collection/products/unload

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
content-type: application/json
connection: Keep-Alive
content-length: 135
location: /_db/_system/_api/collection/products/unload
server: ArangoDB
x-arango-queue-time-seconds: 0.000000
x-content-type-options: nosniff
Show response body

Load Indexes into Memory

Load Indexes into Memory

PUT /_api/collection/{collection-name}/loadIndexesIntoMemory

Accessing collections by their numeric ID is deprecated from version 3.4.0 on. You should reference them via their names instead.

Path Parameters

  • collection-name (string, required):

This route tries to cache index entries of this collection in main memory. Index lookups that can be served from the memory cache can be much faster than lookups not stored in the cache, so you can get a nice performance boost.

The endpoint iterates over suitable indexes of the collection and stores the indexed values, not the entire document data, in memory. Currently this is implemented only for edge indexes.

The endpoint returns as soon as the index warmup has been scheduled. The index warmup may still be ongoing in background even after the return value has already been sent. As all suitable indexes will be scanned, it may cause significant I/O activity and background load.

This function honors memory limits. If the indexes you want to load are smaller than your memory limit this function guarantees that most index values are cached. If the index is larger than your memory limit this function will fill up values up to this limit and for the time being there is no way to control which indexes of the collection should have priority over others.

It is guaranteed at all times that the in-memory cache data is consistent with the stored index data.

On success this endpoint returns an object with attribute result set to true

Responses

HTTP 200: If the index loading has been scheduled for all suitable indexes

HTTP 400: If the collection-name is missing, then a HTTP 400 is returned.

HTTP 404: If the collection-name is unknown, then a HTTP 404 is returned.

Examples

shell> curl -X PUT --header 'accept: application/json' --dump - http://localhost:8529/_api/collection/products/loadIndexesIntoMemory

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
content-type: application/json
connection: Keep-Alive
content-length: 40
location: /_db/_system/_api/collection/products/loadIndexesIntoMemory
server: ArangoDB
x-arango-queue-time-seconds: 0.000000
x-content-type-options: nosniff
Show response body

Change properties of a collection

changes a collection

PUT /_api/collection/{collection-name}/properties

Accessing collections by their numeric ID is deprecated from version 3.4.0 on. You should reference them via their names instead.

Path Parameters

  • collection-name (string, required): The name of the collection.

Request Body

  • waitForSync (boolean, optional): If true then the data is synchronized to disk before returning from a document create, update, replace or removal operation. (default: false)

  • cacheEnabled (boolean, optional): Whether the in-memory hash cache for documents should be enabled for this collection (default: false). Can be controlled globally with the --cache.size startup option. The cache can speed up repeated reads of the same documents via their document keys. If the same documents are not fetched often or are modified frequently, then you may disable the cache to avoid the maintenance costs.

  • schema (object, optional): Optional object that specifies the collection level schema for documents. The attribute keys rule, level and message must follow the rules documented in Document Schema Validation

  • replicationFactor (integer, optional): (The default is 1): in a cluster, this attribute determines how many copies of each shard are kept on different DB-Servers. The value 1 means that only one copy (no synchronous replication) is kept. A value of k means that k-1 replicas are kept. It can also be the string "satellite" for a SatelliteCollection, where the replication factor is matched to the number of DB-Servers (Enterprise Edition only).

    Any two copies reside on different DB-Servers. Replication between them is synchronous, that is, every write operation to the “leader” copy will be replicated to all “follower” replicas, before the write operation is reported successful.

    If a server fails, this is detected automatically and one of the servers holding copies take over, usually without an error being reported.

  • writeConcern (integer, optional): Write concern for this collection (default: 1). It determines how many copies of each shard are required to be in sync on the different DB-Servers. If there are less then these many copies in the cluster a shard will refuse to write. Writes to shards with enough up-to-date copies will succeed at the same time however. The value of writeConcern can not be larger than replicationFactor. (cluster only)

Changes the properties of a collection. Only the provided attributes are updated. Collection properties cannot be changed once a collection is created except for the listed properties, as well as the collection name via the rename endpoint (but not in clusters).

Responses

HTTP 400: If the collection-name is missing, then a HTTP 400 is returned.

HTTP 404: If the collection-name is unknown, then a HTTP 404 is returned.

Examples

shell> curl -X PUT --header 'accept: application/json' --data-binary @- --dump - http://localhost:8529/_api/collection/products/properties <<EOF
{ 
  "waitForSync" : true 
}
EOF

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
content-type: application/json
connection: Keep-Alive
content-length: 423
location: /_db/_system/_api/collection/products/properties
server: ArangoDB
x-arango-queue-time-seconds: 0.000000
x-content-type-options: nosniff
Show response body

Rename collection

renames a collection

PUT /_api/collection/{collection-name}/rename

Accessing collections by their numeric ID is deprecated from version 3.4.0 on. You should reference them via their names instead.

Path Parameters

  • collection-name (string, required): The name of the collection to rename.

Renames a collection. Expects an object with the attribute(s)

  • name: The new name.

It returns an object with the attributes

  • id: The identifier of the collection.

  • name: The new name of the collection.

  • status: The status of the collection as number.

  • type: The collection type. Valid types are:
    • 2: document collection
    • 3: edges collection
  • isSystem: If true then the collection is a system collection.

If renaming the collection succeeds, then the collection is also renamed in all graph definitions inside the _graphs collection in the current database.

Note: this method is not available in a cluster.

Responses

HTTP 400: If the collection-name is missing, then a HTTP 400 is returned.

HTTP 404: If the collection-name is unknown, then a HTTP 404 is returned.

Examples

shell> curl -X PUT --header 'accept: application/json' --data-binary @- --dump - http://localhost:8529/_api/collection/products1/rename <<EOF
{ 
  "name" : "newname" 
}
EOF

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
content-type: application/json
connection: Keep-Alive
content-length: 134
location: /_db/_system/_api/collection/products1/rename
server: ArangoDB
x-arango-queue-time-seconds: 0.000000
x-content-type-options: nosniff
Show response body

Recalculate count of a collection

recalculates the document count of a collection

PUT /_api/collection/{collection-name}/recalculateCount

Path Parameters

  • collection-name (string, required): The name of the collection.

Recalculates the document count of a collection, if it ever becomes inconsistent.

It returns an object with the attributes

  • result: will be true if recalculating the document count succeeded.

Responses

HTTP 200: If the document count was recalculated successfully, HTTP 200 is returned.

HTTP 404: If the collection-name is unknown, then a HTTP 404 is returned.

Compact the data of a collection

compact collection

PUT /_api/collection/{collection-name}/compact

Path Parameters

  • collection-name (string, required): Name of the collection to compact

Compacts the data of a collection in order to reclaim disk space. The operation will compact the document and index data by rewriting the underlying .sst files and only keeping the relevant entries.

Under normal circumstances, running a compact operation is not necessary, as the collection data will eventually get compacted anyway. However, in some situations, e.g. after running lots of update/replace or remove operations, the disk data for a collection may contain a lot of outdated data for which the space shall be reclaimed. In this case the compaction operation can be used.

Responses

HTTP 200: Compaction started successfully

HTTP 401: if the request was not authenticated as a user with sufficient rights

Examples

shell> curl -X PUT --header 'accept: application/json' --dump - http://localhost:8529/_api/collection/testCollection/compact

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
content-type: application/json
connection: Keep-Alive
content-length: 141
location: /_db/_system/_api/collection/testCollection/compact
server: ArangoDB
x-arango-queue-time-seconds: 0.000000
x-content-type-options: nosniff
Show response body