FAQ: Atlas Search
On this page
- Are there any charges for enabling and using Atlas Search?
- Can I run partial string matching Atlas Search queries?
- Can I perform case-insensitive search with the
wildcard
orregex
operator? - Does
storedSource
support case-insensitive collation on fields? - Can I use the shard key to run Atlas Search queries on specific shards?
- Do queries run on primary or secondary nodes?
- Can I duplicate an index?
- Does Atlas Search store my entire index in memory?
- Why is my search index disappearing?
- Can I restore Atlas Search indexes from Cloud Backup snapshots?
- Does Atlas Search work with CSFLE encrypting clients?
- Can I query CSFLE encrypted data?
- Can I use Queryable Encryption with Atlas Search?
- Can I use Atlas Search on time series collections?
- Can I request new functionality?
- Can MongoDB Support access my Search infrastructure and logs?
Are there any charges for enabling and using Atlas Search?
No, there are no additional fees or charges when you enable Atlas Search on your Atlas cluster. However, you might observe an increase in resource utilization on the cluster depending on factors such as the size of the indexed collections or index definitions. To manage and control Atlas Search resource utilization, you can deploy dedicated Search Nodes, which is an additive cost per node. We recommend this for your production environment.
Tip
See also:
Can I run partial string matching Atlas Search queries?
Yes. The following Atlas Search operators support partial string matching queries:
Tip
Can I perform case-insensitive search with the wildcard
or regex
operator?
Yes. You can use the wildcard and regex operators with a custom analyzer to perform a case-insensitive search. You can define a custom analyzer with the following tokenizer and token filter to perform a wildcard case-insensitive search:
Does storedSource
support case-insensitive collation on fields?
Yes. The Atlas Search storedSource option stores
original values. To perform case-insensitive operations after the
$search
stage on the results returned using
returnStoredSource option, you
must set the default collation strength of your collection to 1
or
2
when you create it, and must not specify a different collation in
your queries and indexes.
Can I use the shard key to run Atlas Search queries on specific shards?
No, you can't use the shard key to run Atlas Search queries on a specific shard or a subset of shards. In a sharded cluster environment, Atlas Search queries are scatter-gather queries that run on all the shards.
However, if you use zones to distribute
a sharded collection over a subset of the shards in the cluster,
Atlas Search routes the query to the zone that contains the shards for the
collection that you are querying and runs your $search
queries on just the shards where the collection is located.
Do queries run on primary or secondary nodes?
By default, queries run on the primary node. You can configure your read preference or use replica set tags to specify read preference. To learn more, see Atlas Search Overview.
Can I duplicate an index?
Yes, you can duplicate your index by performing the following:
Create a new Atlas Search index.
Create a new index with the Atlas Search JSON Editor. Paste the index you copied and click Create Search Index. You can make any edits you want directly in the Atlas Search JSON Editor or Atlas Search Visual Index Builder after you create the Atlas Search index.
Note
Work in Progress
We are currently working on a solution for this that doesn't require the steps mentioned above. If you'd like to vote for this feature, or submit your feedback, see this feedback item.
Does Atlas Search store my entire index in memory?
No, Atlas Search uses memory for the JVM heap metrics, which stores the autocomplete and text tokens of your search index. Similar to other database engines, Atlas Search stores the majority of the index files on the disk, which benefits from the underlying OS page cache.
Why is my search index disappearing?
Verify that you entered the correct database and collection names. If you enter a non-existent database or collection name, the Atlas UI temporarily builds the index and deletes it shortly after.
If you use the
$out
aggregation stage to overwrite your collection, you must delete and recreate your search index, as search indexes aren't copied to destination collections. To learn more, see $out Index Constraints.If you reshard a collection that uses Atlas Search, this operation removes existing search indexes. Once the sharding operation completes, you must manually rebuild your collection's search index.
Can I restore Atlas Search indexes from Cloud Backup snapshots?
For M10+
dedicated clusters running MongoDB 4.2 or higher,
Atlas will restore Atlas Search index definitions
from a Cloud Backup snapshot. Atlas doesn't restore the
index data, so the mongot
processes perform initial syncs for all restored index definitions.
If you've defined large search indexes on your cluster, you might
experience delays during snapshot restorations.
Does Atlas Search work with CSFLE encrypting clients?
Yes, you can use CSFLE encrypting clients to run Atlas Search queries against data in MongoDB version 6.0 and later.
Can I query CSFLE encrypted data?
No, you can't query CSFLE encrypted data using Atlas Search.
Can I use Queryable Encryption with Atlas Search?
No, Queryable Encryption is incompatible with Atlas Search.
Can I use Atlas Search on time series collections?
No, you can't use Atlas Search on time series collections.
Can I request new functionality?
Yes, use can request new functionality or upvote an existing request using the MongoDB Feedback Engine.
Can MongoDB Support access my Search infrastructure and logs?
Yes, MongoDB Support can access your Atlas Search infrastructure on both
dedicated and co-located nodes, as well as download mongot
logs from
these nodes. However, you can block access for MongoDB Support at the
organization level and then grant access to MongoDB
Support for 24 hours if needed. To learn more, see Configure MongoDB Support Access to Atlas Backend Infrastructure.