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Migration from ArangoDB 2.8 to 3.0

Problem

I want to use ArangoDB 3.0 from now on but I still have data in ArangoDB 2.8. I need to migrate my data. I am running an ArangoDB 3.0 cluster (and possibly a cluster with ArangoDB 2.8 as well).

Solution

The internal data format changed completely from ArangoDB 2.8 to 3.0, therefore you have to dump all data using arangodump and then restore it to the new ArangoDB instance using arangorestore.

General instructions for this procedure can be found in the manual. Here, we cover some additional details about the cluster case.

Dumping the data in ArangoDB 2.8

Basically, dumping the data works with the following command (use arangodump from your ArangoDB 2.8 distribution!):

arangodump --server.endpoint tcp://localhost:8530 --output-directory dump

or a variation of it, for details see the above mentioned manual page and this section. If your ArangoDB 2.8 instance is a cluster, simply use one of the coordinator endpoints as the above --server.endpoint.

Restoring the data in ArangoDB 3.0

The output consists of JSON files in the output directory, two for each collection, one for the structure and one for the data. The data format is 100% compatible with ArangoDB 3.0, except that ArangoDB 3.0 has an additional option in the structure files for synchronous replication, namely the attribute replicationFactor, which is used to specify, how many copies of the data for each shard are kept in the cluster.

Therefore, you can simply use this command (use the arangorestore from your ArangoDB 3.0 distribution!):

arangorestore --server.endpoint tcp://localhost:8530 --input-directory dump

to import your data into your new ArangoDB 3.0 instance. See this page for details on the available command line options. If your ArangoDB 3.0 instance is a cluster, then simply use one of the coordinators as --server.endpoint.

That is it, your data is migrated.

Controlling the number of shards and the replication factor

This procedure works for all four combinations of single server and cluster for source and destination respectively. If the target is a single server all simply works.

So it remains to explain how one controls the number of shards and the replication factor if the destination is a cluster.

If the source was a cluster, arangorestore will use the same number of shards as before, if you do not tell it otherwise. Since ArangoDB 2.8 does not have synchronous replication, it does not produce dumps with the replicationFactor attribute, and so arangorestore will use replication factor 1 for all collections. If the source was a single server, the same will happen, additionally, arangorestore will always create collections with just a single shard.

There are essentially 3 ways to change this behavior:

  1. The first is to create the collections explicitly on the ArangoDB 3.0 cluster, and then set the --create-collection false flag. In this case you can control the number of shards and the replication factor for each collection individually when you create them.
  2. The second is to use arangorestore’s options --default-number-of-shards and --default-replication-factor (this option was introduced in Version 3.0.2) respectively to specify default values, which are taken if the dump files do not specify numbers. This means that all such restored collections will have the same number of shards and replication factor.
  3. If you need more control you can simply edit the structure files in the dump. They are simply JSON files, you can even first use a JSON pretty printer to make editing easier. For the replication factor you simply have to add a replicationFactor attribute to the parameters subobject with a numerical value. For the number of shards, locate the shards subattribute of the parameters attribute and edit it, such that it has the right number of attributes. The actual names of the attributes as well as their values do not matter. Alternatively, add a numberOfShards attribute to the parameters subobject, this will override the shards attribute (this possibility was introduced in Version 3.0.2).

Note that you can remove individual collections from your dump by deleting their pair of structure and data file in the dump directory. In this way you can restore your data in several steps or even parallelize the restore operation by running multiple arangorestore processes concurrently on different dump directories. You should consider using different coordinators for the different arangorestore processes in this case.

All these possibilities together give you full control over the sharding layout of your data in the new ArangoDB 3.0 cluster.