Caused by accessing a cursor incorrectly or a error receiving a reply. Note
that this can be thrown by any database request that receives a reply, not
just queries. Writes, commands, and any other operation that sends
information to the database and waits for a response can throw a
MongoCursorException. The only exception is
new Mongo() (creating a new connection), which will only
throw MongoConnectionExceptions.
This returns a specific error message to help diagnose the problem and a
numeric error code associated with the cause of the exception.
For example, suppose you tried to insert two documents with the same _id:
<?php
try {
$collection->insert(array("_id" => 1), array("safe" => true));
$collection->insert(array("_id" => 1), array("safe" => true));
}
catch (MongoCursorException $e) {
echo "error message: ".$e->getMessage()."\n";
echo "error code: ".$e->getCode()."\n";
}
?>
error message: E11000 duplicate key error index: foo.bar.$_id_ dup key: { : 1 }
error code: 11000
Note that the MongoDB error code (11000) is used for the PHP error code. The
PHP driver uses the "native" error code wherever possible.
The following is a list of common errors, codes, and causes. Exact errors
are in italics, errors where the message can vary are described in obliques.
-
cannot modify cursor after beginning iteration
Code: 0
You are calling a method that sets up the query after executing the query.
Reset the cursor and try again.
An example:
<?php
try {
$cursor = $collection->find();
var_dump($cursor->getNext());
// getNext() queried the database, it's too late to set a limit
$cursor->limit(1);
}
catch (MongoCursorException $e) {
echo "error message: ".$e->getMessage()."\n";
echo "error code: ".$e->getCode()."\n";
}
// this will work, though:
$cursor->getNext();
$cursor->reset();
$cursor->limit(1);
?>
-
Get next batch send errors
Code: 1
Could not send the query to the database. Make sure the database is
still up and the network is okay.
-
cursor not found
Code: 2
The driver was trying to fetch more results from the database, but the
database did not have a record of the query. This usually means that the
cursor timed out on the server side: after a few minutes of inactivity,
the database will kill a cursor (see
MongoCursor::immortal() for information on preventing
this).
An example:
<?php
try {
$cursor = $collection->find();
$cursor->getNext();
// sleep for 15 minutes
sleep(60*15);
while ($cursor->hasNext()) {
$cursor->getNext();
}
}
catch (MongoCursorException $e) {
echo "error message: ".$e->getMessage()."\n";
echo "error code: ".$e->getCode()."\n";
}
?>
-
cursor->buf.pos is null
Code: 3
This may indicate you are out of RAM or some other extraordinary
circumstance.
-
couldn't get response header
Code: 4
A common error if the database or network goes down. This means that the
driver couldn't get a response from the connection.
-
no db response
Code: 5
This may not even be an error, for example, the database command
"shutdown" returns no response. However, if you were expecting a
response, this means the database didn't give one.
-
bad response length: %d, did the db assert?
Code: 6
This means that the database said that its response was less than 0. This
error probably indicates a network error or database corruption.
-
incomplete header
Code: 7
Highly unusual. Occurs if the database response started out correctly,
but broke off in the middle. Probably indicates a network problem.
-
incomplete response
Code: 8
Highly unusual. Occurs if the database response started out correctly,
but broke off in the middle. Probably indicates a network problem.
-
couldn't find a response
Code: 9
If the response was cached and now cannot be located.
-
error getting socket
Code: 10
The socket was closed or encountered an error. The driver should
automatically reconnect (if possible) on the next operation.
-
couldn't find reply, please try again
Code: 11
The driver saves any database responses it cannot immediately match with a
request. This exception occurs if the driver has already passed your
request's response and cannot find your response in its cache.
-
error getting database response: errstr
WSA error getting database response: errstr
"errstr" is an io error reported directly from the C socket
subsystem. On Windows, the error message is prefixed with "WSA".
-
Timeout error
Code: 13
If there was an error while waiting for a query to complete.
-
couldn't send query: <various>
Code: 14
C socket error on send.
-
max number of retries exhausted, couldn't send query
Code: 19
The driver will automatically retry "plain" queries (not commands) a
couple of times if the first attempt failed for certain reasons. This is
to cause fewer exceptions during replica set failover (although you will
probably still have to deal with some) and gloss over transient network
issues.
This can also be caused by the driver not being able to reconnect at all
to the database (if, for example, the database is unreachable).
Version 1.2.2+.