5-minute tutorial
Migrate MongoDB to Snowflake in 60 Seconds
Learn how to copy your MongoDB data to Snowflake with a single command using ingestr - no code required.
What you'll learn
Prerequisites
- Python 3.8 or higher installed
- MongoDB instance or Atlas cluster
- User with read permissions on database
- Network access to MongoDB port
- IP whitelisted in Atlas (if using cloud)
- Snowflake account with active warehouse
- User credentials with appropriate permissions
- Database and schema access rights
- Network policies allowing connections from your IP
Step 1: Install ingestr
Install ingestr in seconds using pip. Choose the method that works best for you:
Recommended: Using uv (fastest)
# Install uv first if you haven't already
pip install uv
# Run ingestr using uvx
uvx ingestr
Alternative: Global installation
# Install globally using uv
uv pip install --system ingestr
# Or using standard pip
pip install ingestr
Verify installation: Run ingestr --version
to confirm it's installed correctly.
Step 2: Your First Migration
Let's copy a table from MongoDB to Snowflake. This example shows a complete, working command you can adapt to your needs.
Set up your connections
MongoDB connection format:
mongodb://username:password@host:port/database
Parameters:
- • username: MongoDB user
- • password: User password
- • host: Server or cluster endpoint
- • port: Port number (default 27017)
- • database: Database name
- • authSource: Authentication database
- • replicaSet: Replica set name
Snowflake connection format:
snowflake://user:password@account/database/schema?warehouse=warehouse_name
Parameters:
- • user: Snowflake username
- • password: User password
- • account: Account identifier (including region)
- • database: Target database name
- • schema: Schema within the database
- • warehouse: Compute warehouse to use
- • role: Optional role to assume
BigQuery Setup Required
Before running the command:
- Create a service account in Google Cloud Console
- Grant it BigQuery Data Editor and Job User roles
- Download the JSON key file
- Use the path to this file in your connection string
Snowflake connection format:
snowflake://user:password@account/database/schema?warehouse=warehouse_name
Run your first copy
Copy the entire users table from MongoDB to Snowflake:
ingestr ingest \
--source-uri 'mongodb://user:[email protected]:27017/mydb?authSource=admin' \
--source-table 'users' \
--dest-uri 'snowflake://myuser:[email protected]/mydb/public?warehouse=compute_wh' \
--dest-table 'raw.users'
What this does:
- • Connects to your MongoDB database
- • Reads all data from the specified table
- • Creates the table in Snowflake if needed
- • Copies all rows to the destination
Command breakdown:
--source-uri
Your source database--source-table
Table to copy from--dest-uri
Your destination--dest-table
Where to write data
Step 3: Verify your data
After the migration completes, verify your data was copied correctly:
Check row count in Snowflake:
-- Run this in Snowflake
SELECT COUNT(*) as row_count
FROM raw.users;
-- Check a sample of the data
SELECT *
FROM raw.users
LIMIT 10;
Advanced Patterns
Once you've mastered the basics, use these patterns for production workloads.
Only copy new or updated records since the last sync. Perfect for daily updates.
ingestr ingest \
--source-uri 'mongodb://user:[email protected]:27017/mydb?authSource=admin' \
--source-table 'public.orders' \
--dest-uri 'snowflake://myuser:[email protected]/mydb/public?warehouse=compute_wh' \
--dest-table 'raw.orders' \
--incremental-strategy merge \
--incremental-key updated_at \
--primary-key order_id
How it works: The merge strategy updates existing rows and inserts new ones based on the primary key. Only rows where updated_at
has changed will be processed.
Common Use Cases
Ready-to-use commands for typical MongoDB to Snowflake scenarios.
Daily Customer Data Sync
Keep your analytics warehouse updated with the latest customer information every night.
# Add this to your cron job or scheduler
ingestr ingest \
--source-uri 'mongodb://user:[email protected]:27017/mydb?authSource=admin' \
--source-table 'public.customers' \
--dest-uri 'snowflake://myuser:[email protected]/mydb/public?warehouse=compute_wh' \
--dest-table 'analytics.customers' \
--incremental-strategy merge \
--incremental-key updated_at \
--primary-key customer_id
Historical Data Migration
One-time migration of all historical records to your data warehouse.
# One-time full table copy
ingestr ingest \
--source-uri 'mongodb://user:[email protected]:27017/mydb?authSource=admin' \
--source-table 'public.transactions' \
--dest-uri 'snowflake://myuser:[email protected]/mydb/public?warehouse=compute_wh' \
--dest-table 'warehouse.transactions_historical'
Development Environment Sync
Copy production data to your development Snowflake instance (with sensitive data excluded).
# Copy sample data to development
ingestr ingest \
--source-uri 'mongodb://user:[email protected]:27017/mydb?authSource=admin' \
--source-table 'public.products' \
--dest-uri 'snowflake://myuser:[email protected]/mydb/public?warehouse=compute_wh' \
--dest-table 'dev.products' \
--limit 1000 # Only copy 1000 rows for testing
Troubleshooting Guide
Solutions to common issues when migrating from MongoDB to Snowflake.
Connection refused or timeout errors
Check your connection details:
- Check if MongoDB is binding to correct IP
- Verify authentication is enabled/disabled as expected
- Ensure user has correct roles and permissions
- For Atlas, check IP whitelist settings
- Verify account identifier includes region (e.g., xy12345.us-east-1)
- Check if warehouse is running and not suspended
- Ensure user has USAGE privilege on warehouse
- Confirm network policies allow your IP address
Authentication failures
Common authentication issues:
- Check if MongoDB is binding to correct IP
- Verify authentication is enabled/disabled as expected
- Ensure user has correct roles and permissions
- For Atlas, check IP whitelist settings
- Verify account identifier includes region (e.g., xy12345.us-east-1)
- Check if warehouse is running and not suspended
- Ensure user has USAGE privilege on warehouse
- Confirm network policies allow your IP address
Schema or data type mismatches
Handling data type differences:
- ingestr automatically handles most type conversions
- MongoDB: Nested documents and arrays
- MongoDB: ObjectId for unique identifiers
- MongoDB: Date handling in different timezones
- MongoDB: Large documents (16MB limit)
- Snowflake: VARIANT type for semi-structured data
- Snowflake: ARRAY and OBJECT types for complex structures
- Snowflake: Automatic timezone conversion for TIMESTAMP_TZ
Performance issues with large tables
Optimize large data transfers:
- Use incremental loading to process data in chunks
- Run migrations during off-peak hours
- Split very large tables by date ranges using interval parameters
Ready to scale your data pipeline?
You've learned how to migrate data from MongoDB to Snowflake with ingestr. For production workloads with monitoring, scheduling, and data quality checks, explore Bruin Cloud.