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May 22, 2026

From Conversations to Community: Our First MongoDB DBDevOps Meetup in India
| Harness Blog

On May 16th, 2026, Inspired by the growing MongoDB and DevOps community in Bengaluru, we partnered with the Namma MUG community to bring together engineers exploring automation, CI/CD, Infrastructure as Code, and database migration strategies for modern applications.We had been looking forward to for a long time at Harness, our first Database DevOps community event in India focused on MongoDB and modern database automation practices.

The event was a deep dive for experts into how database automation can work with MongoDB easily, without needing manual steps.

My session on OSS Native Mongo Executor initiative was attended by several engineers already using tools like Liquibase, Flyway, and ORM driven migration workflows. That led to incredibly valuable conversations around what Database DevOps should look like for MongoDB-native environments.

Interestingly, many attendees wanted to understand:

  • How Harness DBDevOps works internally
  • How pipelines orchestrate MongoDB deployments
  • How changelog-driven workflows compare against traditional scripting
  • Whether Liquibase-style workflows can fit naturally into MongoDB ecosystems
  • How rollback and migration tracking works in NoSQL environments

We also had several deep discussions around CI/CD production rollout strategies and the differences between native Mongo execution and traditional relational migration engines.

These discussions were incredibly insightful because they showed that teams are no longer thinking only about “Database Scripts” - they are thinking about full database delivery workflows integrated into DevOps platforms.

What the Community Told Us

One clear thing we heard throughout all our discussions was how much people want easier ways to get started and more hands-on examples for working with MongoDB DevOps. People kept asking us for simple guides for beginners, real examples of how to set up Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery (CI/CD), starting templates, and clear steps for moving and rolling back databases from start to finish. We also got into some deep technical talks about handling complex queries, moving databases while they are live, and making sure our deployments are reliable, especially when we talk about advanced ways to undo changes. 

A lot of the attendees were really curious about how our MongoDB-native ways of doing migrations are different from the older, traditional database methods. That led us into bigger discussions about why using native MongoDB tools is important, how we manage schema changes in NoSQL, and the unique problems we face with document databases as we move from simple open-source tools to big enterprise-level Database DevOps systems. Overall, the reaction to our new OSS Native Mongo Executor was fantastic! It was clear that people really liked our approach of building Database DevOps features that fit naturally with MongoDB, instead of trying to force old relational rules onto a NoSQL system.

The future of Database DevOps is expanding beyond relational systems, and it’s exciting to see the MongoDB community helping shape that journey with us. A huge thank you to everyone who joined us, especially the speakers and community members who made the event successful: Naveen Kumar, Narendra Gottipati.Pritesh Kiri, Aripriya Basu

For us at Harness, this meetup made us realise something important: The community is actively looking for better ways to automate MongoDB operations while maintaining reliability, governance, and developer velocity. We have a lot more events coming up which you can join - Harness · Events Calendar

Animesh Pathak

Animesh Pathak is a Developer Relations Engineer with a strong focus on Database DevOps, APIs, testing, and open-source innovation.

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