(mongodb >=1.4.0)
MongoDB\Driver\Server::executeReadWriteCommand — Execute a database command that reads and writes on this server
$db, MongoDB\Driver\Command $command, ?array $options = null): MongoDB\Driver\CursorExecutes the command on this server.
   This method will apply logic that is specific to commands that read and write
   (e.g.
   » aggregate)
   and take the MongoDB server version into account. The
   "readConcern" and "writeConcern"
   options will default to the corresponding values from the
   MongoDB Connection
   URI.
  
db (string)The name of the database on which to execute the command.
command (MongoDB\Driver\Command)The command to execute.
options
| Option | Type | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| readConcern | MongoDB\Driver\ReadConcern | A read concern to apply to the operation. This option is available in MongoDB 3.2+ and will result in an exception at execution time if specified for an older server version. | 
| session | MongoDB\Driver\Session | A session to associate with the operation. | 
| writeConcern | MongoDB\Driver\WriteConcern | A write concern to apply to the operation. | 
       If you are using a "session" which has a transaction
       in progress, you cannot specify a "readConcern" or
       "writeConcern" option. This will result in an
       MongoDB\Driver\Exception\InvalidArgumentException
       being thrown. Instead, you should set these two options when you create
       the transaction with
       MongoDB\Driver\Session::startTransaction().
      
Returns MongoDB\Driver\Cursor on success.
"session" option is used with an associated transaction in combination with a "readConcern" or "writeConcern" option."session" option is used in combination with an unacknowledged write concern.
| Version | Description | 
|---|---|
| PECL mongodb 1.4.4 | MongoDB\Driver\Exception\InvalidArgumentException
        will be thrown if the "session"option is used in
        combination with an unacknowledged write concern. | 
Note: It is the caller's responsibility to ensure that the server is capable of executing the write operation. For example, executing a write operation on a secondary (excluding its "local" database) will fail.
