Hey I was wondering how do I use findById for a schema inside an array? For example, I have the following Schema:
const GameSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
users: [
{
user: { type: mongoose.Schema.ObjectId, ref: 'User' },
role: {
type: String,
required: true,
enum: ['user', 'moderator', 'creator'],
default: 'user',
},
},
]
}]
I want to find the user with a mongoose function like findById, such as the following:
const user = await game.users.findById({ user: req.user.id })
It doesn't seem to work since users is not a mongodb model. I know I can find the user by using find() like the following:
const user = await game.users.find(
(gameUser) => gameUser.user == req.user.id
)
The only problem is that the type of gameUser and req.user.id is not the same and I can't use '==='. Is there some way to go through the array and use the mongoose function findById?
As docs explains, findById method:
Finds a single document by its _id field
So you have to use findOne() instead of findById().
Also, to return only one field from the entire array you can use projection into find.
Check this example. This query find an object by its id (i.e. user field) and return only the object, not the whole array.
db.collection.find({
"users": { "$elemMatch": { "user": 1 } }
},
{
"users.$": 1
})
Using mongoose you can do:
yourModel.findOne(({
"users": { "$elemMatch": { "user": 1 } }
},
{
"users.$": 1
})).then(result => {
console.log(result)
}).catch(e => {
// error
})
I want to access the content of array of document in my model, but I can't and return undefined.
here is my model(Project.js):
var mongoose = require('moongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;
var User = require("./Users");
var ProjectSchema = new Schema({
name: String,
description: String,
owner: {
type: mongoose.SchemaTypes.ObjectId,
ref: "User"
},
contributor: [{
type: mongoose.SchemaTypes.ObjectId,
ref: "User"
}]
});
module.exports = mongoose.model('Project', ProjectSchema);
and my Api:
var Project = require('./Project')
await Project.find({owner: userId, name: name})
.then(project => {
console.log(project);
console.log(project.contributor);
}).catch(err => {
res.status(500).send({
message: err.message
});
});
when i try console.log(project); return expected output but in console.log(project.contributor); return undefined
I've also searched the web but couldn't find anything right and clear solution
I appreciate any help :)
As you are expecting to find only one project, change find by findOne method. Other case you are searching for several projects and you are going to receive an array instead of an object.
Your output from Project.find() (See) will be an array of objects from the database.
If you will only have 1 object as a result then you can use project[0].contributor because project is an array with 1 object inside it, which is on the index 0.
If the result might have many objects in the array then you should iterate through the result to get each of the data individually.
project.forEach(p => console.log(p.contributor))
I have two Schema for user & todo. Every todo has an owner as a user, every user has an array of todos.
// user.js
const TodoSchema = require('./todo').TodoSchema;
var UserSchema = mongoose.Schema({
name: {
type: String,
required: true
},
todos: {
type: [TodoSchema]
}
});
module.exports.UserSchema = UserSchema;
module.exports.UserModel = mongoose.model('UserModel', UserSchema);
// todo.js
var TodoSchema = mongoose.Schema({
body: {
type: String, required: true
},
owner: {
type: mongoose.Schema.Types.ObjectId,
ref: 'UserModel',
required: true
}
});
module.exports.TodoSchema = TodoSchema;
module.exports.TodoModel = mongoose.model('TodoModel', TodoSchema);
I entered data like this.
var nUser = new UserModel({
name: "Alex
)};
nUser.save().then(user => {
var t = new TodoModel({
body: "my new todo",
owner: user._id
});
t.save().then();
});
But the problem is I want to get all the todos from a specific user, something like this...What is the correct way?
UserModel.findOne({name: "Alex"})
.then(user => {
// user.todos
});
P.S.
I can do this like TodoModel.find({owner: specific_user._id}), but I want it from UserModel.
Since you're asking for the proper way of doing it, I am gonna start with your User Schema. If you want to find all the todos of a user, then putting the todo documents inside an array in the User document is not required. So you should probably remove that from your schema.
After that you can use a simple aggregation to get your desired outcome.
UserModel.aggregate([
{
$match:{
name:"Alex"
}
},
{
$lookup:{
from:"todomodels",
localField:"$_id",
foreignField:"$owner",
as:"todos"
}
}
])
this will return all the todos for that user in an array of the same name.
According to this mongodb article it is possible to auto increment a field and I would like the use the counters collection way.
The problem with that example is that I don't have thousands of people typing the data in the database using the mongo console. Instead I am trying to use mongoose.
So my schema looks something like this:
var entitySchema = mongoose.Schema({
testvalue:{type:String,default:function getNextSequence() {
console.log('what is this:',mongoose);//this is mongoose
var ret = db.counters.findAndModify({
query: { _id:'entityId' },
update: { $inc: { seq: 1 } },
new: true
}
);
return ret.seq;
}
}
});
I have created the counters collection in the same database and added a page with the _id of 'entityId'. From here I am not sure how to use mongoose to update that page and get the incrementing number.
There is no schema for counters and I would like it to stay that way because this is not really an entity used by the application. It should only be used in the schema(s) to auto increment fields.
Here is an example how you can implement auto-increment field in Mongoose:
var CounterSchema = Schema({
_id: {type: String, required: true},
seq: { type: Number, default: 0 }
});
var counter = mongoose.model('counter', CounterSchema);
var entitySchema = mongoose.Schema({
testvalue: {type: String}
});
entitySchema.pre('save', function(next) {
var doc = this;
counter.findByIdAndUpdate({_id: 'entityId'}, {$inc: { seq: 1} }, function(error, counter) {
if(error)
return next(error);
doc.testvalue = counter.seq;
next();
});
});
You can use mongoose-auto-increment package as follows:
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var autoIncrement = require('mongoose-auto-increment');
/* connect to your database here */
/* define your CounterSchema here */
autoIncrement.initialize(mongoose.connection);
CounterSchema.plugin(autoIncrement.plugin, 'Counter');
var Counter = mongoose.model('Counter', CounterSchema);
You only need to initialize the autoIncrement once.
The most voted answer doesn't work. This is the fix:
var CounterSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
_id: {type: String, required: true},
seq: { type: Number, default: 0 }
});
var counter = mongoose.model('counter', CounterSchema);
var entitySchema = mongoose.Schema({
sort: {type: String}
});
entitySchema.pre('save', function(next) {
var doc = this;
counter.findByIdAndUpdateAsync({_id: 'entityId'}, {$inc: { seq: 1} }, {new: true, upsert: true}).then(function(count) {
console.log("...count: "+JSON.stringify(count));
doc.sort = count.seq;
next();
})
.catch(function(error) {
console.error("counter error-> : "+error);
throw error;
});
});
The options parameters gives you the result of the update and it creates a new document if it doesn't exist.
You can check here the official doc.
And if you need a sorted index check this doc
So combining multiple answers, this is what I ended up using:
counterModel.js
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;
const counterSchema = new Schema(
{
_id: {type: String, required: true},
seq: { type: Number, default: 0 }
}
);
counterSchema.index({ _id: 1, seq: 1 }, { unique: true })
const counterModel = mongoose.model('counter', counterSchema);
const autoIncrementModelID = function (modelName, doc, next) {
counterModel.findByIdAndUpdate( // ** Method call begins **
modelName, // The ID to find for in counters model
{ $inc: { seq: 1 } }, // The update
{ new: true, upsert: true }, // The options
function(error, counter) { // The callback
if(error) return next(error);
doc.id = counter.seq;
next();
}
); // ** Method call ends **
}
module.exports = autoIncrementModelID;
myModel.js
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;
const autoIncrementModelID = require('./counterModel');
const myModel = new Schema({
id: { type: Number, unique: true, min: 1 },
createdAt: { type: Date, default: Date.now },
updatedAt: { type: Date },
someOtherField: { type: String }
});
myModel.pre('save', function (next) {
if (!this.isNew) {
next();
return;
}
autoIncrementModelID('activities', this, next);
});
module.exports = mongoose.model('myModel', myModel);
Attention!
As hammerbot and dan-dascalescu pointed out this does not work if you remove documents.
If you insert 3 documents with id 1, 2 and 3 - you remove 2 and insert another a new one it'll get 3 as id which is already used!
In case you don't ever remove documents, here you go:
I know this has already a lot of answers, but I would share my solution which is IMO short and easy understandable:
// Use pre middleware
entitySchema.pre('save', function (next) {
// Only increment when the document is new
if (this.isNew) {
entityModel.count().then(res => {
this._id = res; // Increment count
next();
});
} else {
next();
}
});
Make sure that entitySchema._id has type:Number.
Mongoose version: 5.0.1.
This problem is sufficiently complicated and there are enough pitfalls that it's best to rely on a tested mongoose plugin.
Out of the plethora of "autoincrement" plugins at http://plugins.mongoosejs.io/, the best maintained and documented (and not a fork) is mongoose sequence.
I've combined all the (subjectively and objectively) good parts of the answers, and came up with this code:
const counterSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
_id: {
type: String,
required: true,
},
seq: {
type: Number,
default: 0,
},
});
// Add a static "increment" method to the Model
// It will recieve the collection name for which to increment and return the counter value
counterSchema.static('increment', async function(counterName) {
const count = await this.findByIdAndUpdate(
counterName,
{$inc: {seq: 1}},
// new: return the new value
// upsert: create document if it doesn't exist
{new: true, upsert: true}
);
return count.seq;
});
const CounterModel = mongoose.model('Counter', counterSchema);
entitySchema.pre('save', async function() {
// Don't increment if this is NOT a newly created document
if(!this.isNew) return;
const testvalue = await CounterModel.increment('entity');
this.testvalue = testvalue;
});
One of the benefits of this approach is that all the counter related logic is separate. You can store it in a separate file and use it for multiple models importing the CounterModel.
If you are going to increment the _id field, you should add its definition in your schema:
const entitySchema = new mongoose.Schema({
_id: {
type: Number,
alias: 'id',
required: true,
},
<...>
});
test.pre("save",function(next){
if(this.isNew){
this.constructor.find({}).then((result) => {
console.log(result)
this.id = result.length + 1;
next();
});
}
})
I didn't wan to use any plugin (an extra dependencie, initializing the mongodb connection apart from the one I use in the server.js, etc...) so I did an extra module, I can use it at any schema and even, I'm considering when you remove a document from the DB.
module.exports = async function(model, data, next) {
// Only applies to new documents, so updating with model.save() method won't update id
// We search for the biggest id into the documents (will search in the model, not whole db
// We limit the search to one result, in descendant order.
if(data.isNew) {
let total = await model.find().sort({id: -1}).limit(1);
data.id = total.length === 0 ? 1 : Number(total[0].id) + 1;
next();
};
};
And how to use it:
const autoincremental = require('../modules/auto-incremental');
Work.pre('save', function(next) {
autoincremental(model, this, next);
// Arguments:
// model: The model const here below
// this: The schema, the body of the document you wan to save
// next: next fn to continue
});
const model = mongoose.model('Work', Work);
module.exports = model;
Hope it helps you.
(If this Is wrong, please, tell me. I've been having no issues with this, but, not an expert)
Here is a proposal.
Create a separate collection to holds the max value for a model collection
const autoIncrementSchema = new Schema({
name: String,
seq: { type: Number, default: 0 }
});
const AutoIncrement = mongoose.model('AutoIncrement', autoIncrementSchema);
Now for each needed schema, add a pre-save hook.
For example, let the collection name is Test
schema.pre('save', function preSave(next) {
const doc = this;
if (doc.isNew) {
const nextSeq = AutoIncrement.findOneAndUpdate(
{ name: 'Test' },
{ $inc: { seq: 1 } },
{ new: true, upsert: true }
);
nextSeq
.then(nextValue => doc[autoIncrementableField] = nextValue)
.then(next);
}
else next();
}
As findOneAndUpdate is an atomic operation, no two updates will return same seq value. Thus each of your insertion will get an incremental seq regardless of number of concurrent insertions. Also this can be extended to more complex auto incremental logic and the auto increment sequence is not limited to Number type
This is not a tested code. Test before you use until I make a plugin for mongoose.
Update I found that this plugin implemented related approach.
The answers seem to increment the sequence even if the document already has an _id field (sort, whatever). This would be the case if you 'save' to update an existing document. No?
If I'm right, you'd want to call next() if this._id !== 0
The mongoose docs aren't super clear about this. If it is doing an update type query internally, then pre('save' may not be called.
CLARIFICATION
It appears the 'save' pre method is indeed called on updates.
I don't think you want to increment your sequence needlessly. It costs you a query and wastes the sequence number.
I had an issue using Mongoose Document when assigning value to Schema's field through put(). The count returns an Object itself and I have to access it's property.
I played at #Tigran's answer and here's my output:
// My goal is to auto increment the internalId field
export interface EntityDocument extends mongoose.Document {
internalId: number
}
entitySchema.pre<EntityDocument>('save', async function() {
if(!this.isNew) return;
const count = await counter.findByIdAndUpdate(
{_id: 'entityId'},
{$inc: {seq: 1}},
{new: true, upsert: true}
);
// Since count is returning an array
// I used get() to access its child
this.internalId = Number(count.get('seq'))
});
Version: mongoose#5.11.10
None of above answer works when you have unique fields in your schema
because unique check at db level and increment happen before db level validation, so you may skip lots of numbers in auto increments like above solutions
only in post save can find if data already saved on db or return error
schmea.post('save', function(error, doc, next) {
if (error.name === 'MongoError' && error.code === 11000) {
next(new Error('email must be unique'));
} else {
next(error);
}
});
https://stackoverflow.com/a/41479297/10038067
that is why none of above answers are not like atomic operations auto increment in sql like dbs
I use together #cluny85 and #edtech.
But I don't complete finish this issues.
counterModel.findByIdAndUpdate({_id: 'aid'}, {$inc: { seq: 1} }, function(error,counter){
But in function "pre('save...) then response of update counter finish after save document.
So I don't update counter to document.
Please check again all answer.Thank you.
Sorry. I can't add comment. Because I am newbie.
var CounterSchema = Schema({
_id: { type: String, required: true },
seq: { type: Number, default: 0 }
});
var counter = mongoose.model('counter', CounterSchema);
var entitySchema = mongoose.Schema({
testvalue: { type: String }
});
entitySchema.pre('save', function(next) {
if (this.isNew) {
var doc = this;
counter.findByIdAndUpdate({ _id: 'entityId' }, { $inc: { seq: 1 } }, { new: true, upsert: true })
.then(function(count) {
doc.testvalue = count.seq;
next();
})
.catch(function(error) {
throw error;
});
} else {
next();
}
});
How do i tell Mongoose not to save the age field if it's null or undefined?
Or could i do this in Express somehow?
Express
router.put('/edit/:id', function(req, res) {
Person.findOneAndUpdate({ _id: req.params.id }, {
name: req.body.updateData.name,
age: req.body.updateData.age
}, { new: true });
})
Mongoose Schema
var PersonSchema = new Schema({
name: { type: String},
age: {type: String}
})
An explination (if u ask why i need this)
I'm using the same html template for new person and edit person. When i create a new person, Mongoose will save just the name field if i leave the age field empty. But when i use the edit template, Mongoose will always set the age field as null, even if the field is empty. I can't think of anything to stop this.
You could manage your request data before the db update, like:
router.put('/edit/:id', function(req, res) {
let update = {name: req.body.updateData.name};
if (req.body.updateData.age != "") {
update.age = req.body.updateData.age;
}
Person.findOneAndUpdate({ _id: req.params.id }, update, { new: true });
})
#Aioros, you answer gave me an idea, however i found this solution to match my issue. I'm just deleteing the null or undefined object elements before they are send to Mongoose.
let update = {
name: req.body.updateData.name,
age: req.body.updateData.age
};
if (update.age === null || update.age === undefined) delete update.age
Person.findOneAndUpdate({ _id: req.params.id }, update, { new: true });