How to "(WHERE) column = column" in Mongo? - mongodb

I like Mongo for simple things so I was hoping to use it for something more advanced. And that worked fine until I needed this:
UPDATE tbl SET a = b WHERE c <> 0
The a = b part is what I can't figure out. I tried mongodb.org, but I can't find it there. I also looked for WHERE a = b but I can't find that either.
An alternative is so fetch all rows and than update them individually, but I don't like that. It has to be simpler.
Thanks.

You want to check the documentation for updating.
http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Updating
Your code might look like:
db.tbl.update( { c:{$ne:0}}, { $set: { a : b } } );
If you need to brush up on advanced queries (e.g. using $ne), then check here:
http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Advanced+Queries
EDIT:
Apparently you can't update with data from the same document.
MongoDB: Updating documents using data from the same document
EDIT 2 (solution with map reduce):
var c = new Mongo();
var db = c.getDB('db')
var s = db.getCollection('s')
s.drop();
s.save({z:1,q:5});
s.save({z:11,q:55});
db.runCommand({
mapreduce:'s',
map:function(){
var i = this._id; //we will emit with a unique key. _id in this case
this._id=undefined; //strange things happen with merge if you leave the id in
//update your document with access to all fields!
this.z=this.q;
emit(i,this);
},
query:{z:1}, //apply to only certain documents
out:{merge:'s'} //results get merged (overwrite themselves in collection)
});
//now take a look
s.find();

Related

Meteor, mongodb - accessing an object inside an array

Alright, so I have a collection called Polls. Inside the Polls "table" there is an attribute called choiceObjects which is an array of objects. Each object inside this array has its own attributes. What I need to do is update one of the attributes there. Ill give you a screen shot so you can better visualise what Im talking about
As you can see the choice objects have attributes like body, country etc. There is another attribute called pollid which is set to optional and therefore you cant see it right now. I need to update this pollid attribute now that I have acess to the pollid
Polls.update(
{ _id: pollId },
{ "$set": { "choiceObjects": { pollid: pollId } } }
); //this is kind of what Im trying to do but this isnt right
Since then... I have further tried the following :
var selectedpoll = Polls.findOne(pollId);
console.log(selectedpoll);
//Polls.update( selectedpoll, {"$set"{'choiceObjects.$.pollId':pollId}},false, true );
but when i try that i get the error : the positional operator did not find the match needed from the query. unexpanded update: choiceObjects.$.pollId
If I understand your objective correctly, you want to update (or add) pollid to all objects in the choiceObjects array. Unfortunately $, $push, $addToSet only work with single elements AFAIK.
This might not be what you are looking for but one possible and very obvious way to approach this problem would be to update the entire array in the collection i.e.
var choiceObjects = Polls.findOne({_id: pollId}).choiceObjects;
for (var i = 0; i < choiceObjects.length; i++) {
choiceObjects[i].pollid = pollid;
}
Polls.update({_id: pollid}, {choiceObjects: choiceObjects});

Find a document in a loop

I am relatively new to mongodb, so please be patient. Suppose I have the following documents in my collection:
{_id:"3",name:'three',parentId:"2.1"},
{_id:"2.1",name:'two1',parentId:"1"},
{_id:"2.2",name:'two2',parentId:"1"},
{_id:"1",name:'one'}
I have a db.mycoll.find({name:"three"}) which returns me the document with _id 3. I need based on this find document with _id 1.
Basically this represents something like a folder structure. So the top level is 'one', which has 'two1' and 'two2'. The 'two1' in turn has 'three'. Having the id of 'three' I need to get it's top level parent. Is there a way to do it in mongo or do I have to return results to the client, process them there and call mongo for each iteration?
Here is what worked for me:
...find().forEach(
function getParent(itemId) {
var sub = db.mycoll.findOne({_id: itemId});
if(sub) {
if(sub.parentId) {
getParent(sub.parentId)
}
else /*top level*/
print(sub.name)
}
}
)
Hope it helps someone else

Build a reactive publication with additional fields in each document

I want to make a publication with several additional fields, but I don't want to either use Collection.aggregate and lose my publication updates when the collection change (so I can't just use self.added in it either).
I plan to use Cursor.observeChanges in order to achieve that. I have two major constraints:
I don't want to publish all the documents fields
I want to use some of the unpublished fields to create new ones. For example, I have a field item where I store an array of item _id. I don't want to publish it, but I want to publish a item_count field with the length of my field array
Here comes the approach:
I plan to chain find queries. I never did that so I wonder if it possible. The general (simplified) query structure would be like this: http://jsfiddle.net/Billybobbonnet/1cgrqouj/ (I cant get the code properly displayed here)
Based on the count example in Meteor documentation, I store my query in a variable handle in order to stop the changes notification if a client unsubscribes:
self.onStop(function () {
handle.stop();
});
I add a flag initializing = true; before my query and I set it to true just before calling self.ready();. I use this flag to change my itemCount variable only if it is the publication is initialized. So basically, I change my switch like that:
switch (field) {
case "item"
if (!initializing)
itemCount = raw_document.item.length;
break;
default:
}
I wanted to check that this approach is good and possible before committing into big changes in my code. Can someone confirm me if this is the right way to go?
It's relatively easy to keep fields private even if they are part of the database query. The last argument to self.added is the object being passed to the client, so you can strip/modify/delete fields you are sending to the client.
Here's a modified version of your fiddle. This should do what you are asking for. (To be honest I'm not sure why you had anything chained after the observeChanges function in your fiddle, so maybe I'm misunderstanding you, but looking at the rest of your question this should be it. Sorry if I got it wrong.)
var self = this;
// Modify the document we are sending to the client.
function filter(doc) {
var length = doc.item.length;
// White list the fields you want to publish.
var docToPublish = _.pick(doc, [
'someOtherField'
]);
// Add your custom fields.
docToPublish.itemLength = length;
return docToPublish;
}
var handle = myCollection.find({}, {fields: {item:1, someOtherField:1}})
// Use observe since it gives us the the old and new document when something is changing.
// If this becomes a performance issue then consider using observeChanges,
// but its usually a lot simpler to use observe in cases like this.
.observe({
added: function(doc) {
self.added("myCollection", doc._id, filter(doc));
},
changed: function(newDocument, oldDocument)
// When the item count is changing, send update to client.
if (newDocument.item.length !== oldDocument.item.length)
self.changed("myCollection", newDocument._id, filter(newDocument));
},
removed: function(doc) {
self.removed("myCollection", doc._id);
});
self.ready();
self.onStop(function () {
handle.stop();
});
To solve your first problem, you need to tell MongoDB what fields it should return in the cursor. Leave out the fields you don't want:
MyCollection.find({}, {fields: {'a_field':1}});
Solving your second problem is also pretty easy, I would suggest using the collection helpers packages. You could accomplish this easily, like so:
// Add calculated fields to MyCollection.
MyCollection.helpers({
item_count: function() {
return this.items.length;
}
});
This will be run before an object is added to a cursor, and will create properties on the returned objects that are calculated dynamically, not stored in MongoDB.

Mongo - exclude entries in one collection from another find()

I have a local collection that logs when a user has viewed an entry. It stores the ID of the entry and the time it was viewed:
viewedDate = new Date();
notifications.insert({
'viewed': this.data._id,
'viewedDate': viewedDate
});
I want to exclude any of the 'viewed' ids in this collection from another find() (I basically want to count how many entries haven't been viewed)
How can I use the results of a notifications.find() to exclude results from another find()? If I assign the notifications.find() to a variable, it returns all kinds of stuff as an object.
edit
OK, so if I use fetch() I can restrict what comes back - can I do something with this in a find()?
myNotes = notifications.find({}, {fields: {'viewedDate' :0, _id:0}}).fetch();
This returns
[
Object
viewed: "HqYcCma3qKseHALyv"
__proto__: Object
]
Thanks to some invaluable help from garilla_ in the Meteor IRC, I got it working, solution as follows:
myViewedOffers = notifications.find({},{fields: {'viewed':1}}).fetch();
myViewedArray = myViewedOffers.map(function(viewed){return viewed.viewed});
offerCount = Offers.find({_id: {$nin: myViewedArray}}).count();

duplicate mongo record in same collection

In mongo I have a collections with records. These record are very complex. Now I would like to duplicate one of them.
I can easily select the one
mongo> var row = db.barfoo.find({"name":"bar"});
Now I actually don't know what to do. I don't know what is in row because I cannot find a way to print its content. How can I change specific properties and finally insert this modified row again
mongo> db.barfoo.insert(row);
thnx
You must change value _id - generate new:
var row = db.barfoo.findOne({"name":"bar"});
row._id = ObjectId();
db.barfoo.insert(row);
Good Luck!
I am going to assume that you're working directly inside the mongo shell.
Once you have your document (not a row :P ), you'd modify the properties in the same way you would a normal JavaScript object:
var doc = db.barfoo.findOne( { "name": "bar" } );
doc.name = "Mr Bar";
Note that the find() command returns a cursor, so if you're looking to extract a single document, you should use the findOne() function. This function returns a single document.
If you are interested in duplicating numerous documents, you can use the find() function and iterate over the cursor to retrieve each document:
db.barfoo.find( { "name": "bar" } ).forEach( function( doc ){
doc.name = "Mr Bar";
}
After you change the relevant properties, you can use the insert/save methods to persist the data back to mongo. Don't forget to change/delete the _id attribute so that you'll actually create a new document.
As a side note, in order to view the contents of an object in the mongo shell, you can use the print() function. If you want a more visually appealing output, you could use printjson().