A slight rewrite of mongojs to support promises. To aid with migration, this API is fully backwardly-compatible with mongojs, but all functions that accept callbacks now return promises too. Promises are Promises/A+ compatible, so you are free to use any compatible promise library. The promise library used by this project is Q.
promised-mongo is available through npm:
npm install promised-mongo
Use promised-mongo just like mongojs, except you can also use the returned promise instead of the callback. Note that a promise isn't returned if a callback is specified.
var pmongo = require('promised-mongo');
var db = pmongo(connectionString, [collections]);
The connection string should follow the format desribed in the mongo connection string docs. Some examples of this could be:
// simple usage for a local db
var db = pmongo('mydb', ['mycollection']);
// the db is on a remote server (the port default to mongo)
var db = pmongo('example.com/mydb', ['mycollection']);
// we can also provide some credentials
var db = pmongo('username:password@example.com/mydb', ['mycollection']);
// connect now, and worry about collections later
var db = pmongo('mydb');
var mycollection = db.collection('mycollection');
After we connected we can query or update the database just how we would using the mongo API with the exception that the functions return
a promise for the result rather than the result itself. Cursor operations such as find()
and sort()
return a cursor; to get a
promise for the result, you have to force evaluation using toArray()
. Alternatively, you can just call then()
on the cursor and it will call toArray()
for you, returning a promise. The function findOne()
returns a promise immediately, not a cursor.
Note that due to limitations in the Q promise library, you should call .done()
at the end of
any promise chain you aren't returning, in order to throw any uncaught exceptions. For brevity, the examples in this readme don't do that.
// find everything
db.mycollection.find().toArray().then(function(docs){
// docs is an array of all the documents in mycollection
});
// find everything, but sort by name
db.mycollection.find().sort({name:1}).toArray().then(function(docs) {
// docs is now a sorted array
});
// find a document using a native ObjectId
db.mycollection.findOne({
_id: pmongo.ObjectId('523209c4561c640000000001')
}).then(function(doc) {
// doc._id.toString() === '523209c4561c640000000001'
});
// find all named 'mathias' and increment their level
db.mycollection.update({name:'mathias'}, {$inc:{level:1}}, {multi:true})
.then(function(lastErrorObject) {
// the update is complete
});
// find one named 'mathias', tag him as a contributor and return the modified doc
db.mycollection.findAndModify({
query: { name: 'mathias' },
update: { $set: { tag:'maintainer' } },
new: true
})
.then(function(doc) {
// doc.tag === 'maintainer'
});
// use the save function to just save a document
db.mycollection.save({created:'just now'});
The forEach
function is a special case. The library supports the mongojs style:
// iterate over all whose level is greater than 90.
db.mycollection.find({level:{$gt:90}}).forEach(function(err, doc) {
if (doc) {
//do things with doc
} else {
//the callback gets called at the end with a null doc
console.log('Finished!');
}
});
It also supports a promise version. If you pass a callback to the forEach
function with only one argument, you get the promise version. The promise will resolve (with undefined
) when the callback has been called for all documents.
// iterate over all whose level is greater than 90 (promise version)
db.mycollection.find({level:{$gt:90}}).forEach(function(doc) {
//do things with doc
})
.then(function () {
console.log('Finished!');
});
To access lastErrorObject
returned by findAndModify
using the promises API, use the findAndModifyEx
function:
db.mycollection.findAndModifyEx({
query: { name: 'mathias' },
update: { $set: { tag:'maintainer' } },
new: true
})
.then(function(result) {
var doc = result.result;
var lastErrorObject = result.lastErrorObject;
});
If you provide a callback to find
or any cursor config operation mongojs will call toArray
for you
db.mycollection.find({}, function(err, docs) { ... });
db.mycollection.find({}).limit(2).skip(1, function(err, docs) { ... });
is the same as
db.mycollection.find({}).toArray(function(err, docs) { ... });
db.mycollection.find({}).limit(2).skip(1).toArray(function(err, docs) { ... });
If you are using the promises API, you must call toArray() on cursors before a promise can be obtained. E.g.:
db.mycollection.find().limit(2).skip(1).toArray()
.then(function (docs) {
// ...
});
For more detailed information about the different usages of update and querying see the mongo docs
As of 0.7.0
all cursors are a readable stream of objects.
var JSONStream = require('JSONStream');
// pipe all documents in mycollection to stdout
db.mycollection.find({}).pipe(JSONStream.stringify()).pipe(process.stdout);
Notice that you should pipe the cursor through a stringifier (like JSONStream) if you want to pipe it to a serial stream like a http response.
If you are using a capped collection you can create a tailable cursor to that collection by adding tailable:true
to the find options
var cursor = db.mycollection.find({}, {}, {tailable:true, timeout:false});
// since all cursors are streams we can just listen for data
cursor.on('data', function(doc) {
console.log('new document', doc);
});
Note that you need to explicitly set the selection parameter in the find
call.
With promised-mongo you can run database commands just like with the mongo shell using db.runCommand()
db.runCommand({ping:1}).then(function(res) {
if(!err && res.ok) console.log("we're up");
});
or db.collection.runCommand()
db.things.runCommand('count').then(function(res) {
console.log(res);
});
Promised-mongo can also connect to a mongo replication set by providing a connection string with multiple hosts
var db = pmongo('rs-1.com,rs-2.com,rs-3.com/mydb?slaveOk=true', ['mycollection']);
For more detailed information about replica sets see the mongo replication docs
This API documentation is a work in progress. To maintain compatibility with mongojs, all functions can accept a callback. If no callback is specified, a promise is returned.
#####db.collection.aggregate([pipeline], callback)
#####db.collection.count([query], callback)
#####db.collection.createIndex(keys, options, [callback])
#####db.collection.distinct(field, query, callback)
#####db.collection.drop([callback])
#####db.collection.dropIndex(index, [callback])
#####db.collection.dropIndexes([callback])
#####db.collection.ensureIndex(keys, options, [callback])
#####db.collection.find([criteria], [projection], [callback])
This function applies a query to a collection. You can get the return value, which is a cursor, or pass a callback
as the last parameter. Said callback receives (err, documents)
#####db.collection.findOne([criteria], [projection], callback)
Apply a query and get one single document passed as a callback. The callback receives (err, document)
#####db.collection.findAndModify(document, callback)
#####db.collection.getIndexes(callback)
#####db.collection.group(document, callback)
#####db.collection.insert(docOrDocs, callback)
#####db.collection.isCapped(callback)
#####db.collection.mapReduce(map, reduce, options, callback)
#####db.collection.reIndex(callback)
#####db.collection.remove(query, [justOne], [callback])
#####db.collection.runCommand(command, callback)
#####db.collection.save(doc, callback)
#####db.collection.stats(callback)
#####db.collection.update(query, update, [options], callback)
#####cursor.batchSize(size, [callback])
#####cursor.count(callback)
#####cursor.explain(callback)
#####cursor.forEach(function)
#####cursor.limit(n, [callback])
#####cursor.map(function, [callback])
#####cursor.next(callback)
#####cursor.skip(n, [callback])
#####cursor.sort(sortOptions, [callback])
#####cursor.toArray(callback)
#####db.addUser(document)
#####db.createCollection(name, options, [callback])
#####db.dropDatabase([callback])
#####db.eval(function, arguments)
#####db.getCollectionNames([callback])
#####db.getLastError([callback])
#####db.getLastErrorObj([callback])
#####db.removeUser(username, [callback])
#####db.runCommand(command, [callback])
#####db.stats([callback])