MongoDB::Collection(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentatioMongoDB::Collection(3)NAMEMongoDB::Collection - A Mongo collection
SYNOPSIS
An instance of a MongoDB collection.
# gets the foo collection
my $collection = $db->foo;
Collection names can be chained together to access subcollections. For
instance, the collection "foo.bar" can be accessed with:
my $collection = $db->foo->bar;
You can also access collections with the "get_collection" in
MongoDB::Database method.
SEE ALSO
Core documentation on collections:
<http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/collections>.
ATTRIBUTES
name
The name of the collection.
full_name
The full_name of the collection, including the namespace of the
database it's in.
STATIC METHODS
to_index_string ($keys)
$name = MongoDB::Collection::to_index_string({age : 1});
Takes a Tie::IxHash, hash reference, or array reference. Converts it
into an index string.
METHODS
find($query)
my $cursor = $collection->find({ i => { '$gt' => 42 } });
Executes the given $query and returns a "MongoDB::Cursor" with the
results. $query can be a hash reference, Tie::IxHash, or array
reference (with an even number of elements).
The set of fields returned can be limited through the use of the
"MongoDB::Cursor::fields" method on the resulting MongoDB::Cursor
object. Other commonly used cursor methods are
"MongoDB::Cursor::limit", "MongoDB::Cursor::skip", and
"MongoDB::Cursor::sort".
See also core documentation on querying:
<http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/find>.
query($query, $attrs?)
Identical to "MongoDB::Collection::find", described above.
my $cursor = $collection->query->limit(10)->skip(10);
my $cursor = $collection->query({ location => "Vancouver" })->sort({ age => 1 });
Valid query attributes are:
limit
Limit the number of results.
skip
Skip a number of results.
sort_by
Order results.
find_one ($query, $fields?)
my $object = $collection->find_one({ name => 'Resi' });
my $object = $collection->find_one({ name => 'Resi' }, { name => 1, age => 1});
Executes the given $query and returns the first object matching it.
$query can be a hash reference, Tie::IxHash, or array reference (with
an even number of elements). If $fields is specified, the resulting
document will only include the fields given (and the "_id" field) which
can cut down on wire traffic.
insert ($object, $options?)
my $id1 = $coll->insert({ name => 'mongo', type => 'database' });
my $id2 = $coll->insert({ name => 'mongo', type => 'database' }, {safe => 1});
Inserts the given $object into the database and returns it's id value.
$object can be a hash reference, a reference to an array with an even
number of elements, or a Tie::IxHash. The id is the "_id" value
specified in the data or a MongoDB::OID.
The optional $options parameter can be used to specify if this is a
safe insert. A safe insert will check with the database if the insert
succeeded and croak if it did not. You can also check if the insert
succeeded by doing an unsafe insert, then calling
"last_error($options?)" in MongoDB::Database.
See also core documentation on insert:
<http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/insert>.
batch_insert (\@array, $options)
my @ids = $collection->batch_insert([{name => "Joe"}, {name => "Fred"}, {name => "Sam"}]);
Inserts each of the documents in the array into the database and
returns an array of their _id fields.
The optional $options parameter can be used to specify if this is a
safe insert. A safe insert will check with the database if the insert
succeeded and croak if it did not. You can also check if the inserts
succeeded by doing an unsafe batch insert, then calling
"last_error($options?)" in MongoDB::Database.
update (\%criteria, \%object, \%options?)
$collection->update({'x' => 3}, {'$inc' => {'count' => -1} }, {"upsert" => 1, "multiple" => 1});
Updates an existing $object matching $criteria in the database.
Returns 1 unless the "safe" option is set. If "safe" is set, this will
return a hash of information about the update, including number of
documents updated ("n"). If "safe" is set and the update fails,
"update" will croak. You can also check if the update succeeded by
doing an unsafe update, then calling "last_error($options?)" in
MongoDB::Database.
"update" can take a hash reference of options. The options currently
supported are:
"upsert" If no object matching $criteria is found, $object will be
inserted.
"multiple" All of the documents that match $criteria will be updated,
not just the first document found. (Only available with database
version 1.1.3 and newer.)
"safe" If the update fails and safe is set, the update will croak.
See also core documentation on update:
<http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/update>.
remove ($query?, $options?)
$collection->remove({ answer => { '$ne' => 42 } });
Removes all objects matching the given $query from the database. If no
parameters are given, removes all objects from the collection (but does
not delete indexes, as "MongoDB::Collection::drop" does).
Returns 1 unless the "safe" option is set. If "safe" is set and the
remove succeeds, "remove" will return a hash of information about the
remove, including how many documents were removed ("n"). If the remove
fails and "safe" is set, "remove" will croak. You can also check if
the remove succeeded by doing an unsafe remove, then calling
"last_error($options?)" in MongoDB::Database.
"remove" can take a hash reference of options. The options currently
supported are
"just_one" Only one matching document to be removed.
"safe" If the update fails and safe is set, this function will croak.
See also core documentation on remove:
<http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/remove>.
ensure_index ($keys, $options?)
use boolean;
$collection->ensure_index({"foo" => 1, "bar" => -1}, { unique => true });
Makes sure the given $keys of this collection are indexed. $keys can be
an array reference, hash reference, or "Tie::IxHash". "Tie::IxHash" is
prefered for multi-key indexes, so that the keys are in the correct
order. 1 creates an ascending index, -1 creates a descending index.
If the "safe" option is not set, "ensure_index" will not return
anything unless there is a socket error (in which case it will croak).
If the "safe" option is set and the index creation fails, it will also
croak. You can also check if the indexing succeeded by doing an unsafe
index creation, then calling "last_error($options?)" in
MongoDB::Database.
See the MongoDB::Indexing pod for more information on indexing.
save($doc, $options)
$collection->save({"author" => "joe"});
my $post = $collection->find_one;
$post->{author} = {"name" => "joe", "id" => 123, "phone" => "555-5555"};
$collection->save($post);
Inserts a document into the database if it does not have an _id field,
upserts it if it does have an _id field.
"safe =" boolean>
If the save fails and safe is set, this function will croak.
The return types for this function are a bit of a mess, as it will
return the _id if a new document was inserted, 1 if an upsert occurred,
and croak if the safe option was set and an error occurred. You can
also check if the save succeeded by doing an unsafe save, then calling
"last_error($options?)" in MongoDB::Database.
count($query?)
my $n_objects = $collection->count({ name => 'Bob' });
Counts the number of objects in this collection that match the given
$query. If no query is given, the total number of objects in the
collection is returned.
validate
$collection->validate;
Asks the server to validate this collection. Returns a hash of the
form:
{
'ok' => '1',
'ns' => 'foo.bar',
'result' => info
}
where "info" is a string of information about the collection.
drop_indexes
$collection->drop_indexes;
Removes all indexes from this collection.
drop_index ($index_name)
$collection->drop_index('foo_1');
Removes an index called $index_name from this collection. Use
"MongoDB::Collection::get_indexes" to find the index name.
get_indexes
my @indexes = $collection->get_indexes;
Returns a list of all indexes of this collection. Each index contains
"ns", "name", and "key" fields of the form:
{
'ns' => 'db_name.collection_name',
'name' => 'index_name',
'key' => {
'key1' => dir1,
'key2' => dir2,
...
'keyN' => dirN
}
}
where "dirX" is 1 or -1, depending on if the index is ascending or
descending on that key.
drop
$collection->drop;
Deletes a collection as well as all of its indexes.
AUTHOR
Kristina Chodorow <kristina@mongodb.org>
perl v5.14.2 2011-09-07 MongoDB::Collection(3)