Difference between revisions of "MongoDB ObjectIds"

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Line 36: Line 36:
 
The following examples creates a new projectCollection, with two projects:
 
The following examples creates a new projectCollection, with two projects:
 
  db.projCollection.insert(  
 
  db.projCollection.insert(  
  {
+
  { _id: 10,
  _id: 10,
 
 
   projno: 110,  
 
   projno: 110,  
 
   proj_name: 'Oracle Project',
 
   proj_name: 'Oracle Project',
Line 45: Line 44:
 
    
 
    
 
  db.projCollection.insert(
 
  db.projCollection.insert(
  {_id: 20,
+
{ _id: 20,
 
   projno: 120,  
 
   projno: 120,  
 
   proj_name: 'MongoDB Project',
 
   proj_name: 'MongoDB Project',
 
   budget: 20000,
 
   budget: 20000,
 
   }   
 
   }   
)
+
)
 +
 
 +
If you try and reuse the same objectId:
 +
 
 +
db.projCollection.insert(
 +
{ _id: 10,
 +
  projno: 210,
 +
  proj_name: 'Other Oracle Project',
 +
  budget: 10000,
 +
  }
 +
  )
 +
 
 +
You will get a ''E11000 duplicate key error collection'' error message.
  
 
== Querying with ObjectIds ==
 
== Querying with ObjectIds ==

Revision as of 20:41, 21 October 2016

Main Page >> MongoDB >>MongoDB Workbook >> Object IDs

Object IDs

You may have noticed that the database creates an unique object for each document:

db.deptCollection.find().pretty()

Examine the output carefully and you will notice for each department in the collection something like:

"_id" : ObjectId("5808e3d2ec0ff55100af2649")

An ObjectId is like a primary key found in relational databases, except in this case it is globally unique across the whole database, not just one table. It is similar to objectIds found in object-oriented programming languages.

ObjectIds created by MongoDB are a 12-byte BSON type, with the following structure:

ObjectID layout
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
time machine pid inc

Where:

  • time: timestamp - the time in seconds
  • machine: machine identifier
  • pid: process identifier
  • inc: auto-incrementing counter

Adding ObjectIds

You can assign an objectId yourself to a document, but you do need to ensure it will be globally unique, so treating it as a primary key is not a good idea. Alternatively, you can use the ObjectId() function to add one.

The following examples creates a new projectCollection, with two projects:

db.projCollection.insert( 
{ _id: 10,
  projno: 110, 
  proj_name: 'Oracle Project',
  budget: 10000,
  }
 )
 
db.projCollection.insert(
{ _id: 20,
  projno: 120, 
  proj_name: 'MongoDB Project',
  budget: 20000,
  }  
)

If you try and reuse the same objectId:

db.projCollection.insert( 
{ _id: 10,
  projno: 210, 
  proj_name: 'Other Oracle Project',
  budget: 10000,
  }
 )

You will get a E11000 duplicate key error collection error message.

Querying with ObjectIds

db.deptCollection.find({ "employees._id" : ObjectId("580a0e5bf090aeb82af5566c")}).pretty()

Still returns whole array!

Updates with ObjectIds

The objectId can be used to update a record. For example, we want to update employee 2222.