Persistence Methods¶
Mongoid supports all expected CRUD operations for those familiar with other Ruby mappers like Active Record or Data Mapper. What distinguishes Mongoid from other mappers for MongoDB is that the general persistence operations perform atomic updates on only the fields that have changed instead of writing the entire document to the database each time.
The persistence sections will provide examples on what database operation is performed when executing the documented command.
Standard¶
Mongoid’s standard persistence methods come in the form of common methods you would find in other mapping frameworks. The following table shows all standard operations with examples.
Operation | Example |
---|---|
Insert a document or multiple documents into the database. |
|
Insert a document or multiple documents into the database, raising an error if a validation error occurs. |
|
Saves the changed attributes to the database atomically, or insert the document
if flagged as a new record via |
|
Saves the changed attributes to the database atomically, or insert the document if new. Will raise an error of validations fail. |
|
Update the document attributes in the database. Will return true if validation passed, false if not. |
|
Update the document attributes in the database and raise an error if validation failed. |
|
Update a single attribute, bypassing validations. |
|
Performs a MongoDB upsert on the document. If the document exists in the database,
it will get overwritten with the current attributes of the document in memory.
If the document does not exist in the database, it will be inserted. Note that
this only runs the |
|
Update the document’s updated_at timestamp, optionally with one extra provided
time field. This will cascade the touch to all |
|
Deletes the document from the database without running callbacks. |
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Deletes the document from the database while running destroy callbacks. |
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Deletes all documents from the database without running any callbacks. |
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Deletes all documents from the database while running callbacks. This is a potentially expensive operation since all documents will be loaded into memory. |
Atomic¶
Although Mongoid performs atomic operations under the covers by default, there may be cases where you want to do this explicitly without persisting other fields. Mongoid provides support for all of these operations as well. When executing atomic operations via these methods, no callbacks will ever get run, nor will any validations.
Operation | Example |
---|---|
Performs an atomic $addToSet on the field. |
|
Performs an atomic $bit on the field. |
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Performs an atomic $inc on the field. |
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Performs an atomic $pop on the field. |
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Performs an atomic $pull on the field. |
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Performs an atomic $pullAll on the field. |
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Performs an atomic $push on the field. |
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Performs an atomic $rename on the field. |
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Performs an atomic $set on the field. |
|
Performs an atomic $unset on the field. |
Custom¶
There may be cases where you want to persist documents to different sources from their defaults, or with different options from the default. Mongoid provides run-time support for this as well as support on a per-model basis.
Model Level Persistence Options¶
On a per-model basis, you can tell it to store in a custom collection name, a different database, or a different client. The following example would store the Band class by default into a collection named “artists” in the database named “music”, with the client “secondary”.
Note that the value supplied to the client
option must be configured under clients
in your mongoid.yml.
If no store_in
macro would have been provided, Mongoid would store the model in a
collection named “bands” in the default database in the default client.
Runtime Persistence Options¶
You can change at runtime where to store, query, update, or remove documents by prefixing
any operation with #with
and passing a block.
Persisting using with is a one-time switch in the persistence context - it creates a new client under the covers which will get closed and garbage collected after use. Mongoid will not remember anything specific on the document level regarding how it was saved when using this method. A potential gotcha with this is persisting a document via with and then immediately updating it after.
The Mongoid API was changed in version 6.0 to always require that a block be passed to #with. This is because a new client is created under the covers with the options passed to #with. A new client may spin up new monitor threads for keeping track of the MongoDB cluster, depending on what options are specified. This may in turn cause the number of connections to continually grow with each use of #with. Now that a block is required, Mongoid can properly stop the monitor threads and close the client after the block is called.
If you want to switch the persistence context for all operations at runtime, but don’t want
to be using with all over your code, Mongoid provides the ability to do this as the client
and database level globally. The methods for this are Mongoid.override_client
and
Mongoid.override_database
. A useful case for this are internationalized applications
that store information for different locales in different databases or clients, but the
schema in each remains the same.
In the above example, all persistence operations would be stored in the alternative database for all remaining operations on this thread. This is why the after request set the override back to nil - it ensures subsequent requests with no local params use the default option.
Client and Collection Access¶
If you want to drop down to the driver level to perform operations, you can grab the Mongo client or collection from the model or document instance.
From here you also have the same runtime persistence options using the client’s #with
.
You can also override the :read or :write options on the collection using the collections #with
.
Capped Collections¶
Mongoid does not provide a mechanism for creating capped collections on the fly - you will need to create these yourself one time up front either with the driver or via the Mongo console.
To create a capped collection with the driver:
To create a capped collection from the Mongo console:
Set a Default Collation on a Collection¶
Mongoid does not provide a mechanism for creating a collection with a default collation. Like capped collections, you will need to create the collection yourself one time, up-front, either with the driver or via the Mongo console.
To create a collection with a default collation with the driver:
To create a collection with a default collation from the Mongo console: