2022 MongooseJS Cheatsheet
April 19, 2022
What is Mongoose?
Mongoose is an ODM (Object Document Manager) that like relational ORMs (Object Relationship Managers) maps the data in our data base to objects for more familiar programming patterns. Mongoose specifically is a MongoDB ODM for Javascript applications, and this article aims to be a resources for working with MongoDB in JS using Mongoose.
- Install mongoose
npm install mongoose
- We will share many examples in the context of ExpressJS application although the logic and flow should be the same with any other Node web framework like Koa or Fastify.
The Mongoose URI
URI stands for Universal Resource Identifier, a string that allows applications to send messages to other applications. We use HTTP URIs all the time in the form of the URLs to our favorite websites. The pattern is as follows:
protocol://username:password@host:port/resource?query=string&key=value
protocol://
the type of message being sent such ashttps://
,mongodb://
,postgresql://
username:password@
the username and password if one is needed for the target, typically needed for databases since most web pages are open to the public usually not used websites.host
this would be the domain and subdomains that may come with it that are an alias for an IP address of the server that hosts the destination application (localhost
for example is an alias for127.0.0.1
which is the machine your currently using.port
every server can receive messages on different ports numbered up to 65535 (the highest unsigned 16-bit integer). You generally don’t type a port for URLs because browsers knowhttp
traffic goes to port 80 andhttps
traffic goes to port 443. Most databases have a default port they run onmongodb -> 27017 | postgresql -> 5432 | mysql -> 3306
/resource
tell the receiving application what resources to access at the destination. For web applications this is usually a particular web page, file, or JSON data. For database applications this usually refers to the particular database being accessed.?query=string&key=value
this is the query string which can be used to pass additional info like data from a form or database configurations.
A MongoDB URI for a mongo server running on my pc would be:
mongodb://username:password@127.0.0.1:27017/database_name
Read here for options that can be passed in the query string
The mongodb uri should NEVER be hardcoded in your application but delivered via environmental variables or via some file that is included in your .gitignore so you don’t export your URL in any remote public get repositories
Importing Mongoose
By default node uses commonJS so importing a library would be done using require
.
const mongoose = require("mongoose")
If you add "type":"module"
to your package.json then your project will be treated like an ES Module and you can then do the following instead.
import mongoose from "mongoose"
Establising a Connection
For our purposes we will assume the mongo uri is stored in a variable called DATABASE_URL
it’s up to you to make sure this variable exists and holds the URI string. The options
variable we are assuming holds a javascript object with any database configuration which can see listed here.
//establish the connection
mongoose.connect(DATABASE_URL, OPTIONS)
// saving the connection in a variable
const cxn = mongoose.connection
//creating messages when connection changes state
cxn
.on("open", () => console.log("mongoose is connected"))
.on("close", () => console.log("mongoose is disconnected"))
.on("error", (error) => console.log(error))
Models
Models allow us to save in and retrieve from our mongoose database. To create a model we must first create a schema which defines the shape of the data in the database (the individual properties and their data types). Defining a basic model can be done like so:
// destructure model function and Schema constructor from mongoose
const {model, Schema} = mongoose
// create a schema
const UserSchema = new Schema({
username: {type: String, unique: true, required: true},
password: {type: String, required: true},
age: Number,
email: String
}, {timestamps: true})
// create a model
const User = model("User", UserSchema)
details on the different schema data types and options
details on working with models
Using Model Methods
Model objects have many methods for creating, deleting, updating and finding data in the database. Methods can be used in three different ways. We will write these in the context of an express route but would be pretty much the same in any node web framework.
// callback syntax
app.get("/users", (req, res) => {
// use the find method to find all users with the specified username
User.find({username: req.query.username}, (error, results) => {
// check if there is an error
if(error){
res.status(400).json({error})
return false
}
// send results as json
res.json(results)
})
})
// .then syntax
app.get("/users", (req, res) => {
// use the find method and catch errors
User.find({username: req.query.username})
.then((results) => res.json(results))
.catch((error) => res.status(400).json({error})
})
// async/await syntax
app.get("/users", async (req, res) => {
// use the find method, catch errors
const results = await User.find({username: req.query.username}).catch((error) => res.status(400).json({error})
// send results as response
res.json(results)
})
Handling Related Documents
MongoDB is a document database so it is optimal for handling unrelated data, but mongoose does build in several tools to make implementing related data a lot easier.
First Step: The ObjectID Type
To express a relationship we specify a related field as an ObjectID type meaning it expects the field to hold strings that represent the object ID of related documents in a specified collection.
// destructure model function and Schema constructor from mongoose
const {model, Schema} = mongoose
// create a schema
const UserSchema = new Schema({
username: {type: String, unique: true, required: true},
password: {type: String, required: true},
age: Number,
email: String,
posts: [{type: mongoose.Types.ObjectId, ref: "Post"]
}, {timestamps: true})
const PostSchema = new Schema({
title: String,
body: String,
author: {type: mongoose.types.ObjectId, ref: "User"}
}, {timestamps: true})
// create a model
const User = model("User", UserSchema)
const Post = model("Post", PostSchema)
Second Step: Associate Records with Each Other
// grab two existing documents from both collection
app.get("/createPost/:userId", async (req, res) => {
const post = await Post.create(req.body) // create new post
const user = await User.findById(req.params.userId) // get existing user
// associate post with user
post.author = user
post.save()
// associate user with post
user.posts.push(post)
user.save()
// send back post as response with author populated
res.json(await post.populate("author"))
})
The populate method allows us to take a field marked as related to another document (the ObjectID type) and fill in the data from that related document that way you don’t have to manually do another query to get the additional data.