Query MongoDB - React Native SDK
On this page
- Use Cases
- Prerequisites
- Connect to a Linked Cluster
- Read Operations
- Find a Single Document
- Find Multiple Documents
- Count Documents
- Write Operations
- Insert a Single Document
- Insert Multiple Documents
- Update a Single Document
- Update Multiple Documents
- Upsert Documents
- Delete a Single Document
- Delete Multiple Documents
- Real-time Change Notifications
- Watch for All Changes in a Collection
- Watch for Specific Changes in a Collection
- Aggregation Operations
- Run an Aggregation Pipeline
You can query data stored in MongoDB Atlas directly from your client application code by using the Realm React Native SDK's MongoDB client with the Query API. Atlas App Services provides data access rules on collections to securely retrieve results based on the logged-in user or the content of each document.
Note
Example Dataset
The examples on this page use a MongoDB collection that describes inventory in a chain of plant stores. For more information on the collection schema and document contents, see Example Data.
Use Cases
There are a variety of reasons you might want to query a MongoDB data source. Working with data in your client via Atlas Device Sync is not always practical or possible. You might want to query MongoDB when:
The data set is large or the client device has constraints against loading the entire data set
You are retrieving documents that are not modeled in Realm
Your app needs to access collections that don't have strict schemas
A non-Realm service generates collections that you want to access
While not exhaustive, these are some common use cases for querying MongoDB directly.
Prerequisites
Before you can query MongoDB from your React Native application, you must set up MongoDB Data Access in your App Services App. To learn how to set up your backend App to let the Realm SDK query Atlas, refer to Set Up MongoDB Data Access in the App Services documentation.
Example
Example Data
The examples on this page use the following MongoDB collection that describes various plants for sale in a chain of plant stores:
{ _id: ObjectId("5f87976b7b800b285345a8c4"), name: "venus flytrap", sunlight: "full", color: "white", type: "perennial", _partition: "Store 42" }, { _id: ObjectId("5f87976b7b800b285345a8c5"), name: "sweet basil", sunlight: "partial", color: "green", type: "annual", _partition: "Store 42" }, { _id: ObjectId("5f87976b7b800b285345a8c6"), name: "thai basil", sunlight: "partial", color: "green", type: "perennial", _partition: "Store 42" }, { _id: ObjectId("5f87976b7b800b285345a8c7"), name: "helianthus", sunlight: "full", color: "yellow", type: "annual", _partition: "Store 42" }, { _id: ObjectId("5f87976b7b800b285345a8c8"), name: "petunia", sunlight: "full", color: "purple", type: "annual", _partition: "Store 47" }
Documents in the plants
collection use the following schema:
{ "title": "Plant", "bsonType": "object", "required": ["_id", "_partition", "name"], "properties": { "_id": { "bsonType": "objectId" }, "_partition": { "bsonType": "string" }, "name": { "bsonType": "string" }, "sunlight": { "bsonType": "string" }, "color": { "bsonType": "string" }, "type": { "bsonType": "string" } } }
type Plant = { _id: BSON.ObjectId; _partition: string; name: string; sunlight?: string; color?: string; type?: string; };
Connect to a Linked Cluster
To access a linked cluster from your client application, authenticate a user and pass the cluster name to User.mongoClient(). This returns a MongoDB service interface that you can use to access databases and collections in the cluster.
If you are using @realm/react
, you can access the MongoDB client
with the useUser()
hook in a component wrapped by UserProvider
.
import React from 'react'; import {useUser} from '@realm/react'; function QueryPlants() { // Get currently logged in user const user = useUser(); const getPlantByName = async name => { // Access linked MongoDB collection const mongodb = user.mongoClient('mongodb-atlas'); const plants = mongodb.db('example').collection('plants'); // Query the collection const response = await plants.findOne({name}); return response; }; // ... }
import React from 'react'; import {useUser} from '@realm/react'; function QueryPlants() { // Get currently logged in user const user = useUser(); const getPlantByName = async (name: string) => { // Access linked MongoDB collection const mongodb = user.mongoClient('mongodb-atlas'); const plants = mongodb.db('example').collection<Plant>('plants'); // Query the collection const response = await plants.findOne({name}); return response; }; // ... }
Read Operations
Find a Single Document
To find a single document, pass a query that matches the document to
collection.findOne(). If you do
not pass a query, findOne()
matches the first document it finds in
the collection.
The following snippet finds the document that describes "venus flytrap" plants in the collection of documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores:
const venusFlytrap = await plants.findOne({ name: "venus flytrap" }); console.log("venusFlytrap", venusFlytrap);
{ _id: ObjectId("5f87976b7b800b285345a8c4"), name: "venus flytrap", sunlight: "full", color: "white", type: "perennial", _partition: "Store 42", }
Find Multiple Documents
To find multiple documents, pass a query that matches the documents to
collection.find(). If you do not
pass a query, find()
matches all documents in the collection.
The following snippet finds all documents that describe perennial plants in the collection of documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores:
const perennials = await plants.find({ type: "perennial" }); console.log("perennials", perennials);
[ { _id: ObjectId("5f87976b7b800b285345a8c4"), name: 'venus flytrap', sunlight: 'full', color: 'white', type: 'perennial', _partition: 'Store 42' }, { _id: ObjectId("5f87976b7b800b285345a8c6"), name: 'thai basil', sunlight: 'partial', color: 'green', type: 'perennial', _partition: 'Store 42' }, { _id: ObjectId("5f879f83fc9013565c23360e"), name: 'lily of the valley', sunlight: 'full', color: 'white', type: 'perennial', _partition: 'Store 47' }, { _id: ObjectId("5f87a0defc9013565c233611"), name: 'rhubarb', sunlight: 'full', color: 'red', type: 'perennial', _partition: 'Store 47' }, { _id: ObjectId("5f87a0dffc9013565c233612"), name: 'wisteria lilac', sunlight: 'partial', color: 'purple', type: 'perennial', _partition: 'Store 42' }, { _id: ObjectId("5f87a0dffc9013565c233613"), name: 'daffodil', sunlight: 'full', color: 'yellow', type: 'perennial', _partition: 'Store 42' } ]
Count Documents
To count documents, pass a query that matches the documents to
collection.count(). If you do not
pass a query, count()
counts all documents in the collection.
The following snippet counts the number of documents in a collection of documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores:
const numPlants = await plants.count(); console.log(`There are ${numPlants} plants in the collection`);
"There are 9 plants in the collection"
Write Operations
Insert a Single Document
To insert a single document, pass it to collection.insertOne().
The following snippet inserts a single document describing a "lily of the valley" plant into a collection of documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores:
const result = await plants.insertOne({ name: "lily of the valley", sunlight: "full", color: "white", type: "perennial", _partition: "Store 47", }); console.log(result);
{ insertedId: "5f879f83fc9013565c23360e", }
Insert Multiple Documents
To insert multiple documents at the same time, pass them as an array to collection.insertMany().
The following snippet inserts three documents describing plants into a collection of documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores:
const result = await plants.insertMany([ { name: "rhubarb", sunlight: "full", color: "red", type: "perennial", _partition: "Store 47", }, { name: "wisteria lilac", sunlight: "partial", color: "purple", type: "perennial", _partition: "Store 42", }, { name: "daffodil", sunlight: "full", color: "yellow", type: "perennial", _partition: "Store 42", }, ]); console.log(result);
{ insertedIds: [ "5f87a0defc9013565c233611", "5f87a0dffc9013565c233612", "5f87a0dffc9013565c233613", ], }
Update a Single Document
To update a single document, pass a query that matches the document and an update document to collection.updateOne().
The following snippet updates a single document in a collection of
documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores. This operation queries for a document where the
name
field contains the value "petunia" and changes the value of the first
matched document's sunlight
field to "partial":
const result = await plants.updateOne( { name: "petunia" }, { $set: { sunlight: "partial" } } ); console.log(result);
{ matchedCount: 1, modifiedCount: 1 }
Update Multiple Documents
To update multiple documents simultaneously, pass a query that matches the documents and an update description to collection.updateMany().
The following snippet updates multiple documents in a collection of
documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores. This operation queries for documents where the
_partition
field contains the value "Store 47" and changes the value of the
_partition
field of each matching document to "Store 51":
const result = await plants.updateMany( { _partition: "Store 47" }, { $set: { _partition: "Store 51" } } ); console.log(result);
{ matchedCount: 3, modifiedCount: 3 }
Upsert Documents
To upsert a document, set the upsert
option to true
in your update
operation. If the operation's query does not match any document in the
collection, an upsert automatically inserts a single new document into the
collection that matches the provided query document with the update applied to
it.
The following snippet updates a document in a collection of documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores with an upsert operation. The query doesn't match any existing documents, so MongoDB automatically creates a new one.
const result = await plants.updateOne( { sunlight: "full", type: "perennial", color: "green", _partition: "Store 47", }, { $set: { name: "sweet basil" } }, { upsert: true } ); console.log(result);
{ matchedCount: 0, modifiedCount: 0, upsertedId: ObjectId("5f1f63055512f2cb67f460a3"), }
Delete a Single Document
To delete a single document from a collection, pass a query that matches the document to collection.deleteOne(). If you do not pass a query or if the query matches multiple documents, then the operation deletes the first document it finds.
The following snippet deletes one document in a collection of documents
that describe plants for sale in a group of stores. This operation queries for a document where
the color
field has a value of "green" and deletes the first document that
matches the query:
const result = await plants.deleteOne({ color: "green" }); console.log(result);
{ deletedCount: 1 }
Delete Multiple Documents
To delete multiple document from a collection, pass a query that matches
the documents to collection.deleteMany(). If you do not pass a query,
deleteMany()
deletes all documents in the collection.
The following snippet deletes all documents for plants that are in "Store 51" in a collection of documents that describe plants for sale in a group of stores:
const result = await plants.deleteMany({ _partition: "Store 51", }); console.log(result);
{ deletedCount: 3 }
Real-time Change Notifications
You can call collection.watch() to subscribe to real-time change notifications that MongoDB emits whenever a document in the collection is added, modified, or deleted. Each notification specifies a document that changed, how it changed, and the full document after the operation that caused the event.
collection.watch()
returns an async generator
that allows you to asynchronously pull change events for operations as they occur.
collection.watch()
requires some set up to work with a React Native client
app. To watch a collection for changes, you must first install the
react-native-polyfill-globals
and @babel/plugin-proposal-async-generator-functions packages.
To use collection.watch():
Install dependencies.
npm install react-native-polyfill-globals text-encoding npm install --save-dev @babel/plugin-proposal-async-generator-functions Import polyfills in a higher scope than where you need to use them. For example, in
index.js
.import { polyfill as polyfillReadableStream } from "react-native-polyfill-globals/src/readable-stream"; import { polyfill as polyfillEncoding } from "react-native-polyfill-globals/src/encoding"; import { polyfill as polyfillFetch } from "react-native-polyfill-globals/src/fetch"; polyfillReadableStream(); polyfillEncoding(); polyfillFetch();
Important
Serverless Limitations
You cannot watch for changes if the data source is an Atlas serverless instance. MongoDB serverless currently does not support change streams, which are used on watched collections to listen for changes.
Watch for All Changes in a Collection
With the @realm/react
package, make sure you have
configured user authentication
for your app.
To watch for all changes in a collection, call collection.watch() with no arguments. This call must be
wrapped by a UserProvider
with an authenticated user.
import React, {useEffect} from 'react'; import Realm from 'realm'; import {useUser, useApp, AppProvider, UserProvider} from '@realm/react'; function AppWrapper() { return ( <AppProvider id={APP_ID}> <UserProvider fallback={<LogIn />}> <NotificationSetter /> </UserProvider> </AppProvider> ); } function NotificationSetter() { // Get currently logged in user const user = useUser(); const watchForAllChanges = async ( plants, ) => { // Watch for changes to the plants collection for await (const change of plants.watch()) { switch (change.operationType) { case 'insert': { const {documentKey, fullDocument} = change; // ... do something with the change information. break; } case 'update': { const {documentKey, fullDocument} = change; // ... do something with the change information. break; } case 'replace': { const {documentKey, fullDocument} = change; // ... do something with the change information. break; } case 'delete': { const {documentKey} = change; // ... do something with the change information. break; } } } }; useEffect(() => { const plants = user .mongoClient('mongodb-atlas') .db('example') .collection('plants'); // Set up notifications watchForAllChanges(plants); }, [user, watchForAllChanges]); // ... rest of component }
import React, {useEffect} from 'react'; import Realm from 'realm'; import {useUser, useApp, AppProvider, UserProvider} from '@realm/react'; function AppWrapper() { return ( <AppProvider id={APP_ID}> <UserProvider fallback={<LogIn />}> <NotificationSetter /> </UserProvider> </AppProvider> ); } function NotificationSetter() { // Get currently logged in user const user = useUser(); const watchForAllChanges = async ( plants: Realm.Services.MongoDB.MongoDBCollection<Plant>, ) => { // Watch for changes to the plants collection for await (const change of plants.watch()) { switch (change.operationType) { case 'insert': { const {documentKey, fullDocument} = change; // ... do something with the change information. break; } case 'update': { const {documentKey, fullDocument} = change; // ... do something with the change information. break; } case 'replace': { const {documentKey, fullDocument} = change; // ... do something with the change information. break; } case 'delete': { const {documentKey} = change; // ... do something with the change information. break; } } } }; useEffect(() => { const plants = user! .mongoClient('mongodb-atlas') .db('example') .collection<Plant>('plants'); // Set up notifications watchForAllChanges(plants); }, [user, watchForAllChanges]); // ... rest of component }
Watch for Specific Changes in a Collection
To watch for specific changes in a collection, pass a query that matches change event fields to collection.watch():
for await (const change of plants.watch({ filter: { operationType: "insert", "fullDocument.type": "perennial", }, })) { // The change event will always represent a newly inserted perennial const { documentKey, fullDocument } = change; console.log(`new document: ${documentKey}`, fullDocument); }
Aggregation Operations
Aggregation operations run all documents in a collection through a series of stages called an aggregation pipeline. Aggregation allows you to filter and transform documents, collect summary data about groups of related documents, and other complex data operations.
Run an Aggregation Pipeline
To execute an aggregation pipeline, pass an array of aggregation stages to collection.aggregate(). Aggregation operations return the result set of the last stage in the pipeline.
The following snippet groups all documents in the plants
collection by their
type
value and aggregates a count of the number of each type:
const result = await plants.aggregate([ { $group: { _id: "$type", total: { $sum: 1 }, }, }, { $sort: { _id: 1 } }, ]); console.log(result);
[ { _id: "annual", total: 1 }, { _id: "perennial", total: 5 }, ]
Filter Documents
You can use the $match stage to filter documents according to standard MongoDB query syntax.
{ "$match": { "<Field Name>": <Query Expression>, ... } }
Example
The following $match
stage filters documents to include
only those where the type
field has a value equal to "perennial":
const perennials = await plants.aggregate([ { $match: { type: { $eq: "perennial" } } }, ]); console.log(perennials);
Group Documents
You can use the $group stage to aggregate summary
data for one or more documents. MongoDB groups documents based
on the expression defined in the _id
field of the $group
stage.
You can reference a specific document field by prefixing the field name
with a $
.
{ "$group": { "_id": <Group By Expression>, "<Field Name>": <Aggregation Expression>, ... } }
Example
The following $group
stage arranges documents by the value of their
type
field and calculates the number of plant documents
that each unique type
value appears in.
const result = await plants.aggregate([ { $group: { _id: "$type", numItems: { $sum: 1 }, }, }, { $sort: { _id: 1 } }, ]); console.log(result);
Paginate Documents
To paginate results, you can use range aggregation queries with the $match
,
$sort
, and $limit
operators. To learn more about paginating documents,
refer to Using Range Queries
in the MongoDB Server documentation.
Example
The following example paginates through a collection of documents in ascending order.
// Paginates through list of plants // in ascending order by plant name (A -> Z) async function paginateCollectionAscending( collection, nPerPage, startValue ) { const pipeline = [{ $sort: { name: 1 } }, { $limit: nPerPage }]; // If not starting from the beginning of the collection, // only match documents greater than the previous greatest value. if (startValue !== undefined) { pipeline.unshift({ $match: { name: { $gt: startValue }, }, }); } const results = await collection.aggregate(pipeline); return results; } // Number of results to show on each page const resultsPerPage = 3; const pageOneResults = await paginateCollectionAscending( plants, resultsPerPage ); const pageTwoStartValue = pageOneResults[pageOneResults.length - 1].name; const pageTwoResults = await paginateCollectionAscending( plants, resultsPerPage, pageTwoStartValue ); // ... can keep paginating for as many plants as there are in the collection
Project Document Fields
You can use the $project stage to include or omit specific fields from documents or to calculate new fields using aggregation operators. Projections work in two ways:
Explicitly include fields with a value of 1. This has the side-effect of implicitly excluding all unspecified fields.
Implicitly exclude fields with a value of 0. This has the side-effect of implicitly including all unspecified fields.
These two methods of projection are mutually exclusive: if you explicitly include fields, you cannot explicitly exclude fields, and vice versa.
Note
The _id
field is a special case: it is always included in every
query unless explicitly specified otherwise. For this reason, you
can exclude the _id
field with a 0
value while simultaneously
including other fields, like _partition
, with a 1
. Only the
special case of exclusion of the _id
field allows both exclusion
and inclusion in one $project
stage.
{ "$project": { "<Field Name>": <0 | 1 | Expression>, ... } }
Example
The following $project
stage omits the _id
field, includes
the name
field, and creates a new field named storeNumber
.
The storeNumber
is generated using two aggregation operators:
$split
separates the_partition
value into two string segments surrounding the space character. For example, the value "Store 42" split in this way returns an array with two elements: "Store" and "42".$arrayElemAt
selects a specific element from an array based on the second argument. In this case, the value1
selects the second element from the array generated by the$split
operator since arrays index from0
. For example, the value ["Store", "42"] passed to this operation would return a value of "42".
const result = await plants.aggregate([ { $project: { _id: 0, name: 1, storeNumber: { $arrayElemAt: [{ $split: ["$_partition", " "] }, 1], }, }, }, ]); console.log(result);
Add Fields to Documents
You can use the $addFields stage to add new fields with calculated values using aggregation operators.
{ $addFields: { <newField>: <expression>, ... } }
Note
$addFields
is similar to $project but does not allow you to
include or omit fields.
Example
The following $addFields
stage creates a new field named
storeNumber
where the value is the output of two aggregate operators
that transform the value of the _partition
field.
const result = await plants.aggregate([ { $addFields: { storeNumber: { $arrayElemAt: [{ $split: ["$_partition", " "] }, 1], }, }, }, ]); console.log(result);
Unwind Array Values
You can use the $unwind stage to transform a single document containing an array into multiple documents containing individual values from that array. When you unwind an array field, MongoDB copies each document once for each element of the array field but replaces the array value with the array element in each copy.
{ $unwind: { path: <Array Field Path>, includeArrayIndex: <string>, preserveNullAndEmptyArrays: <boolean> } }
Example
The following example uses the $unwind
stage for each object's type
and color
combination. The aggregation pipeline has the following steps:
Use
$group
stage with$addToSet
to create new documents for eachtype
with a new fieldcolors
that contains an array of all the the colors for that flower type that occur in the collection.Use
$unwind
stage to create separate documents for each combination of type and color.Use
$sort
stage to sort the results in alphabetical order.
const result = await plants.aggregate([ { $group: { _id: "$type", colors: { $addToSet: "$color" } } }, { $unwind: { path: "$colors" } }, { $sort: { _id: 1, colors: 1 } }, ]); console.log(result);