NAME

MongoDB::Database - A Mongo Database

VERSION

version 0.503.3

SYNOPSIS

The MongoDB::Database class accesses to a database.

# accesses the foo database
my $db = $connection->foo;

You can also access databases with the "get_database($name)" in MongoDB::Connection method.

NAME

MongoDB::Database - A Mongo database

SEE ALSO

Core documentation on databases: http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/databases.

ATTRIBUTES

name

The name of the database.

METHODS

collection_names

my @collections = $database->collection_names;

Returns the list of collections in this database.

get_collection ($name)

my $collection = $database->get_collection('foo');

Returns a MongoDB::Collection for the collection called $name within this database.

get_gridfs ($prefix?)

my $grid = $database->get_gridfs;

Returns a MongoDB::GridFS for storing and retrieving files from the database. Default prefix is "fs", making $grid->files "fs.files" and $grid->chunks "fs.chunks".

See MongoDB::GridFS for more information.

drop

$database->drop;

Deletes the database.

last_error($options?)

my $err = $db->last_error({w => 2});

Finds out if the last database operation completed successfully. If the last operation did not complete successfully, returns a hash reference of information about the error that occured.

The optional $options parameter is a hash reference that can contain any of the following:

w

Guarantees that the previous operation will be replicated to w servers before this command will return success. See MongoDB::Connection::w for more information.

wtimeout

Milliseconds to wait for w copies of the data to be made. This parameter should generally be specified, as the database will otherwise wait forever if w copies cannot be made.

fsync

If true, the database will fsync to disk before returning.

j

If true, awaits the journal commit before returning. If the server is running without journaling, it returns immediately, and successfully.

last_error returns a hash with fields that vary, depending on what the previous operation was and if it succeeded or failed. If the last operation (before the last_error call) failed, either:

err will be set or
errmsg will be set and ok will be 0.

If err is null and ok is 1, the previous operation succeeded.

The fields in the hash returned can include (but are not limited to):

ok

This should almost be 1 (unless last_error itself failed).

err

If this field is non-null, an error occurred on the previous operation. If this field is set, it will be a string describing the error that occurred.

code

If a database error occurred, the relevant error code will be passed back to the client.

errmsg

This field is set if something goes wrong with a database command. It is coupled with ok being 0. For example, if w is set and times out, errmsg will be set to "timed out waiting for slaves" and ok will be 0. If this field is set, it will be a string describing the error that occurred.

n

If the last operation was an insert, an update or a remove, the number of objects affected will be returned.

wtimeout

If the previous option timed out waiting for replication.

waited

How long the operation waited before timing out.

wtime

If w was set and the operation succeeded, how long it took to replicate to w servers.

upserted

If an upsert occured, this field will contain the new record's _id field. For upserts, either this field or updatedExisting will be present (unless an error occurred).

updatedExisting

If an upsert updated an existing element, this field will be true. For upserts, either this field or upserted will be present (unless an error occurred).

See "w" in MongoDB::Connection for more information.

run_command ($command)

my $result = $database->run_command({ some_command => 1 });

Runs a database command. Returns a string with the error message if the command fails. Returns the result of the command (a hash reference) on success. For a list of possible database commands, run:

my $commands = $db->run_command({listCommands : 1});

There are a few examples of database commands in the "DATABASE COMMANDS" in MongoDB::Examples section.

See also core documentation on database commands: http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/commands.

eval ($code, $args?)

my $result = $database->eval('function(x) { return "hello, "+x; }', ["world"]);

Evaluate a JavaScript expression on the Mongo server. The $code argument can be a string or an instance of MongoDB::Code. The $args are an optional array of arguments to be passed to the $code function.

eval is useful if you need to touch a lot of data lightly; in such a scenario the network transfer of the data could be a bottleneck. The $code argument must be a JavaScript function. $args is an array of parameters that will be passed to the function. For more examples of using eval see http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Server-side+Code+Execution#Server-sideCodeExecution-Using{{db.eval%28%29}}.

AUTHORS

  • Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>

  • Kristina Chodorow <kristina@mongodb.org>

  • Mike Friedman <mike.friedman@10gen.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is Copyright (c) 2013 by 10gen, Inc..

This is free software, licensed under:

The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004