In today’s article, we will be focusing on the Update command within MongoDB. As this is not a traditional SQL database we need to pay extra attention and efforts to understand how an Update statement works in this case.
With the use of the Update method, an individual can update a specific field within the document or they can completely update an existing document. This can be achieved based on the Update parameters used. We will go through these scenarios with relevant examples at a later part of this article.
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db. collection.update( query, update, options)
As per the default update() method, a single document can be updated. If “Multi-Parameter” is acknowledged in the syntax then the update method will update all the documents as per the query.
db.collection.update(
,
,
{
upsert: ,
multi: ,
writeConcern: ,
collation:
}
)
Note: Code snippet has been taken from MongoDB official documentation.
Parameter
|
Query
|
Description
|
query | document | This part describes the selection criteria of the document that needs to be updated |
update | document | Whatever the documents needed to be updated, this parameter will be the key and it will do the job |
upsert | boolean | If the upsert is set to true, If no documents are matched based on the query selection, a new document will be created. If the upsert is set to false, which is a default way. Based on the query selection, if documents are matched then only the information will be updated. |
multi | boolean | If this parameter is set to true, then it will update multiple documents that meet the query criteria or selection. If this parameter is set to false, then it will update only a single document. The default value for this parameter is always false. |
Write concern | document | It is an optional parameter |
collation | document | It is an optional parameter |
Let’s consider the below example as a way to walk you through a single document update within MongoDB.
The school collection contains the following documents:
{ "_id" : 1, "name" : "International school", "New York" : "Manhattan" },
{ "_id" : 2, "name" : "Jack the sparrow", "New York" : "Empire State", "violations" : 2 },
{ "_id" : 3, "name" : "Eternal Techno School", "New York" : "Brooklyn", "violations" : 0 }
The above data set is available within the database as of now.
Now we are writing an update statement to include “Violations” as another data field the first record with the name “International School”.
try {
db.school.updateOne(
{ "name" : "International School" },
{ $set: { "violations" : 4 } }
);
} catch (e) {
print(e);
}
So based on the above query, if it is processed.
If there is any data matched, then the below statement will appear confirming the data has been updated.
{acknowledged”: true, “matchedCount”:1 , “modifiedCount” :1}
If the data didn’t match then the below statement will appear confirming the data has not been updated.
{acknowledged” : true, “matchedCount” :0 , “modifiedCount” :0}
So after the update, the school collection documents within MongoDB will be something like this:
{ "_id" : 1, "name" : "International school", "New York" : "Manhattan", “violations”:4 },
{ "_id" : 2, "name" : "Jack the sparrow", "New York" : "Empire State", "violations" : 2 },
{ "_id" : 3, "name" : "Eternal Techno School", "New York" : "Brooklyn", "violations" : 0 }
Now let’s try to understand and update a document within MongoDB using Upsert as a parameter, set to true:
As said, setting this parameter will update the document within MongoDB.
If the parameter is set to true then.
If the selection query is matched then it will update the values associated to it. If the selection query is not matched then it will insert a new document with the values.
Let’s understand this behavior
The school collection has the following documents
{ "_id" : 1, "name" : "International school", "New York" : "Manhattan", “violations”:4 },
{ "_id" : 2, "name" : "Jack the sparrow", "New York" : "Empire State", "violations" : 2 },
{ "_id" : 3, "name" : "Eternal Techno School", "New York" : "Brooklyn", "violations" : 0 }
With upsert has a parameter set to true, the document provided in the query will be inserted.
try {
db.restaurant.updateOne(
{ "name" : "Above and Beyond School" },
{ $set: {"_id" : 4, "violations" : 7, "New York" : "Manhattan" } },
{ upsert: true }
);
} catch (e) {
print(e);
}
If you have observed, the new document set that we have in the query didn’t match with the existing documents available in the database.
As the Upsert parameter is set to true so the document will be inserted as a new document within the database and the end result would be something like below:
This would be the response
{
"acknowledged" : true,
"matchedCount" : 0,
"modifiedCount" : 0,
"upsertedId" : 4
}
And this is how the documents will look like:
{ "_id" : 1, "name" : "International school", "New York" : "Manhattan", “violations”:4 },
{ "_id" : 2, "name" : "Jack the sparrow", "New York" : "Empire State", "violations" : 2 },
{ "_id" : 3, "name" : "Eternal Techno School", "New York" : "Brooklyn", "violations" : 0 }
{ "_id" : 4, "name" : "Above and Beyond School", "New York" : "Manhattan", "violations" : 7 }
So far we have understood how an update statement would work while updating one of the data elements within the document.
Frequently Asked MongoDB Interview Questions
Now let’s go through a process where multiple documents need to be updated. For this, we need to use the Update many functions within the Update statement.
db.collection.updateMany(
,
,
{
upsert: ,
writeConcern: ,
collation:
}
)
Note: Code snippet referred from MongoDB official documentation
Parameter | Query | Description |
Filter | document | This part describes the selection criteria of the document that needs to be updated |
update | document | Whatever the documents needed to be updated, this parameter will be the key and it will do the job |
upsert | boolean | If the upsert is set to true, If no documents are matched based on the query selection, a new document will be created. If the upsert is set to false, which is a default way Based on the query selection, if documents are matched then only the information will be updated. |
Write concern | document | It is an optional parameter |
collation
| document | It is an optional parameter |
Here is the set of documents that we have in the database, now let’s try out Update many function :
{ "_id" : 1, "name" : "International school", "New York" : "Manhattan", “violations”:4 },
{ "_id" : 2, "name" : "Jack the sparrow", "New York" : "Empire State", "violations" : 2 },
{ "_id" : 3, "name" : "Eternal Techno School", "New York" : "Brooklyn", "violations" : 0 }
{ "_id" : 4, "name" : "Above and Beyond School", "New York" : "Manhattan", "violations" : 7 }
Based on the following operation, we set a filter saying update all violations which are greater than 4 flag for status:
try {
db.restaurant.updateMany(
{ violations: { $gt: 3 } },
{ $set: { "Status" : true } }
);
} catch (e) {
print(e);
}
Based on the above filter criteria , we get to see this result as
{ "acknowledged" : true, "matchedCount" : 2, "modifiedCount" : 2 }
And the updated documents will look like this:
{ "_id" : 1, "name" : "International school", "New York" : "Manhattan", “violations”:4, “Status” : true },
{ "_id" : 2, "name" : "Jack the sparrow", "New York" : "Empire State", "violations" : 2 },
{ "_id" : 3, "name" : "Eternal Techno School", "New York" : "Brooklyn", "violations" : 0 }
{ "_id" : 4, "name" : "Above and Beyond School", "New York" : "Manhattan", "violations" : 7 , “Status” : true }
On contrary, if no matches were found, the operation would show a result in the following manner:
{ "acknowledged" : true, "matchedCount" : 0, "modifiedCount" : 0 }
try {
db.schools.updateMany(
{ "Violations" : { $gt : 5 }, "name" : "International School" },
{ $set: { "Status" : false } },
{ upsert: true }
);
} catch (e) {
print(e);
}
{
"acknowledged" : true,
"matchedCount" : 0,
"modifiedCount" : 0,
"upsertedId" : ObjectId("56fd5dcb39ec682bdc609b03")
}
{ "_id" : 1, "name" : "International school", "New York" : "Manhattan", “violations”:4, “Status” : true },
{ "_id" : 2, "name" : "Jack the sparrow", "New York" : "Empire State", "violations" : 2 },
{ "_id" : 3, "name" : "Eternal Techno School", "New York" : "Brooklyn", "violations" : 0 }
{ "_id" : 4, "name" : "Above and Beyond School", "New York" : "Manhattan", "violations" : 7 , “Status” : true }
{ "_id" :ObjectId("56fd5dcb39ec682bdc609b03"), "name" : "International school", "New York" : "Manhattan", “violations”:5, “Status” : false },
As we didn’t have an exact document match, the above update many statements has inserted a new document in the database.
We hope that you have learned something today, so keep on practicing and make sure you learn something new every day and every time.
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Prasanthi is an expert writer in MongoDB, and has written for various reputable online and print publications. At present, she is working for MindMajix, and writes content not only on MongoDB, but also on Sharepoint, Uipath, and AWS.