NAME¶
MongoDB::Indexing - Indexing collections
VERSION¶
version v0.705.0.0
CREATING AN INDEX¶
Unique and non-unique indexes can be created on collections using
"MongoDB::Collection::ensure_index".
For example, to create a non-unique index on "x":
$collection->ensure_index({'x' => 1})
To create a unique index on "y":
$collection->ensure_index({"y" => 1}, {"unique" => 1});
Multi-key indexes can be created to speed up queries like "sort by name,
then by age." Index direction (1 or -1) is only important for multi-key
indexes and should be the sort order. So, for example, if we want a fast sort
by name ascending and age descending, we'd write:
my $idx = Tie::IxHash->new(name => 1, age => -1);
$collection->ensure_index($idx);
Keep in mind that you should use Tie::IxHash for multi-key indexes to guarantee
the keys will be saved in the correct order.
Options¶
The second parameter to "MongoDB::Collection::ensure_index" specifies
index options. Available options are:
- "unique => boolean"
- By default, indexes are not unique. To create a unique index, pass
"unique => true". "true" can be boolean::true or
any other true value.
- "drop_dups => boolean"
- If a unique index is being created on an existing set of data that has
duplicate values, creating the index will fail. To force the index
creation by deleting duplicate values, use this option. Again, any value
that evaluates to true will work.
- "safe => boolean"
- If the update fails and safe is set, this function will return 0. You
should check "MongoDB::Database::last_error" to find out why the
update failed.
- "background => boolean"
- Create the index as a background operation.
- "name => string"
- Give the index a non-default name. This can be useful if the index
contains so many keys that you get an "index name too long"
assertion, or if you just prefer a more human-readable name.
See Also¶
MongoDB documentation on indexing:
<
http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/indexes>.
GEOSPATIAL INDEXES¶
Starting in version 1.3.3 of MongoDB, you can create geospatial indexes. These
are useful for querying for "N documents nearest this point" or
"documents within this shape."
To create an index for geospatial queries, use "2d" instead of 1 or
-1. For example, this would create an index on the "location" field:
$coll->ensure_index({"location" => "2d"});
Then, you can query for documents using $near:
my $cursor = $coll->query({"location" => {'$near' => [44, -70]}})->limit(10);
This finds the 10 nearest documents (automatically sorted by distance ascending)
to latitude -70, longitude 44.
Documents must have some sort of pair in the "location" field,
although the database is pretty flexible as to what it will accept:
# valid geospatial locations
$coll->insert({"location" => [44, -70]});
$coll->insert({"location" => {"x" => 44, "y" => -70}});
$coll->insert({"location" => {"foo" => 44, "bar" => -70}});
You can save values in "(x,y)" or "(y,x)" order, but you
must be consistent.
By default, the geospatial index assumes that points will lie between -180 and
180, for longitude and latitude queries.
Options¶
- "min => int"
- By default, the geospatial index assumes that points will lie between -180
and 180, for longitude and latitude queries. If you need an alternative
minimum value, you can use this option. This value is exclusive: if you
specify "min => 0", you cannot save a point with a 0 value
coordinate.
- "max => int"
- Alternative maximum value, exclusive.
See Also¶
MongoDB documentation on geospatial indexes:
<
http://dochub.mongodb.org/core/geo>.
AUTHORS¶
- •
- David Golden <david.golden@mongodb.org>
- •
- Mike Friedman <friedo@mongodb.com>
- •
- Kristina Chodorow <kristina@mongodb.org>
- •
- Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This software is Copyright (c) 2014 by MongoDB, Inc..
This is free software, licensed under:
The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004