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MONGOC_INDEX(3) MongoDB C Driver MONGOC_INDEX(3)

NAME

mongoc_index - MongoDB C Driver

A Cross Platform MongoDB Client Library for C

INTRODUCTION

The MongoDB C Driver, also known as "libmongoc", is a library for using MongoDB from C applications, and for writing MongoDB drivers in higher-level languages.

It depends on libbson to generate and parse BSON documents, the native data format of MongoDB.

Installing the MongoDB C Driver

The following guide will step you through the process of downloading, building, and installing the current release of the MongoDB C Driver.

Supported Platforms

The MongoDB C Driver is continuously tested on variety of platforms including:

Operating Systems CPU Architectures Compiler Toolchain
GNU/Linux x86 and x86_64 GCC 4.1 and newer
Solaris 11 ARM Clang 3.3 and newer
Mac OS X 10.6 and newer PPC Microsoft Visual Studio 2010 and newer
Windows Vista, 7, and 8 SPARC Oracle Solaris Studio 12
FreeBSD MinGW

Install with a Package Manager

The libmongoc package is available on recent versions of Debian and Ubuntu.

$ apt-get install libmongoc-1.0-0


On Fedora, a mongo-c-driver package is available in the default repositories and can be installed with:

$ dnf install mongo-c-driver


On recent Red Hat systems, such as CentOS and RHEL 7, a mongo-c-driver package is available in the EPEL repository. To check version available, see https://apps.fedoraproject.org/packages/mongo-c-driver. The package can be installed with:

$ yum install mongo-c-driver


Building on Unix

Prerequisites

OpenSSL is required for authentication or for SSL connections to MongoDB. Kerberos or LDAP support requires Cyrus SASL.

To install all optional dependencies on RedHat / Fedora:

$ sudo yum install pkg-config openssl-devel cyrus-sasl-devel


On Debian / Ubuntu:

$ sudo apt-get install pkg-config libssl-dev libsasl2-dev


On FreeBSD:

$ su -c 'pkg install pkgconf openssl cyrus-sasl'


Building from a release tarball

Unless you intend on contributing to the mongo-c-driver, you will want to build from a release tarball.

The most recent release of libmongoc is 1.6.3 and can be downloaded here. The following snippet will download and extract the driver, and configure it:

$ wget https://github.com/mongodb/mongo-c-driver/releases/download/1.6.3/mongo-c-driver-1.6.3.tar.gz
$ tar xzf mongo-c-driver-1.6.3.tar.gz
$ cd mongo-c-driver-1.6.3
$ ./configure --disable-automatic-init-and-cleanup


The --disable-automatic-init-and-cleanup option is recommended, see init-cleanup. For a list of all configure options, run ./configure --help.

If configure completed successfully, you'll see something like the following describing your build configuration.

libmongoc 1.6.3 was configured with the following options:
Build configuration:

Enable debugging (slow) : no
Compile with debug symbols (slow) : no
Enable GCC build optimization : yes
Enable automatic init and cleanup : no
Code coverage support : no
Cross Compiling : no
Fast counters : no
Shared memory performance counters : yes
SASL : sasl2
SSL : openssl
Libbson : bundled Documentation:
man : no
HTML : no


mongo-c-driver contains a copy of libbson, in case your system does not already have libbson installed. The configure script will detect if libbson is not installed and use the bundled libbson.

$ make
$ sudo make install


Building from git

To build an unreleased version of the driver from git requires additional dependencies.

RedHat / Fedora:

$ sudo yum install git gcc automake autoconf libtool


Debian / Ubuntu:

$ sudo apt-get install git gcc automake autoconf libtool


FreeBSD:

$ su -c 'pkg install git gcc automake autoconf libtool'


Once you have the dependencies installed, clone the repository and build the current master or a particular release tag:

$ git clone https://github.com/mongodb/mongo-c-driver.git
$ cd mongo-c-driver
$ git checkout x.y.z  # To build a particular release
$ ./autogen.sh --with-libbson=bundled
$ make
$ sudo make install


Generating the documentation

Install Sphinx, then:

$ ./configure --enable-html-docs --enable-man-pages
$ make man html


Building on Mac OS X

Install the XCode Command Line Tools:

$ xcode-select --install


Some Homebrew packages are also required. First install Homebrew according to its instructions, then:

$ brew install automake autoconf libtool pkgconfig


Download the latest release tarball

$ curl -LO https://github.com/mongodb/mongo-c-driver/releases/download/1.6.3/mongo-c-driver-1.6.3.tar.gz
$ tar xzf mongo-c-driver-1.6.3.tar.gz
$ cd mongo-c-driver-1.6.3


Build and install the driver:

$ ./configure
$ make
$ sudo make install


Native TLS Support on Mac OS X / Darwin (Secure Transport)

The MongoDB C Driver supports the Darwin native TLS and crypto libraries. Using the native libraries there is no need to install OpenSSL. By default however, the driver will compile against OpenSSL if it detects it being available. If OpenSSL is not available, it will fallback on the native libraries.

To compile against the Darwin native TLS and crypto libraries, even when OpenSSL is available, configure the driver like so:

$ ./configure --enable-ssl=darwin


OpenSSL support on El Capitan

Beginning in OS X 10.11 El Capitan, OS X no longer includes the OpenSSL headers. To build the driver with SSL on El Capitan and later:

$ brew install openssl
$ export LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib"
$ export CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include"


Building on Windows

Building on Windows requires Windows Vista or newer and Visual Studio 2010 or newer. Additionally, cmake is required to generate Visual Studio project files.

Let's start by generating Visual Studio project files for libbson, a dependency of the C driver. The following assumes we are compiling for 64-bit Windows using Visual Studio 2015 Express, which can be freely downloaded from Microsoft.

cd mongo-c-driver-1.6.3\src\libbson
cmake -G "Visual Studio 14 2015 Win64" "-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=C:\mongo-c-driver"


(Run cmake -LH . for a list of other options.)

Now that we have project files generated, we can either open the project in Visual Studio or compile from the command line. Let's build using the command line program msbuild.exe

msbuild.exe ALL_BUILD.vcxproj


Now that libbson is compiled, let's install it using msbuild. It will be installed to the path specified by CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.

msbuild.exe INSTALL.vcxproj


You should now see libbson installed in C:\mongo-c-driver

Now let's do the same for the MongoDB C driver.

cd mongo-c-driver-1.6.3
cmake -G "Visual Studio 14 2015 Win64" \

"-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=C:\mongo-c-driver" \
"-DBSON_ROOT_DIR=C:\mongo-c-driver" msbuild.exe ALL_BUILD.vcxproj msbuild.exe INSTALL.vcxproj


All of the MongoDB C Driver's components will now be found in C:\mongo-c-driver.

Native TLS Support on Windows (Secure Channel)

The MongoDB C Driver supports the Windows native TLS and crypto libraries. Using the native libraries there is no need to install OpenSSL. By default however, the driver will compile against OpenSSL if it detects it being available. If OpenSSL is not available, it will fallback on the native libraries.

To compile against the Windows native TLS and crypto libraries, even when OpenSSL is available, configure the driver like so:

cmake -G "Visual Studio 14 2015 Win64" \

"-DENABLE_SSL=WINDOWS" \
"-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=C:\mongo-c-driver" \
"-DBSON_ROOT_DIR=C:\mongo-c-driver"


Tutorial

This guide offers a brief introduction to the MongoDB C Driver.

For more information on the C API, please refer to the api.

Contents

Tutorial
  • Installing
  • Starting MongoDB
  • Making a Connection
  • Creating BSON Documents
  • Basic CRUD Operations
  • Executing Commands
  • Threading
  • Next Steps


Installing

For detailed instructions on installing the MongoDB C Driver on a particular platform, please see the installation guide.

Starting MongoDB

To run the examples in this tutorial, MongoDB must be installed and running on localhost on the default port, 27017. To check if it is up and running, connect to it with the MongoDB shell.

$ mongo --host localhost --port 27017
MongoDB shell version: 3.0.6
connecting to: localhost:27017/test
>


Making a Connection

The C Driver provides a convenient way to access MongoDB -- regardless of cluster configuration -- via a mongoc_client_t. It transparently connects to standalone servers, replica sets and sharded clusters on demand. Once a connection has been made, handles to databases and collections can be obtained via the structs mongoc_database_t and mongoc_collection_t, respectively. MongoDB operations can then be performed through these handles.

At the start of an application, call mongoc_init() before any other libmongoc functions and call mongoc_cleanup() before exiting. When creating handles to clients, databases and servers, call the appropriate destroy functions when finished.

The example below establishes a connection to a standalone server on localhost, registers the client application as "connect-example," and performs a simple command. More information about database operations can be found in the CRUD Operations and Executing Commands sections. Examples of connecting to replica sets and sharded clusters can be found on the Advanced Connections page.

#include <bson.h>
#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
int
main (int   argc,

char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_database_t *database;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
bson_t *command,
reply,
*insert;
bson_error_t error;
char *str;
bool retval;
/*
* Required to initialize libmongoc's internals
*/
mongoc_init ();
/*
* Create a new client instance
*/
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost:27017");
/*
* Register the application name so we can track it in the profile logs
* on the server. This can also be done from the URI (see other examples).
*/
mongoc_client_set_appname (client, "connect-example");
/*
* Get a handle on the database "db_name" and collection "coll_name"
*/
database = mongoc_client_get_database (client, "db_name");
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "db_name", "coll_name");
/*
* Do work. This example pings the database, prints the result as JSON and
* performs an insert
*/
command = BCON_NEW ("ping", BCON_INT32 (1));
retval = mongoc_client_command_simple (client, "admin", command, NULL, &reply, &error);
if (!retval) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
insert = BCON_NEW ("hello", BCON_UTF8 ("world"));
if (!mongoc_collection_insert (collection, MONGOC_INSERT_NONE, insert, NULL, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (insert);
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (command);
bson_free (str);
/*
* Release our handles and clean up libmongoc
*/
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_database_destroy (database);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


On a UNIX-like system, the code can be compiled and run like so:

$ gcc -o connect connect.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./connect
{ "ok" : 1.000000 }


Alternatively, if pkg-config is not available, paths and libraries can be managed manually.

$ gcc -o connect connect.c -I/usr/local/include -lmongoc-1.0 -lbson-1.0
$ ./connect
{ "ok" : 1.000000 }


For Windows users, the code can be compiled and run with the following commands. (This assumes that the MongoDB C Driver has been installed to C:\mongo-c-driver; change the include directory as needed.)

C:\> cl.exe /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libbson-1.0 /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libmongoc-1.0 connect.c
C:\> connect
{ "ok" : 1.000000 }


Creating BSON Documents

Documents are stored in MongoDB's data format, BSON. The C driver uses libbson to create BSON documents. There are several ways to construct them: appending key-value pairs, using BCON, or parsing JSON.

Appending BSON

A BSON document, represented as a bson_t in code, can be constructed one field at a time using libbson's append functions.

For example, to create a document like this:

{

born : ISODate("1906-12-09"),
died : ISODate("1992-01-01"),
name : {
first : "Grace",
last : "Hopper"
},
languages : [ "MATH-MATIC", "FLOW-MATIC", "COBOL" ],
degrees: [ { degree: "BA", school: "Vassar" }, { degree: "PhD", school: "Yale" } ] }


Use the following code:

#include <bson.h>
int
main (int   argc,

char *argv[]) {
struct tm born = { 0 };
struct tm died = { 0 };
const char *lang_names[] = {"MATH-MATIC", "FLOW-MATIC", "COBOL"};
const char *schools[] = {"Vassar", "Yale"};
const char *degrees[] = {"BA", "PhD"};
uint32_t i;
char buf[16];
const char *key;
size_t keylen;
bson_t *document;
bson_t child;
bson_t child2;
char *str;
document = bson_new ();
/*
* Append { "born" : ISODate("1906-12-09") } to the document.
* Passing -1 for the length argument tells libbson to calculate the string length.
*/
born.tm_year = 6; /* years are 1900-based */
born.tm_mon = 11; /* months are 0-based */
born.tm_mday = 9;
bson_append_date_time (document, "born", -1, mktime (&born) * 1000);
/*
* Append { "died" : ISODate("1992-01-01") } to the document.
*/
died.tm_year = 92;
died.tm_mon = 0;
died.tm_mday = 1;
/*
* For convenience, this macro passes length -1 by default.
*/
BSON_APPEND_DATE_TIME (document, "died", mktime (&died) * 1000);
/*
* Append a subdocument.
*/
BSON_APPEND_DOCUMENT_BEGIN (document, "name", &child);
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&child, "first", "Grace");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&child, "last", "Hopper");
bson_append_document_end (document, &child);
/*
* Append array of strings. Generate keys "0", "1", "2".
*/
BSON_APPEND_ARRAY_BEGIN (document, "languages", &child);
for (i = 0; i < sizeof lang_names / sizeof (char *); ++i) {
keylen = bson_uint32_to_string (i, &key, buf, sizeof buf);
bson_append_utf8 (&child, key, (int) keylen, lang_names[i], -1);
}
bson_append_array_end (document, &child);
/*
* Array of subdocuments:
* degrees: [ { degree: "BA", school: "Vassar" }, ... ]
*/
BSON_APPEND_ARRAY_BEGIN (document, "degrees", &child);
for (i = 0; i < sizeof degrees / sizeof (char *); ++i) {
keylen = bson_uint32_to_string (i, &key, buf, sizeof buf);
bson_append_document_begin (&child, key, (int) keylen, &child2);
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&child2, "degree", degrees[i]);
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&child2, "school", schools[i]);
bson_append_document_end (&child, &child2);
}
bson_append_array_end (document, &child);
/*
* Print the document as a JSON string.
*/
str = bson_as_json (document, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
/*
* Clean up allocated bson documents.
*/
bson_destroy (document);
return 0; }


See the libbson documentation for all of the types that can be appended to a bson_t.

Using BCON

BSON C Object Notation, BCON for short, is an alternative way of constructing BSON documents in a manner closer to the intended format. It has less type-safety than BSON's append functions but results in less code.

#include <bson.h>
int
main (int   argc,

char *argv[]) {
struct tm born = { 0 };
struct tm died = { 0 };
bson_t *document;
char *str;
born.tm_year = 6;
born.tm_mon = 11;
born.tm_mday = 9;
died.tm_year = 92;
died.tm_mon = 0;
died.tm_mday = 1;
document = BCON_NEW (
"born", BCON_DATE_TIME (mktime (&born) * 1000),
"died", BCON_DATE_TIME (mktime (&died) * 1000),
"name", "{",
"first", BCON_UTF8 ("Grace"),
"last", BCON_UTF8 ("Hopper"),
"}",
"languages", "[",
BCON_UTF8 ("MATH-MATIC"),
BCON_UTF8 ("FLOW-MATIC"),
BCON_UTF8 ("COBOL"),
"]",
"degrees", "[",
"{", "degree", BCON_UTF8 ("BA"), "school", BCON_UTF8 ("Vassar"), "}",
"{", "degree", BCON_UTF8 ("PhD"), "school", BCON_UTF8 ("Yale"), "}",
"]");
/*
* Print the document as a JSON string.
*/
str = bson_as_json (document, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
/*
* Clean up allocated bson documents.
*/
bson_destroy (document);
return 0; }


Notice that BCON can create arrays, subdocuments and arbitrary fields.

Creating BSON from JSON

For single documents, BSON can be created from JSON strings via bson_new_from_json.

#include <bson.h>
int
main (int   argc,

char *argv[]) {
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *bson;
char *string;
const char *json = "{\"name\": {\"first\":\"Grace\", \"last\":\"Hopper\"}}";
bson = bson_new_from_json ((const uint8_t *)json, -1, &error);
if (!bson) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
string = bson_as_json (bson, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", string);
bson_free (string);
return 0; }


To initialize BSON from a sequence of JSON documents, use bson_json_reader_t.

Basic CRUD Operations

This section demonstrates the basics of using the C Driver to interact with MongoDB.

Inserting a Document

To insert documents into a collection, first obtain a handle to a mongoc_collection_t via a mongoc_client_t. Then, use mongoc_collection_insert() to add BSON documents to the collection. This example inserts into the database "mydb" and collection "mycoll".

When finished, ensure that allocated structures are freed by using their respective destroy functions.

#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int   argc,

char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
bson_error_t error;
bson_oid_t oid;
bson_t *doc;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost:27017/?appname=insert-example");
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "mydb", "mycoll");
doc = bson_new ();
bson_oid_init (&oid, NULL);
BSON_APPEND_OID (doc, "_id", &oid);
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (doc, "hello", "world");
if (!mongoc_collection_insert (collection, MONGOC_INSERT_NONE, doc, NULL, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (doc);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


Compile the code and run it:

$ gcc -o insert insert.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./insert


On Windows:

C:\> cl.exe /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libbson-1.0 /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libmongoc-1.0 insert.c
C:\> insert


To verify that the insert succeeded, connect with the MongoDB shell.

$ mongo
MongoDB shell version: 3.0.6
connecting to: test
> use mydb
switched to db mydb
> db.mycoll.find()
{ "_id" : ObjectId("55ef43766cb5f36a3bae6ee4"), "hello" : "world" }
>


Finding a Document

To query a MongoDB collection with the C driver, use the function mongoc_collection_find_with_opts(). This returns a cursor to the matching documents. The following examples iterate through the result cursors and print the matches to stdout as JSON strings.

Use a document as a query specifier; for example,

{ "color" : "red" }


will match any document with a field named "color" with value "red". An empty document {} can be used to match all documents.

This first example uses an empty query specifier to find all documents in the database "mydb" and collection "mycoll".

#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
const bson_t *doc;
bson_t *query;
char *str;
mongoc_init ();
client =
mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost:27017/?appname=find-example");
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "mydb", "mycoll");
query = bson_new ();
cursor = mongoc_collection_find_with_opts (collection, query, NULL, NULL);
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
str = bson_as_json (doc, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
}
bson_destroy (query);
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


Compile the code and run it:

$ gcc -o find find.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./find
{ "_id" : { "$oid" : "55ef43766cb5f36a3bae6ee4" }, "hello" : "world" }


On Windows:

C:\> cl.exe /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libbson-1.0 /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libmongoc-1.0 find.c
C:\> find
{ "_id" : { "$oid" : "55ef43766cb5f36a3bae6ee4" }, "hello" : "world" }


To look for a specific document, add a specifier to query. This example adds a call to BSON_APPEND_UTF8() to look for all documents matching {"hello" : "world"}.

#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
const bson_t *doc;
bson_t *query;
char *str;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new (
"mongodb://localhost:27017/?appname=find-specific-example");
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "mydb", "mycoll");
query = bson_new ();
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (query, "hello", "world");
cursor = mongoc_collection_find_with_opts (collection, query, NULL, NULL);
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
str = bson_as_json (doc, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
}
bson_destroy (query);
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


$ gcc -o find-specific find-specific.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./find-specific
{ "_id" : { "$oid" : "55ef43766cb5f36a3bae6ee4" }, "hello" : "world" }


C:\> cl.exe /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libbson-1.0 /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libmongoc-1.0 find-specific.c
C:\> find-specific
{ "_id" : { "$oid" : "55ef43766cb5f36a3bae6ee4" }, "hello" : "world" }


Updating a Document

This code snippet gives an example of using mongoc_collection_update() to update the fields of a document.

Using the "mydb" database, the following example inserts an example document into the "mycoll" collection. Then, using its _id field, the document is updated with different values and a new field.

#include <bcon.h>
#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_client_t *client;
bson_error_t error;
bson_oid_t oid;
bson_t *doc = NULL;
bson_t *update = NULL;
bson_t *query = NULL;
mongoc_init ();
client =
mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost:27017/?appname=update-example");
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "mydb", "mycoll");
bson_oid_init (&oid, NULL);
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_OID (&oid), "key", BCON_UTF8 ("old_value"));
if (!mongoc_collection_insert (
collection, MONGOC_INSERT_NONE, doc, NULL, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
goto fail;
}
query = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_OID (&oid));
update = BCON_NEW ("$set",
"{",
"key",
BCON_UTF8 ("new_value"),
"updated",
BCON_BOOL (true),
"}");
if (!mongoc_collection_update (
collection, MONGOC_UPDATE_NONE, query, update, NULL, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
goto fail;
} fail:
if (doc)
bson_destroy (doc);
if (query)
bson_destroy (query);
if (update)
bson_destroy (update);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


Compile the code and run it:

$ gcc -o update update.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./update


On Windows:

C:\> cl.exe /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libbson-1.0 /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libmongoc-1.0 update.c
C:\> update
{ "_id" : { "$oid" : "55ef43766cb5f36a3bae6ee4" }, "hello" : "world" }


To verify that the update succeeded, connect with the MongoDB shell.

$ mongo
MongoDB shell version: 3.0.6
connecting to: test
> use mydb
switched to db mydb
> db.mycoll.find({"updated" : true})
{ "_id" : ObjectId("55ef549236fe322f9490e17b"), "updated" : true, "key" : "new_value" }
>


Deleting a Document

This example illustrates the use of mongoc_collection_remove() to delete documents.

The following code inserts a sample document into the database "mydb" and collection "mycoll". Then, it deletes all documents matching {"hello" : "world"}.

#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
bson_error_t error;
bson_oid_t oid;
bson_t *doc;
mongoc_init ();
client =
mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost:27017/?appname=delete-example");
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "test");
doc = bson_new ();
bson_oid_init (&oid, NULL);
BSON_APPEND_OID (doc, "_id", &oid);
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (doc, "hello", "world");
if (!mongoc_collection_insert (
collection, MONGOC_INSERT_NONE, doc, NULL, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "Insert failed: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (doc);
doc = bson_new ();
BSON_APPEND_OID (doc, "_id", &oid);
if (!mongoc_collection_remove (
collection, MONGOC_REMOVE_SINGLE_REMOVE, doc, NULL, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "Delete failed: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (doc);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


Compile the code and run it:

$ gcc -o delete delete.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./delete


On Windows:

C:\> cl.exe /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libbson-1.0 /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libmongoc-1.0 delete.c
C:\> delete


Use the MongoDB shell to prove that the documents have been removed successfully.

$ mongo
MongoDB shell version: 3.0.6
connecting to: test
> use mydb
switched to db mydb
> db.mycoll.count({"hello" : "world"})
0
>


Counting Documents

Counting the number of documents in a MongoDB collection is similar to performing a find operation. This example counts the number of documents matching {"hello" : "world"} in the database "mydb" and collection "mycoll".

#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *doc;
int64_t count;
mongoc_init ();
client =
mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost:27017/?appname=count-example");
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "mydb", "mycoll");
doc = bson_new_from_json (
(const uint8_t *) "{\"hello\" : \"world\"}", -1, &error);
count = mongoc_collection_count (
collection, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, doc, 0, 0, NULL, &error);
if (count < 0) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
} else {
printf ("%" PRId64 "\n", count);
}
bson_destroy (doc);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


Compile the code and run it:

$ gcc -o count count.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./count
1


On Windows:

C:\> cl.exe /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libbson-1.0 /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libmongoc-1.0 count.c
C:\> count
1


Executing Commands

The driver provides helper functions for executing MongoDB commands on client, database and collection structures. These functions return cursors; the _simple variants return booleans indicating success or failure.

This example executes the collStats command against the collection "mycoll" in database "mydb".

#include <bson.h>
#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *command;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new (
"mongodb://localhost:27017/?appname=executing-example");
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "mydb", "mycoll");
command = BCON_NEW ("collStats", BCON_UTF8 ("mycoll"));
if (mongoc_collection_command_simple (
collection, command, NULL, &reply, &error)) {
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
} else {
fprintf (stderr, "Failed to run command: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (command);
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


Compile the code and run it:

$ gcc -o executing executing.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./executing
{ "ns" : "mydb.mycoll", "count" : 1, "size" : 48, "avgObjSize" : 48, "numExtents" : 1, "storageSize" : 8192,
"lastExtentSize" : 8192.000000, "paddingFactor" : 1.000000, "userFlags" : 1, "capped" : false, "nindexes" : 1,
"indexDetails" : {  }, "totalIndexSize" : 8176, "indexSizes" : { "_id_" : 8176 }, "ok" : 1.000000 }


On Windows:

C:\> cl.exe /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libbson-1.0 /IC:\mongo-c-driver\include\libmongoc-1.0 executing.c
C:\> executing
{ "ns" : "mydb.mycoll", "count" : 1, "size" : 48, "avgObjSize" : 48, "numExtents" : 1, "storageSize" : 8192,
"lastExtentSize" : 8192.000000, "paddingFactor" : 1.000000, "userFlags" : 1, "capped" : false, "nindexes" : 1,
"indexDetails" : {  }, "totalIndexSize" : 8176, "indexSizes" : { "_id_" : 8176 }, "ok" : 1.000000 }


Threading

The MongoDB C Driver is thread-unaware in the vast majority of its operations. This means it is up to the programmer to guarantee thread-safety.

However, mongoc_client_pool_t is thread-safe and is used to fetch a mongoc_client_t in a thread-safe manner. After retrieving a client from the pool, the client structure should be considered owned by the calling thread. When the thread is finished, the client should be placed back into the pool. example-pool.c.INDENT 0.0

/* gcc example-pool.c -o example-pool $(pkg-config --cflags --libs

* libmongoc-1.0) */ /* ./example-pool [CONNECTION_STRING] */ #include <mongoc.h> #include <pthread.h> #include <stdio.h> static pthread_mutex_t mutex; static bool in_shutdown = false; static void * worker (void *data) {
mongoc_client_pool_t *pool = data;
mongoc_client_t *client;
bson_t ping = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bson_error_t error;
bool r;
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&ping, "ping", 1);
while (true) {
client = mongoc_client_pool_pop (pool);
/* Do something with client. If you are writing an HTTP server, you
* probably only want to hold onto the client for the portion of the
* request performing database queries.
*/
r = mongoc_client_command_simple (
client, "admin", &ping, NULL, NULL, &error);
if (!r) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
}
mongoc_client_pool_push (pool, client);
pthread_mutex_lock (&mutex);
if (in_shutdown || !r) {
pthread_mutex_unlock (&mutex);
break;
}
pthread_mutex_unlock (&mutex);
}
bson_destroy (&ping);
return NULL; } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
const char *uristr = "mongodb://127.0.0.1/?appname=pool-example";
mongoc_uri_t *uri;
mongoc_client_pool_t *pool;
pthread_t threads[10];
unsigned i;
void *ret;
pthread_mutex_init (&mutex, NULL);
mongoc_init ();
if (argc > 1) {
uristr = argv[1];
}
uri = mongoc_uri_new (uristr);
if (!uri) {
fprintf (stderr, "Failed to parse URI: \"%s\".\n", uristr);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
pool = mongoc_client_pool_new (uri);
mongoc_client_pool_set_error_api (pool, 2);
for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
pthread_create (&threads[i], NULL, worker, pool);
}
sleep (10);
pthread_mutex_lock (&mutex);
in_shutdown = true;
pthread_mutex_unlock (&mutex);
for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
pthread_join (threads[i], &ret);
}
mongoc_client_pool_destroy (pool);
mongoc_uri_destroy (uri);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



Next Steps

To find information on advanced topics, browse the rest of the C driver guide or the official MongoDB documentation.

For help with common issues, consult the Troubleshooting page. To report a bug or request a new feature, follow these instructions.

Authentication

This guide covers the use of authentication options with the MongoDB C Driver. Ensure that the MongoDB server is also properly configured for authentication before making a connection. For more information, see the MongoDB security documentation.

Basic Authentication

The MongoDB C driver supports challenge response authentication (sometimes known as MONGODB-CR) through the use of MongoDB connection URIs.

Simply provide the username and password as one would with an HTTP URL, as well as the database to authenticate against via authSource.

mongoc_client_t *client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://user:password@localhost/?authSource=mydb");


GSSAPI (Kerberos) Authentication

NOTE:

Kerberos support is only provided in environments supported by the cyrus-sasl Kerberos implementation. This currently limits support to UNIX-like environments.


GSSAPI (Kerberos) authentication is available in the Enterprise Edition of MongoDB, version 2.4 and newer. To authenticate using GSSAPI, the MongoDB C driver must be installed with SASL support. Run the kinit command before using the following authentication methods:

$ kinit mongodbuser@EXAMPLE.COMmongodbuser@EXAMPLE.COM's Password:
$ klistCredentials cache: FILE:/tmp/krb5cc_1000

Principal: mongodbuser@EXAMPLE.COM
Issued Expires Principal Feb 9 13:48:51 2013 Feb 9 23:48:51 2013 krbtgt/EXAMPLE.COM@EXAMPLE.COM


Now authenticate using the MongoDB URI. GSSAPI authenticates against the $external virtual database, so a database does not need to be specified in the URI. Note that the Kerberos principal must be URL-encoded:

mongoc_client_t *client;
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://mongodbuser%40EXAMPLE.COM@example.com/?authMechanism=GSSAPI");


The driver supports these GSSAPI properties:

  • CANONICALIZE_HOST_NAME: This might be required when the hosts report different hostnames than what is used in the kerberos database. The default is "false".
  • SERVICE_NAME: Use a different service name than the default, "mongodb".

Set properties in the URL:

mongoc_client_t *client;
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://mongodbuser%40EXAMPLE.COM@example.com/?authMechanism=GSSAPI&"

"authMechanismProperties=SERVICE_NAME:other,CANONICALIZE_HOST_NAME:true");


If you encounter errors such as Invalid net address, check if the application is behind a NAT (Network Address Translation) firewall. If so, create a ticket that uses forwardable and addressless Kerberos tickets. This can be done by passing -f -A to kinit.

$ kinit -f -A mongodbuser@EXAMPLE.COM


SASL Plain Authentication

NOTE:

The MongoDB C Driver must be compiled with SASL support in order to use SASL PLAIN authentication.


MongoDB Enterprise Edition versions 2.5.0 and newer support the SASL PLAIN authentication mechanism, initially intended for delegating authentication to an LDAP server. Using the SASL PLAIN mechanism is very similar to the challenge response mechanism with usernames and passwords. These examples use the $external virtual database for LDAP support:

NOTE:

SASL PLAIN is a clear-text authentication mechanism. It is strongly recommended to connect to MongoDB using SSL with certificate validation when using the PLAIN mechanism.


mongoc_client_t *client;
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://user:password@example.com/?authMechanism=PLAIN&authSource=$external");


X.509 Certificate Authentication

NOTE:

The MongoDB C Driver must be compiled with SSL support for X.509 authentication support. Once this is done, start a server with the following options:

$ mongod --clusterAuthMode x509 --sslMode requireSSL --sslPEMKeyFile server.pem --sslCAFile ca.pem




The MONGODB-X509 mechanism authenticates a username derived from the distinguished subject name of the X.509 certificate presented by the driver during SSL negotiation. This authentication method requires the use of SSL connections with certificate validation and is available in MongoDB 2.5.1 and newer:

mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_ssl_opt_t ssl_opts = { 0 };
ssl_opts.pem_file = "mycert.pem";
ssl_opts.pem_pwd = "mycertpassword";
ssl_opts.ca_file = "myca.pem";
ssl_opts.ca_dir = "trust_dir";
ssl_opts.weak_cert_validation = false;
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://x509_derived_username@localhost/?authMechanism=MONGODB-X509");
mongoc_client_set_ssl_opts (client, &ssl_opts);


MONGODB-X509 authenticates against the $external database, so specifying a database is not required. For more information on the x509_derived_username, see the MongoDB server x.509 tutorial.

Basic Troubleshooting

Troubleshooting Checklist

The following is a short list of things to check when you have a problem.

  • Did you call mongoc_init() in main()? If not, you will likely see a segfault.
  • Have you leaked any clients or cursors as can be found with mongoc-stat <PID>?
  • Have packets been delivered to the server? See egress bytes from mongoc-stat <PID>.
  • Does valgrind show any leaks? Ensure you call mongoc_cleanup() at the end of your process to cleanup lingering allocations from the MongoDB C driver.
  • If compiling your own copy of MongoDB C driver, consider configuring with --enable-tracing to enable function tracing and hex dumps of network packets to STDERR and STDOUT.

Performance Counters

The MongoDB C driver comes with a unique feature to help developers and sysadmins troubleshoot problems in production. Performance counters are available for each process using the driver. The counters can be accessed outside of the application process via a shared memory segment. This means that you can graph statistics about your application process easily from tools like Munin or Nagios. Your author often uses watch --interval=0.5 -d mongoc-stat $PID to monitor an application.

Counters are currently available on UNIX-like platforms that support shared memory segments.

  • Active and Disposed Cursors
  • Active and Disposed Clients, Client Pools, and Socket Streams.
  • Number of operations sent and received, by type.
  • Bytes transferred and received.
  • Authentication successes and failures.
  • Number of wire protocol errors.

To access counters for a given process, simply provide the process id to the mongoc-stat program installed with the MongoDB C Driver.

$ mongoc-stat 22203

Operations : Egress Total : The number of sent operations. : 13247
Operations : Ingress Total : The number of received operations. : 13246
Operations : Egress Queries : The number of sent Query operations. : 13247
Operations : Ingress Queries : The number of received Query operations. : 0
Operations : Egress GetMore : The number of sent GetMore operations. : 0
Operations : Ingress GetMore : The number of received GetMore operations. : 0
Operations : Egress Insert : The number of sent Insert operations. : 0
Operations : Ingress Insert : The number of received Insert operations. : 0
Operations : Egress Delete : The number of sent Delete operations. : 0
Operations : Ingress Delete : The number of received Delete operations. : 0
Operations : Egress Update : The number of sent Update operations. : 0
Operations : Ingress Update : The number of received Update operations. : 0
Operations : Egress KillCursors : The number of sent KillCursors operations. : 0
Operations : Ingress KillCursors : The number of received KillCursors operations. : 0
Operations : Egress Msg : The number of sent Msg operations. : 0
Operations : Ingress Msg : The number of received Msg operations. : 0
Operations : Egress Reply : The number of sent Reply operations. : 0
Operations : Ingress Reply : The number of received Reply operations. : 13246
Cursors : Active : The number of active cursors. : 1
Cursors : Disposed : The number of disposed cursors. : 13246
Clients : Active : The number of active clients. : 1
Clients : Disposed : The number of disposed clients. : 0
Streams : Active : The number of active streams. : 1
Streams : Disposed : The number of disposed streams. : 0
Streams : Egress Bytes : The number of bytes sent. : 794931
Streams : Ingress Bytes : The number of bytes received. : 589694
Streams : N Socket Timeouts : The number of socket timeouts. : 0
Client Pools : Active : The number of active client pools. : 1
Client Pools : Disposed : The number of disposed client pools. : 0
Protocol : Ingress Errors : The number of protocol errors on ingress. : 0
Auth : Failures : The number of failed authentication requests. : 0
Auth : Success : The number of successful authentication requests. : 0


Submitting a Bug Report

Think you've found a bug? Want to see a new feature in the MongoDB C driver? Please open a case in our issue management tool, JIRA:

  • Create an account and login.
  • Navigate to the CDRIVER project.
  • Click Create Issue - Please provide as much information as possible about the issue type and how to reproduce it.

Bug reports in JIRA for all driver projects (i.e. CDRIVER, CSHARP, JAVA) and the Core Server (i.e. SERVER) project are public.

Guides

Common Tasks

Drivers for some other languages provide helper functions to perform certain common tasks. In the C Driver we must explicitly build commands to send to the server.

This snippet contains example code for the explain, copydb and cloneCollection commands.

Setup

First we'll write some code to insert sample data: doc-common-insert.c.INDENT 0.0

/* Don't try to compile this file on its own. It's meant to be #included

by example code */ /* Insert some sample data */ bool insert_data (mongoc_collection_t *collection) {
mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
enum N { ndocs = 4 };
bson_t *docs[ndocs];
bson_error_t error;
int i = 0;
bool ret;
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, NULL);
docs[0] = BCON_NEW ("x", BCON_DOUBLE (1.0), "tags", "[", "dog", "cat", "]");
docs[1] = BCON_NEW ("x", BCON_DOUBLE (2.0), "tags", "[", "cat", "]");
docs[2] = BCON_NEW (
"x", BCON_DOUBLE (2.0), "tags", "[", "mouse", "cat", "dog", "]");
docs[3] = BCON_NEW ("x", BCON_DOUBLE (3.0), "tags", "[", "]");
for (i = 0; i < ndocs; i++) {
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, docs[i]);
bson_destroy (docs[i]);
docs[i] = NULL;
}
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, NULL, &error);
if (!ret) {
fprintf (stderr, "Error inserting data: %s\n", error.message);
}
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk);
return ret; } /* A helper which we'll use a lot later on */ void print_res (const bson_t *reply) {
BSON_ASSERT (reply);
char *str = bson_as_json (reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str); }



explain Command

This is how to use the explain command in MongoDB 3.2+: explain.c.INDENT 0.0

bool
explain (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

bson_t *command;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
bool res;
command = BCON_NEW ("explain",
"{",
"find",
BCON_UTF8 (COLLECTION_NAME),
"filter",
"{",
"x",
BCON_INT32 (1),
"}",
"}");
res = mongoc_collection_command_simple (
collection, command, NULL, &reply, &error);
if (!res) {
fprintf (stderr, "Error with explain: %s\n", error.message);
goto cleanup;
}
/* Do something with the reply */
print_res (&reply); cleanup:
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (command);
return res; }



copydb Command

This example requires two instances of mongo to be running.

Here's how to use the copydb command to copy a database from another instance of MongoDB: copydb.c.INDENT 0.0

bool
copydb (mongoc_client_t *client, const char *other_host_and_port)
{

mongoc_database_t *admindb;
bson_t *command;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
bool res;
BSON_ASSERT (other_host_and_port);
/* Must do this from the admin db */
admindb = mongoc_client_get_database (client, "admin");
command = BCON_NEW ("copydb",
BCON_INT32 (1),
"fromdb",
BCON_UTF8 ("test"),
"todb",
BCON_UTF8 ("test2"),
/* If you want from a different host */
"fromhost",
BCON_UTF8 (other_host_and_port));
res =
mongoc_database_command_simple (admindb, command, NULL, &reply, &error);
if (!res) {
fprintf (stderr, "Error with copydb: %s\n", error.message);
goto cleanup;
}
/* Do something with the reply */
print_res (&reply); cleanup:
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (command);
mongoc_database_destroy (admindb);
return res; }



cloneCollection Command

This example requires two instances of mongo to be running.

Here's an example of the cloneCollection command to clone a collection from another instance of MongoDB: clone-collection.c.INDENT 0.0

bool
clone_collection (mongoc_database_t *database, const char *other_host_and_port)
{

bson_t *command;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
bool res;
BSON_ASSERT (other_host_and_port);
command = BCON_NEW ("cloneCollection",
BCON_UTF8 ("test.remoteThings"),
"from",
BCON_UTF8 (other_host_and_port),
"query",
"{",
"x",
BCON_INT32 (1),
"}");
res =
mongoc_database_command_simple (database, command, NULL, &reply, &error);
if (!res) {
fprintf (stderr, "Error with clone: %s\n", error.message);
goto cleanup;
}
/* Do something with the reply */
print_res (&reply); cleanup:
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (command);
return res; }



Running the Examples

common-operations.c.INDENT 0.0

/*

* Copyright 2016 MongoDB, Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/ #include <mongoc.h> #include <stdio.h> const char *COLLECTION_NAME = "things"; #include "../doc-common-insert.c" #include "explain.c" #include "copydb.c" #include "clone-collection.c" int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_database_t *database = NULL;
mongoc_client_t *client = NULL;
mongoc_collection_t *collection = NULL;
char *host_and_port;
int res = 0;
char *other_host_and_port = NULL;
if (argc < 2 || argc > 3) {
fprintf (stderr,
"usage: %s MONGOD-1-CONNECTION-STRING "
"[MONGOD-2-HOST-NAME:MONGOD-2-PORT]\n",
argv[0]);
fprintf (stderr,
"MONGOD-1-CONNECTION-STRING can be "
"of the following forms:\n");
fprintf (stderr, "localhost\t\t\t\tlocal machine\n");
fprintf (stderr, "localhost:27018\t\t\t\tlocal machine on port 27018\n");
fprintf (stderr,
"mongodb://user:pass@localhost:27017\t"
"local machine on port 27017, and authenticate with username "
"user and password pass\n");
return 1;
}
mongoc_init ();
if (strncmp (argv[1], "mongodb://", 10) == 0) {
host_and_port = bson_strdup (argv[1]);
} else {
host_and_port = bson_strdup_printf ("mongodb://%s", argv[1]);
}
other_host_and_port = argc > 2 ? argv[2] : NULL;
client = mongoc_client_new (host_and_port);
if (!client) {
fprintf (stderr, "Invalid hostname or port: %s\n", host_and_port);
res = 2;
goto cleanup;
}
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
database = mongoc_client_get_database (client, "test");
collection = mongoc_database_get_collection (database, COLLECTION_NAME);
printf ("Inserting data\n");
if (!insert_data (collection)) {
res = 3;
goto cleanup;
}
printf ("explain\n");
if (!explain (collection)) {
res = 4;
goto cleanup;
}
if (other_host_and_port) {
printf ("copydb\n");
if (!copydb (client, other_host_and_port)) {
res = 5;
goto cleanup;
}
printf ("clone collection\n");
if (!clone_collection (database, other_host_and_port)) {
res = 6;
goto cleanup;
}
} cleanup:
if (collection) {
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
}
if (database) {
mongoc_database_destroy (database);
}
if (client) {
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
}
bson_free (host_and_port);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return res; }



First launch two separate instances of mongod (must be done from separate shells):

$ mongod


$ mkdir /tmp/db2$ mongod --dbpath /tmp/db2 --port 27018 # second instance


Now compile and run the example program:

$ cd examples/common_operations/$ gcc -Wall -o example common-operations.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)$ ./example localhost:27017 localhost:27018
Inserting data
explain
{

"executionStats" : {
"allPlansExecution" : [],
"executionStages" : {
"advanced" : 19,
"direction" : "forward" ,
"docsExamined" : 76,
"executionTimeMillisEstimate" : 0,
"filter" : {
"x" : {
"$eq" : 1
}
},
"invalidates" : 0,
"isEOF" : 1,
"nReturned" : 19,
"needTime" : 58,
"needYield" : 0,
"restoreState" : 0,
"saveState" : 0,
"stage" : "COLLSCAN" ,
"works" : 78
},
"executionSuccess" : true,
"executionTimeMillis" : 0,
"nReturned" : 19,
"totalDocsExamined" : 76,
"totalKeysExamined" : 0
},
"ok" : 1,
"queryPlanner" : {
"indexFilterSet" : false,
"namespace" : "test.things",
"parsedQuery" : {
"x" : {
"$eq" : 1
}
},
"plannerVersion" : 1,
"rejectedPlans" : [],
"winningPlan" : {
"direction" : "forward" ,
"filter" : {
"x" : {
"$eq" : 1
}
},
"stage" : "COLLSCAN"
}
},
"serverInfo" : {
"gitVersion" : "05552b562c7a0b3143a729aaa0838e558dc49b25" ,
"host" : "MacBook-Pro-57.local",
"port" : 27017,
"version" : "3.2.6"
} } copydb { "ok" : 1 } clone collection { "ok" : 1 }


Advanced Connections

The following guide contains information specific to certain types of MongoDB configurations.

For an example of connecting to a simple standalone server, see the Tutorial. To establish a connection with authentication options enabled, see the Authentication page.

Connecting to a Replica Set

Connecting to a replica set is much like connecting to a standalone MongoDB server. Simply specify the replica set name using the ?replicaSet=myreplset URI option.

#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_init ();
/* Create our MongoDB Client */
client = mongoc_client_new (
"mongodb://host01:27017,host02:27017,host03:27017/?replicaSet=myreplset");
/* Do some work */
/* TODO */
/* Clean up */
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


TIP:

Multiple hostnames can be specified in the MongoDB connection string URI, with a comma separating hosts in the seed list.

It is recommended to use a seed list of members of the replica set to allow the driver to connect to any node.



Connecting to a Sharded Cluster

To connect to a sharded cluster, specify the mongos nodes the client should connect to. The C Driver will automatically detect that it has connected to a mongos sharding server.

If more than one hostname is specified, a seed list will be created to attempt failover between the mongos instances.

WARNING:

Specifying the replicaSet parameter when connecting to a mongos sharding server is invalid.


#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_init ();
/* Create our MongoDB Client */
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://myshard01:27017/");
/* Do something with client ... */
/* Free the client */
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


Connecting to an IPv6 Address

The MongoDB C Driver will automatically resolve IPv6 addresses from host names. However, to specify an IPv6 address directly, wrap the address in [].

mongoc_uri_t *uri = mongoc_uri_new ("mongodb://[::1]:27017");


Connecting to a UNIX Domain Socket

On UNIX-like systems, the C Driver can connect directly to a MongoDB server using a UNIX domain socket. Pass the URL-encoded path to the socket, which must be suffixed with .sock. For example, to connect to a domain socket at /tmp/mongodb-27017.sock:

mongoc_uri_t *uri = mongoc_uri_new ("mongodb://%2Ftmp%2Fmongodb-27017.sock");


Include username and password like so:

mongoc_uri_t *uri = mongoc_uri_new ("mongodb://user:pass@%2Ftmp%2Fmongodb-27017.sock");


Connecting to a server over SSL

These are instructions for configuring TLS/SSL connections.

To run a server locally (on port 27017, for example):

$ mongod --port 27017 --sslMode requireSSL --sslPEMKeyFile server.pem --sslCAFile ca.pem


Add /?ssl=true to the end of a client URI.

mongoc_client_t *client = NULL;
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost:27017/?ssl=true");


MongoDB requires client certificates by default, unless the --sslAllowConnectionsWithoutCertificates is provided. The C Driver can be configured to present a client certificate using a mongoc_ssl_opt_t:

const mongoc_ssl_opt_t *ssl_default = mongoc_ssl_opt_get_default ();
mongoc_ssl_opt_t ssl_opts = { 0 };
/* optionally copy in a custom trust directory or file; otherwise the default is used. */
memcpy (&ssl_opts, ssl_default, sizeof ssl_opts);
ssl_opts.pem_file = "client.pem"
mongoc_client_set_ssl_opts (client, &ssl_opts);


The client certificate provided by pem_file must be issued by one of the server trusted Certificate Authorities listed in --sslCAFile, or issued by a CA in the native certificate store on the server when omitted.

To verify the server certificate against a specific CA, provide a PEM armored file with a CA certificate, or contatinated list of CA certificates using the ca_file option, or c_rehash directory structure of CAs, pointed to using the ca_dir option. When no ca_file or ca_dir is provided, the driver will use CAs provided by the native platform certificate store.

See mongoc_ssl_opt_t for more information on the various SSL related options.

Additional Connection Options

A variety of connection options for the MongoDB URI can be found here.

Cursors

Handling Cursor Failures

Cursors exist on a MongoDB server. However, the mongoc_cursor_t structure gives the local process a handle to the cursor. It is possible for errors to occur on the server while iterating a cursor on the client. Even a network partition may occur. This means that applications should be robust in handling cursor failures.

While iterating cursors, you should check to see if an error has occurred. See the following example for how to robustly check for errors.

static void
print_all_documents (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
const bson_t *doc;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t query = BSON_INITIALIZER;
char *str;
cursor = mongoc_collection_find_with_opts (collection, query, NULL, NULL);
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
str = bson_as_json (doc, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
}
if (mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "Failed to iterate all documents: %s\n", error.message);
}
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor); }


Destroying Server-Side Cursors

The MongoDB C driver will automatically destroy a server-side cursor when mongoc_cursor_destroy() is called. Failure to call this function when done with a cursor will leak memory client side as well as consume extra memory server side. If the cursor was configured to never timeout, it will become a memory leak on the server.

Tailable Cursors

Tailable cursors are cursors that remain open even after they've returned a final result. This way, if more documents are added to a collection (i.e., to the cursor's result set), then you can continue to call mongoc_cursor_next() to retrieve those additional results.

Here's a complete test case that demonstrates the use of tailable cursors.

NOTE:

Tailable cursors are for capped collections only.


An example to tail the oplog from a replicaSet. mongoc-tail.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#ifdef _WIN32
#define sleep(_n) Sleep ((_n) *1000)
#endif
static void
print_bson (const bson_t *b)
{

char *str;
str = bson_as_json (b, NULL);
fprintf (stdout, "%s\n", str);
bson_free (str); } static mongoc_cursor_t * query_collection (mongoc_collection_t *collection, uint32_t last_time) {
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
bson_t query;
bson_t gt;
bson_t opts;
BSON_ASSERT (collection);
bson_init (&query);
BSON_APPEND_DOCUMENT_BEGIN (&query, "ts", &gt);
BSON_APPEND_TIMESTAMP (&gt, "$gt", last_time, 0);
bson_append_document_end (&query, &gt);
bson_init (&opts);
BSON_APPEND_BOOL (&opts, "tailable", true);
BSON_APPEND_BOOL (&opts, "awaitData", true);
cursor = mongoc_collection_find_with_opts (collection, &query, &opts, NULL);
bson_destroy (&query);
bson_destroy (&opts);
return cursor; } static void tail_collection (mongoc_collection_t *collection) {
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
uint32_t last_time;
const bson_t *doc;
bson_error_t error;
bson_iter_t iter;
BSON_ASSERT (collection);
last_time = (uint32_t) time (NULL);
while (true) {
cursor = query_collection (collection, last_time);
while (!mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error) &&
mongoc_cursor_more (cursor)) {
if (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
if (bson_iter_init_find (&iter, doc, "ts") &&
BSON_ITER_HOLDS_TIMESTAMP (&iter)) {
bson_iter_timestamp (&iter, &last_time, NULL);
}
print_bson (doc);
}
}
if (mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error)) {
if (error.domain == MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
exit (1);
}
}
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
sleep (1);
} } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_client_t *client;
if (argc != 2) {
fprintf (stderr, "usage: %s MONGO_URI\n", argv[0]);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new (argv[1]);
if (!client) {
fprintf (stderr, "Invalid URI: \"%s\"\n", argv[1]);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "local", "oplog.rs");
tail_collection (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
return 0; }



Let's compile and run this example against a replica set to see updates as they are made.

$ gcc -Wall -o mongoc-tail mongoc-tail.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)$ ./mongoc-tail mongodb://example.com/?replicaSet=myReplSet{ "ts" : { "$timestamp" : { "t" : 1400023818, "i" : 1 } }, "h" : -8458503739429355503, "v" : 2, "op" : "i", "ns" : "test.test", "o" : { "_id" : { "$oid" : "5372ab0a25164be923d10d50" } } }


The line of output is a sample from performing db.test.insert({}) from the mongo shell on the given replicaSet.

See also mongoc_cursor_set_max_await_time_ms.

Bulk Write Operations

This tutorial explains how to take advantage of MongoDB C driver bulk write operation features. Executing write operations in batches reduces the number of network round trips, increasing write throughput.

Bulk Insert

First we need to fetch a bulk operation handle from the mongoc_collection_t. This can be performed in either ordered or unordered mode. Unordered mode allows for greater parallelization when working with sharded clusters.

mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk =

mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, write_concern);


We can now start inserting documents to the bulk operation. These will be buffered until we execute the operation.

The bulk operation will coalesce insertions as a single batch for each consecutive call to mongoc_bulk_operation_insert(). This creates a pipelined effect when possible.

TIP:

The bulk operation API will automatically handle MongoDB servers < 2.6 by speaking the old wire protocol. However, some performance degradation may occur.


To execute the bulk operation and receive the result we call mongoc_bulk_operation_execute(). bulk1.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <assert.h>
#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
bulk1 (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *doc;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
bool ret;
int i;
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, NULL);
for (i = 0; i < 10000; i++) {
doc = BCON_NEW ("i", BCON_INT32 (i));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
}
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, &reply, &error);
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
if (!ret) {
fprintf (stderr, "Error: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost/?appname=bulk1-example");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "test");
bulk1 (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



Example reply document:

{"nInserted"   : 10000,

"nMatched" : 0,
"nModified" : 0,
"nRemoved" : 0,
"nUpserted" : 0,
"writeErrors" : []
"writeConcernErrors" : [] }


Mixed Bulk Write Operations

MongoDB C driver also supports executing mixed bulk write operations. A batch of insert, update, and remove operations can be executed together using the bulk write operations API.

TIP:

Though the following API will work with all versions of MongoDB, it is designed to be used with MongoDB versions >= 2.6. Much better bulk insert performance can be achieved with older versions of MongoDB through the deprecated mongoc_collection_insert_bulk() method.


Ordered Bulk Write Operations

Ordered bulk write operations are batched and sent to the server in the order provided for serial execution. The reply document describes the type and count of operations performed. bulk2.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <assert.h>
#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
bulk2 (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *query;
bson_t *doc;
bson_t *opts;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
bool ret;
int i;
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, NULL);
/* Remove everything */
query = bson_new ();
mongoc_bulk_operation_remove (bulk, query);
bson_destroy (query);
/* Add a few documents */
for (i = 1; i < 4; i++) {
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (i));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
}
/* {_id: 1} => {$set: {foo: "bar"}} */
query = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (1));
doc = BCON_NEW ("$set", "{", "foo", BCON_UTF8 ("bar"), "}");
mongoc_bulk_operation_update_many_with_opts (bulk, query, doc, NULL, &error);
bson_destroy (query);
bson_destroy (doc);
/* {_id: 4} => {'$inc': {'j': 1}} (upsert) */
opts = BCON_NEW ("upsert", BCON_BOOL (true));
query = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (4));
doc = BCON_NEW ("$inc", "{", "j", BCON_INT32 (1), "}");
mongoc_bulk_operation_update_many_with_opts (bulk, query, doc, opts, &error);
bson_destroy (query);
bson_destroy (doc);
bson_destroy (opts);
/* replace {j:1} with {j:2} */
query = BCON_NEW ("j", BCON_INT32 (1));
doc = BCON_NEW ("j", BCON_INT32 (2));
mongoc_bulk_operation_replace_one_with_opts (bulk, query, doc, NULL, &error);
bson_destroy (query);
bson_destroy (doc);
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, &reply, &error);
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
if (!ret) {
printf ("Error: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost/?appname=bulk2-example");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "test");
bulk2 (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



Example reply document:

{ "nInserted"   : 3,

"nMatched" : 2,
"nModified" : 2,
"nRemoved" : 10000,
"nUpserted" : 1,
"upserted" : [{"index" : 5, "_id" : 4}],
"writeErrors" : []
"writeConcernErrors" : [] }


The index field in the upserted array is the 0-based index of the upsert operation; in this example, the sixth operation of the overall bulk operation was an upsert, so its index is 5.

nModified is only reported when using MongoDB 2.6 and later, otherwise the field is omitted.

Unordered Bulk Write Operations

Unordered bulk write operations are batched and sent to the server in arbitrary order where they may be executed in parallel. Any errors that occur are reported after all operations are attempted.

In the next example the first and third operations fail due to the unique constraint on _id. Since we are doing unordered execution the second and fourth operations succeed. bulk3.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <assert.h>
#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
bulk3 (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *query;
bson_t *doc;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
bool ret;
/* false indicates unordered */
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, false, NULL);
/* Add a document */
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (1));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
/* remove {_id: 2} */
query = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (2));
mongoc_bulk_operation_remove_one (bulk, query);
bson_destroy (query);
/* insert {_id: 3} */
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (3));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
/* replace {_id:4} {'i': 1} */
query = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (4));
doc = BCON_NEW ("i", BCON_INT32 (1));
mongoc_bulk_operation_replace_one (bulk, query, doc, false);
bson_destroy (query);
bson_destroy (doc);
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, &reply, &error);
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
if (!ret) {
printf ("Error: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost/?appname=bulk3-example");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "test");
bulk3 (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



Example reply document:

{ "nInserted"    : 0,

"nMatched" : 1,
"nModified" : 1,
"nRemoved" : 1,
"nUpserted" : 0,
"writeErrors" : [
{ "index" : 0,
"code" : 11000,
"errmsg" : "E11000 duplicate key error index: test.test.$_id_ dup key: { : 1 }" },
{ "index" : 2,
"code" : 11000,
"errmsg" : "E11000 duplicate key error index: test.test.$_id_ dup key: { : 3 }" } ],
"writeConcernErrors" : [] } Error: E11000 duplicate key error index: test.test.$_id_ dup key: { : 1 }


The bson_error_t domain is MONGOC_ERROR_COMMAND and its code is 11000.

Bulk Operation Bypassing Document Validation

This feature is only available when using MongoDB 3.2 and later.

By default bulk operations are validated against the schema, if any is defined. In certain cases however it may be necessary to bypass the document validation. bulk5.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <assert.h>
#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
bulk5_fail (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *doc;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
bool ret;
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, NULL);
/* Two inserts */
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (31));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (32));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
/* The above documents do not comply to the schema validation rules
* we created previously, so this will result in an error */
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, &reply, &error);
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
if (!ret) {
printf ("Error: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk); } static void bulk5_success (mongoc_collection_t *collection) {
mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *doc;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
bool ret;
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, NULL);
/* Allow this document to bypass document validation.
* NOTE: When authentication is enabled, the authenticated user must have
* either the "dbadmin" or "restore" roles to bypass document validation */
mongoc_bulk_operation_set_bypass_document_validation (bulk, true);
/* Two inserts */
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (31));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (32));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, &reply, &error);
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
if (!ret) {
printf ("Error: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
bson_t *options;
bson_error_t error;
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_database_t *database;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost/?appname=bulk5-example");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
database = mongoc_client_get_database (client, "testasdf");
/* Create schema validator */
options = BCON_NEW (
"validator", "{", "number", "{", "$gte", BCON_INT32 (5), "}", "}");
collection =
mongoc_database_create_collection (database, "collname", options, &error);
if (collection) {
bulk5_fail (collection);
bulk5_success (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
} else {
fprintf (stderr, "Couldn't create collection: '%s'\n", error.message);
}
bson_free (options);
mongoc_database_destroy (database);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



Running the above example will result in:

{ "nInserted" : 0,

"nMatched" : 0,
"nModified" : 0,
"nRemoved" : 0,
"nUpserted" : 0,
"writeErrors" : [
{ "index" : 0,
"code" : 121,
"errmsg" : "Document failed validation" } ] } Error: Document failed validation { "nInserted" : 2,
"nMatched" : 0,
"nModified" : 0,
"nRemoved" : 0,
"nUpserted" : 0,
"writeErrors" : [] }


The bson_error_t domain is MONGOC_ERROR_COMMAND.

Bulk Operation Write Concerns

By default bulk operations are executed with the write_concern of the collection they are executed against. A custom write concern can be passed to the mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation() method. Write concern errors (e.g. wtimeout) will be reported after all operations are attempted, regardless of execution order. bulk4.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <assert.h>
#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
bulk4 (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_write_concern_t *wc;
mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *doc;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
bool ret;
wc = mongoc_write_concern_new ();
mongoc_write_concern_set_w (wc, 4);
mongoc_write_concern_set_wtimeout (wc, 100); /* milliseconds */
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, wc);
/* Two inserts */
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (10));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (11));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, &reply, &error);
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
if (!ret) {
printf ("Error: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk);
mongoc_write_concern_destroy (wc); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost/?appname=bulk4-example");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "test");
bulk4 (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



Example reply document and error message:

{ "nInserted"    : 2,

"nMatched" : 0,
"nModified" : 0,
"nRemoved" : 0,
"nUpserted" : 0,
"writeErrors" : [],
"writeConcernErrors" : [
{ "code" : 64,
"errmsg" : "waiting for replication timed out" } ] } Error: waiting for replication timed out


The bson_error_t domain is MONGOC_ERROR_WRITE_CONCERN if there are write concern errors and no write errors. Write errors indicate failed operations, so they take precedence over write concern errors, which mean merely that the write concern is not satisfied yet.

Setting Collation Order

This feature is only available when using MongoDB 3.4 and later. bulk-collation.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
bulk_collation (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
bson_t *opts;
bson_t *doc;
bson_t *selector;
bson_t *update;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
uint32_t ret;
/* insert {_id: "one"} and {_id: "One"} */
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, NULL);
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_UTF8 ("one"));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_UTF8 ("One"));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
/* "One" normally sorts before "one"; make "one" come first */
opts = BCON_NEW ("collation",
"{",
"locale",
BCON_UTF8 ("en_US"),
"caseFirst",
BCON_UTF8 ("lower"),
"}");
/* set x=1 on the document with _id "One", which now sorts after "one" */
update = BCON_NEW ("$set", "{", "x", BCON_INT64 (1), "}");
selector = BCON_NEW ("_id", "{", "$gt", BCON_UTF8 ("one"), "}");
mongoc_bulk_operation_update_one_with_opts (
bulk, selector, update, opts, &error);
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, &reply, &error);
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
if (!ret) {
printf ("Error: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (update);
bson_destroy (selector);
bson_destroy (opts);
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost/?appname=bulk-collation");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "db", "collection");
bulk_collation (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



Running the above example will result in:

{ "nInserted" : 2,

"nMatched" : 1,
"nModified" : 1,
"nRemoved" : 0,
"nUpserted" : 0,
"writeErrors" : [ ] }


Unacknowledged Bulk Writes

Set "w" to zero for an unacknowledged write. The driver sends unacknowledged writes using the legacy opcodes OP_INSERT, OP_UPDATE, and OP_DELETE. bulk6.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
bulk6 (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_write_concern_t *wc;
mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *doc;
bson_t *selector;
bson_t reply;
char *str;
bool ret;
wc = mongoc_write_concern_new ();
mongoc_write_concern_set_w (wc, 0);
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, wc);
doc = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (10));
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, doc);
bson_destroy (doc);
selector = BCON_NEW ("_id", BCON_INT32 (11));
mongoc_bulk_operation_remove_one (bulk, selector);
bson_destroy (selector);
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, &reply, &error);
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
if (!ret) {
printf ("Error: %s\n", error.message);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk);
mongoc_write_concern_destroy (wc); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost/?appname=bulk6-example");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "test");
bulk6 (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



The reply document is empty:

{ }


Further Reading

See the Driver Bulk API Spec, which describes bulk write operations for all MongoDB drivers.

Aggregation Framework Examples

This document provides a number of practical examples that display the capabilities of the aggregation framework.

The Aggregations using the Zip Codes Data Set examples uses a publicly available data set of all zipcodes and populations in the United States. These data are available at: zips.json.

Requirements

MongoDB, version 2.2.0 or later. MongoDB C driver, version 0.96.0 or later.

Let's check if everything is installed.

Use the following command to load zips.json data set into mongod instance:

$ mongoimport --drop -d test -c zipcodes zips.json


Let's use the MongoDB shell to verify that everything was imported successfully.

$ mongo testMongoDB shell version: 2.6.1
connecting to: test> db.zipcodes.count()29467> db.zipcodes.findOne(){

"_id" : "35004",
"city" : "ACMAR",
"loc" : [
-86.51557,
33.584132
],
"pop" : 6055,
"state" : "AL" }


Aggregations using the Zip Codes Data Set

Each document in this collection has the following form:

{

"_id" : "35004",
"city" : "Acmar",
"state" : "AL",
"pop" : 6055,
"loc" : [-86.51557, 33.584132] }


In these documents:

  • The _id field holds the zipcode as a string.
  • The city field holds the city name.
  • The state field holds the two letter state abbreviation.
  • The pop field holds the population.
  • The loc field holds the location as a [latitude, longitude] array.

States with Populations Over 10 Million

To get all states with a population greater than 10 million, use the following aggregation pipeline: aggregation1.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
print_pipeline (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
bson_error_t error;
const bson_t *doc;
bson_t *pipeline;
char *str;
pipeline = BCON_NEW ("pipeline",
"[",
"{",
"$group",
"{",
"_id",
"$state",
"total_pop",
"{",
"$sum",
"$pop",
"}",
"}",
"}",
"{",
"$match",
"{",
"total_pop",
"{",
"$gte",
BCON_INT32 (10000000),
"}",
"}",
"}",
"]");
cursor = mongoc_collection_aggregate (
collection, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, pipeline, NULL, NULL);
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
str = bson_as_json (doc, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
}
if (mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "Cursor Failure: %s\n", error.message);
}
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
bson_destroy (pipeline); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new (
"mongodb://localhost:27017?appname=aggregation-example");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "zipcodes");
print_pipeline (collection);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



You should see a result like the following:

{ "_id" : "PA", "total_pop" : 11881643 }
{ "_id" : "OH", "total_pop" : 10847115 }
{ "_id" : "NY", "total_pop" : 17990455 }
{ "_id" : "FL", "total_pop" : 12937284 }
{ "_id" : "TX", "total_pop" : 16986510 }
{ "_id" : "IL", "total_pop" : 11430472 }
{ "_id" : "CA", "total_pop" : 29760021 }


The above aggregation pipeline is build from two pipeline operators: $group and $match.

The $group pipeline operator requires _id field where we specify grouping; remaining fields specify how to generate composite value and must use one of the group aggregation functions: $addToSet, $first, $last, $max, $min, $avg, $push, $sum. The $match pipeline operator syntax is the same as the read operation query syntax.

The $group process reads all documents and for each state it creates a separate document, for example:

{ "_id" : "WA", "total_pop" : 4866692 }


The total_pop field uses the $sum aggregation function to sum the values of all pop fields in the source documents.

Documents created by $group are piped to the $match pipeline operator. It returns the documents with the value of total_pop field greater than or equal to 10 million.

Average City Population by State

To get the first three states with the greatest average population per city, use the following aggregation:

pipeline = BCON_NEW ("pipeline", "[",

"{", "$group", "{", "_id", "{", "state", "$state", "city", "$city", "}", "pop", "{", "$sum", "$pop", "}", "}", "}",
"{", "$group", "{", "_id", "$_id.state", "avg_city_pop", "{", "$avg", "$pop", "}", "}", "}",
"{", "$sort", "{", "avg_city_pop", BCON_INT32 (-1), "}", "}",
"{", "$limit", BCON_INT32 (3) "}", "]");


This aggregate pipeline produces:

{ "_id" : "DC", "avg_city_pop" : 303450.0 }
{ "_id" : "FL", "avg_city_pop" : 27942.29805615551 }
{ "_id" : "CA", "avg_city_pop" : 27735.341099720412 }


The above aggregation pipeline is build from three pipeline operators: $group, $sort and $limit.

The first $group operator creates the following documents:

{ "_id" : { "state" : "WY", "city" : "Smoot" }, "pop" : 414 }


Note, that the $group operator can't use nested documents except the _id field.

The second $group uses these documents to create the following documents:

{ "_id" : "FL", "avg_city_pop" : 27942.29805615551 }


These documents are sorted by the avg_city_pop field in descending order. Finally, the $limit pipeline operator returns the first 3 documents from the sorted set.

distinct and mapReduce

This document provides some practical, simple, examples to demonstrate the distinct and mapReduce commands.

Setup

First we'll write some code to insert sample data: doc-common-insert.c.INDENT 0.0

/* Don't try to compile this file on its own. It's meant to be #included

by example code */ /* Insert some sample data */ bool insert_data (mongoc_collection_t *collection) {
mongoc_bulk_operation_t *bulk;
enum N { ndocs = 4 };
bson_t *docs[ndocs];
bson_error_t error;
int i = 0;
bool ret;
bulk = mongoc_collection_create_bulk_operation (collection, true, NULL);
docs[0] = BCON_NEW ("x", BCON_DOUBLE (1.0), "tags", "[", "dog", "cat", "]");
docs[1] = BCON_NEW ("x", BCON_DOUBLE (2.0), "tags", "[", "cat", "]");
docs[2] = BCON_NEW (
"x", BCON_DOUBLE (2.0), "tags", "[", "mouse", "cat", "dog", "]");
docs[3] = BCON_NEW ("x", BCON_DOUBLE (3.0), "tags", "[", "]");
for (i = 0; i < ndocs; i++) {
mongoc_bulk_operation_insert (bulk, docs[i]);
bson_destroy (docs[i]);
docs[i] = NULL;
}
ret = mongoc_bulk_operation_execute (bulk, NULL, &error);
if (!ret) {
fprintf (stderr, "Error inserting data: %s\n", error.message);
}
mongoc_bulk_operation_destroy (bulk);
return ret; } /* A helper which we'll use a lot later on */ void print_res (const bson_t *reply) {
BSON_ASSERT (reply);
char *str = bson_as_json (reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str); }



distinct command

This is how to use the distinct command to get the distinct values of x which are greater than 1: distinct.c.INDENT 0.0

bool
distinct (mongoc_database_t *database)
{

bson_t *command;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
bool res;
bson_iter_t iter;
bson_iter_t array_iter;
double val;
command = BCON_NEW ("distinct",
BCON_UTF8 (COLLECTION_NAME),
"key",
BCON_UTF8 ("x"),
"query",
"{",
"x",
"{",
"$gt",
BCON_DOUBLE (1.0),
"}",
"}");
res =
mongoc_database_command_simple (database, command, NULL, &reply, &error);
if (!res) {
fprintf (stderr, "Error with distinct: %s\n", error.message);
goto cleanup;
}
/* Do something with reply (in this case iterate through the values) */
if (!(bson_iter_init_find (&iter, &reply, "values") &&
BSON_ITER_HOLDS_ARRAY (&iter) &&
bson_iter_recurse (&iter, &array_iter))) {
fprintf (stderr, "Couldn't extract \"values\" field from response\n");
goto cleanup;
}
while (bson_iter_next (&array_iter)) {
if (BSON_ITER_HOLDS_DOUBLE (&array_iter)) {
val = bson_iter_double (&array_iter);
printf ("Next double: %f\n", val);
}
} cleanup:
/* cleanup */
bson_destroy (command);
bson_destroy (&reply);
return res; }



mapReduce - basic example

A simple example using the map reduce framework. It simply adds up the number of occurrences of each "tag".

First define the map and reduce functions: constants.c.INDENT 0.0

const char *const COLLECTION_NAME = "things";
/* Our map function just emits a single (key, 1) pair for each tag

in the array: */ const char *const MAPPER = "function () {"
"this.tags.forEach(function(z) {"
"emit(z, 1);"
"});"
"}"; /* The reduce function sums over all of the emitted values for a
given key: */ const char *const REDUCER = "function (key, values) {"
"var total = 0;"
"for (var i = 0; i < values.length; i++) {"
"total += values[i];"
"}"
"return total;"
"}"; /* Note We can't just return values.length as the reduce function
might be called iteratively on the results of other reduce
steps. */



Run the mapReduce command: map-reduce-basic.c.INDENT 0.0

bool
map_reduce_basic (mongoc_database_t *database)
{

bson_t reply;
bson_t *command;
bool res;
bson_error_t error;
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
const bson_t *doc;
bool map_reduce_done = false;
bool query_done = false;
const char *out_collection_name = "outCollection";
mongoc_collection_t *out_collection;
/* Empty find query */
bson_t find_query = BSON_INITIALIZER;
/* Construct the mapReduce command */
/* Other arguments can also be specified here, like "query" or
"limit" and so on */
command = BCON_NEW ("mapReduce",
BCON_UTF8 (COLLECTION_NAME),
"map",
BCON_CODE (MAPPER),
"reduce",
BCON_CODE (REDUCER),
"out",
BCON_UTF8 (out_collection_name));
res =
mongoc_database_command_simple (database, command, NULL, &reply, &error);
map_reduce_done = true;
if (!res) {
fprintf (stderr, "MapReduce failed: %s\n", error.message);
goto cleanup;
}
/* Do something with the reply (it doesn't contain the mapReduce results) */
print_res (&reply);
/* Now we'll query outCollection to see what the results are */
out_collection =
mongoc_database_get_collection (database, out_collection_name);
cursor = mongoc_collection_find_with_opts (
out_collection, &find_query, NULL, NULL);
query_done = true;
/* Do something with the results */
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
print_res (doc);
}
if (mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "ERROR: %s\n", error.message);
res = false;
goto cleanup;
} cleanup:
/* cleanup */
if (query_done) {
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
mongoc_collection_destroy (out_collection);
}
if (map_reduce_done) {
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (command);
}
return res; }



mapReduce - more complicated example

You must have replica set running for this.

In this example we contact a secondary in the replica set and do an "inline" map reduce, so the results are returned immediately: map-reduce-advanced.c.INDENT 0.0

bool
map_reduce_advanced (mongoc_database_t *database)
{

bson_t *command;
bson_error_t error;
bool res = true;
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
mongoc_read_prefs_t *read_pref;
const bson_t *doc;
/* Construct the mapReduce command */
/* Other arguments can also be specified here, like "query" or "limit"
and so on */
/* Read the results inline from a secondary replica */
command = BCON_NEW ("mapReduce",
BCON_UTF8 (COLLECTION_NAME),
"map",
BCON_CODE (MAPPER),
"reduce",
BCON_CODE (REDUCER),
"out",
"{",
"inline",
"1",
"}");
read_pref = mongoc_read_prefs_new (MONGOC_READ_SECONDARY);
cursor = mongoc_database_command (
database, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, 0, 0, 0, command, NULL, read_pref);
/* Do something with the results */
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
print_res (doc);
}
if (mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "ERROR: %s\n", error.message);
res = false;
}
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
mongoc_read_prefs_destroy (read_pref);
bson_destroy (command);
return res; }



Running the Examples

Here's how to run the example code basic-aggregation.c.INDENT 0.0

/*

* Copyright 2016 MongoDB, Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/ #include <mongoc.h> #include <stdio.h> #include "constants.c" #include "../doc-common-insert.c" #include "distinct.c" #include "map-reduce-basic.c" #include "map-reduce-advanced.c" int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_database_t *database = NULL;
mongoc_client_t *client = NULL;
mongoc_collection_t *collection = NULL;
char *host_and_port = NULL;
int res = 0;
if (argc != 2) {
fprintf (stderr, "usage: %s CONNECTION-STRING\n", argv[0]);
fprintf (stderr,
"the connection string can be of the following forms:\n");
fprintf (stderr, "localhost\t\t\t\tlocal machine\n");
fprintf (stderr, "localhost:27018\t\t\t\tlocal machine on port 27018\n");
fprintf (stderr,
"mongodb://user:pass@localhost:27017\t"
"local machine on port 27017, and authenticate with username "
"user and password pass\n");
return 1;
}
mongoc_init ();
if (strncmp (argv[1], "mongodb://", 10) == 0) {
host_and_port = bson_strdup (argv[1]);
} else {
host_and_port = bson_strdup_printf ("mongodb://%s", argv[1]);
}
client = mongoc_client_new (host_and_port);
if (!client) {
fprintf (stderr, "Invalid hostname or port: %s\n", host_and_port);
res = 2;
goto cleanup;
}
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
database = mongoc_client_get_database (client, "test");
collection = mongoc_database_get_collection (database, COLLECTION_NAME);
printf ("Inserting data\n");
if (!insert_data (collection)) {
res = 3;
goto cleanup;
}
printf ("distinct\n");
if (!distinct (database)) {
res = 4;
goto cleanup;
}
printf ("map reduce\n");
if (!map_reduce_basic (database)) {
res = 5;
goto cleanup;
}
printf ("more complicated map reduce\n");
if (!map_reduce_advanced (database)) {
res = 6;
goto cleanup;
} cleanup:
if (collection) {
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
}
if (database) {
mongoc_database_destroy (database);
}
if (client) {
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
}
if (host_and_port) {
bson_free (host_and_port);
}
mongoc_cleanup ();
return res; }



If you want to try the advanced map reduce example with a secondary, start a replica set (instructions for how to do this can be found here).

Otherwise, just start an instance of MongoDB:

$ mongod


Now compile and run the example program:

$ cd examples/basic_aggregation/
$ gcc -Wall -o agg-example basic-aggregation.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0)
$ ./agg-example localhost
Inserting data
distinct
Next double: 2.000000
Next double: 3.000000
map reduce
{ "result" : "outCollection", "timeMillis" : 155, "counts" : { "input" : 84, "emit" : 126, "reduce" : 3, "output" : 3 }, "ok" : 1 }
{ "_id" : "cat", "value" : 63 }
{ "_id" : "dog", "value" : 42 }
{ "_id" : "mouse", "value" : 21 }
more complicated map reduce
{ "results" : [ { "_id" : "cat", "value" : 63 }, { "_id" : "dog", "value" : 42 }, { "_id" : "mouse", "value" : 21 } ], "timeMillis" : 14, "counts" : { "input" : 84, "emit" : 126, "reduce" : 3, "output" : 3 }, "ok" : 1 }


API Reference

Initialization and cleanup

Synopsis

Initialize the MongoDB C Driver by calling mongoc_init exactly once at the beginning of your program. It is responsible for initializing global state such as process counters, SSL, and threading primitives.

Call mongoc_cleanup exactly once at the end of your program to release all memory and other resources allocated by the driver. You must not call any other MongoDB C Driver functions after mongoc_cleanup. Note that mongoc_init does not reinitialize the driver after mongoc_cleanup.

Deprecated feature: automatic initialization and cleanup

On some platforms the driver can automatically call mongoc_init before main, and call mongoc_cleanup as the process exits. This is problematic in situations where related libraries also execute cleanup code on shutdown, and it creates inconsistent rules across platforms. Therefore the automatic initialization and cleanup feature is deprecated, and will be dropped in version 2.0. Meanwhile, for backward compatibility, the feature is enabled by default on platforms where it is available.

For portable, future-proof code, always call mongoc_init and mongoc_cleanup yourself, and configure the driver like:

./configure --disable-automatic-init-and-cleanup


Or with CMake:

cmake -DENABLE_AUTOMATIC_INIT_AND_CLEANUP=NO


Logging

MongoDB C driver Logging Abstraction

Synopsis

typedef enum {

MONGOC_LOG_LEVEL_ERROR,
MONGOC_LOG_LEVEL_CRITICAL,
MONGOC_LOG_LEVEL_WARNING,
MONGOC_LOG_LEVEL_MESSAGE,
MONGOC_LOG_LEVEL_INFO,
MONGOC_LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG,
MONGOC_LOG_LEVEL_TRACE, } mongoc_log_level_t; #define MONGOC_ERROR(...) #define MONGOC_CRITICAL(...) #define MONGOC_WARNING(...) #define MONGOC_MESSAGE(...) #define MONGOC_INFO(...) #define MONGOC_DEBUG(...) typedef void (*mongoc_log_func_t) (mongoc_log_level_t log_level,
const char *log_domain,
const char *message,
void *user_data); void mongoc_log_set_handler (mongoc_log_func_t log_func, void *user_data); void mongoc_log (mongoc_log_level_t log_level,
const char *log_domain,
const char *format,
...) BSON_GNUC_PRINTF (3, 4); const char * mongoc_log_level_str (mongoc_log_level_t log_level); void mongoc_log_default_handler (mongoc_log_level_t log_level,
const char *log_domain,
const char *message,
void *user_data); void mongoc_log_trace_enable (void); void mongoc_log_trace_disable (void);


The MongoDB C driver comes with an abstraction for logging that you can use in your application, or integrate with an existing logging system.

Macros

To make logging a little less painful, various helper macros are provided. See the following example.

#undef MONGOC_LOG_DOMAIN
#define MONGOC_LOG_DOMAIN "my-custom-domain"
MONGOC_WARNING ("An error occurred: %s", strerror (errno));


Custom Log Handlers

You can override the handler with mongoc_log_set_handler(). Your handler function is called in a mutex for thread safety.

For example, you could register a custom handler to suppress messages at INFO level and below:

void
my_logger (mongoc_log_level_t log_level,

const char *log_domain,
const char *message,
void *user_data) {
/* smaller values are more important */
if (log_level < MONGOC_LOG_LEVEL_INFO) {
mongoc_log_default_handler (log_level, log_domain, message, user_data);
} } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_init ();
mongoc_log_set_handler (my_logger, NULL);
/* ... your code ... */
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


To restore the default handler:

mongoc_log_set_handler (mongoc_log_default_handler, NULL);


Disable logging

To disable all logging, including warnings, critical messages and errors, provide an empty log handler:

mongoc_log_set_handler (NULL, NULL);


Tracing

If compiling your own copy of the MongoDB C driver, consider configuring with --enable-tracing to enable function tracing and hex dumps of network packets to STDERR and STDOUT during development and debugging.

This is especially useful when debugging what may be going on internally in the driver.

Trace messages can be enabled and disabled by calling mongoc_log_trace_enable() and mongoc_log_trace_disable()

NOTE:

Compiling the driver with --enable-tracing will affect its performance. Disabling tracing with mongoc_log_trace_disable() significantly reduces the overhead, but cannot remove it completely.


« index

Error Reporting

Description

Many C Driver functions report errors by returning false or -1 and filling out a bson_error_t structure with an error domain, error code, and message. Use domain to determine which subsystem generated the error, and code for the specific error. message is a human-readable error description.

See also: Handling Errors in libbson.

Domain Code Description
MONGOC_ERROR_CLIENT MONGOC_ERROR_CLIENT_TOO_BIG You tried to send a message larger than the server's max message size.
MONGOC_ERROR_CLIENT_AUTHENTICATE Wrong credentials, or failure sending or receiving authentication messages.
MONGOC_ERROR_CLIENT_NO_ACCEPTABLE_PEER You tried an SSL connection but the driver was not built with SSL.
MONGOC_ERROR_CLIENT_IN_EXHAUST You began iterating an exhaust cursor, then tried to begin another operation with the same mongoc_client_t.
MONGOC_ERROR_STREAM MONGOC_ERROR_STREAM_NAME_RESOLUTION DNS failure.
MONGOC_ERROR_STREAM_SOCKET Timeout communicating with server, or connection closed.
MONGOC_ERROR_STREAM_CONNECT Failed to connect to server.
MONGOC_ERROR_PROTOCOL MONGOC_ERROR_PROTOCOL_INVALID_REPLY Corrupt response from server.
MONGOC_ERROR_PROTOCOL_BAD_WIRE_VERSION The server version is too old or too new to communicate with the driver.
MONGOC_ERROR_CURSOR MONGOC_ERROR_CURSOR_INVALID_CURSOR You passed bad arguments to mongoc_collection_find_with_opts, or you called mongoc_cursor_next on a completed or failed cursor, or the cursor timed out on the server.
MONGOC_ERROR_QUERY MONGOC_ERROR_QUERY_FAILURE Error API Version 1: Server error from command or query. The server error message is in message.
MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER MONGOC_ERROR_QUERY_FAILURE Error API Version 2: Server error from command or query. The server error message is in message.
MONGOC_ERROR_SASL A SASL error code. man sasl_errors for a list of codes.
MONGOC_ERROR_BSON MONGOC_ERROR_BSON_INVALID You passed an invalid or oversized BSON document as a parameter, or called mongoc_collection_create_index with invalid keys, or the server reply was corrupt.
MONGOC_ERROR_NAMESPACE MONGOC_ERROR_NAMESPACE_INVALID You tried to create a collection with an invalid name.
MONGOC_ERROR_COMMAND MONGOC_ERROR_COMMAND_INVALID_ARG Many functions set this error code when passed bad parameters. Print the error message for details.
MONGOC_ERROR_PROTOCOL_BAD_WIRE_VERSION You tried to use a command option the server does not support.
MONGOC_ERROR_DUPLICATE_KEY An insert or update failed because because of a duplicate _id or other unique-index violation.
MONGOC_ERROR_COMMAND Error code from server. Error API Version 1: Server error from a command. The server error message is in message.
MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER Error code from server. Error API Version 2: Server error from a command. The server error message is in message.
MONGOC_ERROR_COLLECTION MONGOC_ERROR_COLLECTION_INSERT_FAILED, MONGOC_ERROR_COLLECTION_UPDATE_FAILED, MONGOC_ERROR_COLLECTION_DELETE_FAILED. Invalid or empty input to mongoc_collection_insert, mongoc_collection_insert_bulk, mongoc_collection_update, or mongoc_collection_remove.
MONGOC_ERROR_COLLECTION Error code from server. Error API Version 1: Server error from mongoc_collection_insert, mongoc_collection_insert_bulk, mongoc_collection_update, or mongoc_collection_remove.
MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER Error code from server. Error API Version 2: Server error from mongoc_collection_insert, mongoc_collection_insert_bulk, mongoc_collection_update, or mongoc_collection_remove.
MONGOC_ERROR_GRIDFS MONGOC_ERROR_GRIDFS_CHUNK_MISSING The GridFS file is missing a document in its chunks collection.
MONGOC_ERROR_GRIDFS_INVALID_FILENAME You passed a NULL filename to mongoc_gridfs_remove_by_filename.
MONGOC_ERROR_GRIDFS_PROTOCOL_ERROR You called mongoc_gridfs_file_set_id after mongoc_gridfs_file_save.
MONGOC_ERROR_SCRAM MONGOC_ERROR_SCRAM_PROTOCOL_ERROR Failure in SCRAM-SHA-1 authentication.
MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER_SELECTION MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER_SELECTION_FAILURE No replica set member or mongos is available, or none matches your read preference, or you supplied an invalid mongoc_read_prefs_t.
MONGOC_ERROR_WRITE_CONCERN Error code from server. There was a write concern error or timeout from the server.

Setting the Error API Version

The driver's error reporting began with a design flaw: when the error domain is MONGOC_ERROR_COLLECTION, MONGOC_ERROR_QUERY, or MONGOC_ERROR_COMMAND, the error code might originate from the server or the driver. An application cannot always know where an error originated, and therefore cannot tell what the code means.

For example, if mongoc_collection_update sets the error's domain to MONGOC_ERROR_COLLECTION and its code to 24, the application cannot know whether 24 is the generic driver error code MONGOC_ERROR_COLLECTION_UPDATE_FAILED or the specific server error code "LockTimeout".

To fix this flaw while preserving backward compatibility, the C Driver 1.4 introduces "Error API Versions". Version 1, the default Error API Version, maintains the flawed behavior. Version 2 adds a new error domain, MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER. In Version 2, error codes originating on the server always have error domain MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER or MONGOC_ERROR_WRITE_CONCERN. When the driver uses Version 2 the application can always determine the origin and meaning of error codes. New applications should use Version 2, and existing applications should be updated to use Version 2 as well.

Error Source API Version 1 API Version 2
mongoc_cursor_error MONGOC_ERROR_QUERY MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER
mongoc_client_command, mongoc_database_command, and other command functions MONGOC_ERROR_QUERY MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER
mongoc_collection_count_with_opts, mongoc_client_get_database_names, and other command helper functions MONGOC_ERROR_QUERY MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER
mongoc_collection_insert mongoc_collection_insert_bulk mongoc_collection_update mongoc_collection_remove MONGOC_ERROR_COMMAND MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER
mongoc_bulk_operation_execute MONGOC_ERROR_COMMAND MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER
Write-concern timeout MONGOC_ERROR_WRITE_CONCERN MONGOC_ERROR_WRITE_CONCERN

The Error API Versions are defined with MONGOC_ERROR_API_VERSION_LEGACY and MONGOC_ERROR_API_VERSION_2. Set the version with mongoc_client_set_error_api or mongoc_client_pool_set_error_api.

See Also

MongoDB Server Error Codes

Version Checks

Conditional compilation based on mongoc version

Description

The following preprocessor macros can be used to perform various checks based on the version of the library you are compiling against. This may be useful if you only want to enable a feature on a certain version of the library.

#include <mongoc.h>
#define MONGOC_MAJOR_VERSION (1)
#define MONGOC_MINOR_VERSION (6)
#define MONGOC_MICRO_VERSION (3)
#define MONGOC_VERSION_S     "1.6.3"
#define MONGOC_VERSION_HEX   ((1 << 24) | (0 << 16) | (0 << 8) | 0)
#define MONGOC_CHECK_VERSION(major, minor, micro)


Only compile a block on MongoDB C Driver 1.1.0 and newer.

#if MONGOC_CHECK_VERSION(1, 1, 0)
static void
do_something (void)
{
}
#endif


mongoc_bulk_operation_t

Bulk Write Operations

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_bulk_operation_t mongoc_bulk_operation_t;


The opaque type mongoc_bulk_operation_t provides an abstraction for submitting multiple write operations as a single batch.

After adding all of the write operations to the mongoc_bulk_operation_t, call mongoc_bulk_operation_execute() to execute the operation.

WARNING:

It is only valid to call mongoc_bulk_operation_execute() once. The mongoc_bulk_operation_t must be destroyed afterwards.


See Also

Bulk Write Operations

mongoc_client_pool_t

Connection pooling abstraction

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_client_pool_t mongoc_client_pool_t


mongoc_client_pool_t is the basis for multi-threading in the MongoDB C driver. Since mongoc_client_t structures are not thread-safe, this structure is used to retrieve a new mongoc_client_t for a given thread. This structure is thread-safe.

Example

example-pool.c.INDENT 0.0

/* gcc example-pool.c -o example-pool $(pkg-config --cflags --libs

* libmongoc-1.0) */ /* ./example-pool [CONNECTION_STRING] */ #include <mongoc.h> #include <pthread.h> #include <stdio.h> static pthread_mutex_t mutex; static bool in_shutdown = false; static void * worker (void *data) {
mongoc_client_pool_t *pool = data;
mongoc_client_t *client;
bson_t ping = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bson_error_t error;
bool r;
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&ping, "ping", 1);
while (true) {
client = mongoc_client_pool_pop (pool);
/* Do something with client. If you are writing an HTTP server, you
* probably only want to hold onto the client for the portion of the
* request performing database queries.
*/
r = mongoc_client_command_simple (
client, "admin", &ping, NULL, NULL, &error);
if (!r) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
}
mongoc_client_pool_push (pool, client);
pthread_mutex_lock (&mutex);
if (in_shutdown || !r) {
pthread_mutex_unlock (&mutex);
break;
}
pthread_mutex_unlock (&mutex);
}
bson_destroy (&ping);
return NULL; } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
const char *uristr = "mongodb://127.0.0.1/?appname=pool-example";
mongoc_uri_t *uri;
mongoc_client_pool_t *pool;
pthread_t threads[10];
unsigned i;
void *ret;
pthread_mutex_init (&mutex, NULL);
mongoc_init ();
if (argc > 1) {
uristr = argv[1];
}
uri = mongoc_uri_new (uristr);
if (!uri) {
fprintf (stderr, "Failed to parse URI: \"%s\".\n", uristr);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
pool = mongoc_client_pool_new (uri);
mongoc_client_pool_set_error_api (pool, 2);
for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
pthread_create (&threads[i], NULL, worker, pool);
}
sleep (10);
pthread_mutex_lock (&mutex);
in_shutdown = true;
pthread_mutex_unlock (&mutex);
for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
pthread_join (threads[i], &ret);
}
mongoc_client_pool_destroy (pool);
mongoc_uri_destroy (uri);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



mongoc_client_t

MongoDB Connection Abstraction

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_client_t mongoc_client_t;
typedef mongoc_stream_t *(*mongoc_stream_initiator_t) (

const mongoc_uri_t *uri,
const mongoc_host_list_t *host,
void *user_data,
bson_error_t *error);


mongoc_client_t is an opaque type that provides access to a MongoDB node, replica-set, or sharded-cluster. It maintains management of underlying sockets and routing to individual nodes based on mongoc_read_prefs_t or mongoc_write_concern_t.

Streams

The underlying transport for a given client can be customized, wrapped or replaced by any implementation that fulfills mongoc_stream_t. A custom transport can be set with mongoc_client_set_stream_initiator().

Thread Safety

mongoc_client_t is NOT thread-safe and should only be used from one thread at a time. When used in multi-threaded scenarios, it is recommended that you use the thread-safe mongoc_client_pool_t to retrieve a mongoc_client_t for your thread.

Lifecycle

It is an error to call mongoc_client_destroy on a client that has operations pending. It is required that you release mongoc_collection_t and mongoc_database_t structures before calling mongoc_client_destroy.

Example

example-client.c.INDENT 0.0

/* gcc example-client.c -o example-client $(pkg-config --cflags --libs

* libmongoc-1.0) */ /* ./example-client [CONNECTION_STRING [COLLECTION_NAME]] */ #include <mongoc.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
bson_error_t error;
const bson_t *doc;
const char *uristr = "mongodb://127.0.0.1/?appname=client-example";
const char *collection_name = "test";
bson_t query;
char *str;
mongoc_init ();
if (argc > 1) {
uristr = argv[1];
}
if (argc > 2) {
collection_name = argv[2];
}
client = mongoc_client_new (uristr);
if (!client) {
fprintf (stderr, "Failed to parse URI.\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
bson_init (&query); #if 0
bson_append_utf8 (&query, "hello", -1, "world", -1); #endif
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", collection_name);
cursor = mongoc_collection_find_with_opts (
collection,
&query,
NULL, /* additional options */
NULL); /* read prefs, NULL for default */
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
str = bson_as_json (doc, NULL);
fprintf (stdout, "%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
}
if (mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "Cursor Failure: %s\n", error.message);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
bson_destroy (&query);
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return EXIT_SUCCESS; }



mongoc_collection_t

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
typedef struct _mongoc_collection_t mongoc_collection_t;


mongoc_collection_t provides access to a MongoDB collection. This handle is useful for actions for most CRUD operations, I.e. insert, update, delete, find, etc.

Read Preferences and Write Concerns

Read preferences and write concerns are inherited from the parent client. They can be overridden by set_* commands if so desired.

Lifecycle

It is an error to call mongoc_collection_destroy() on a collection that has operations pending. It is required that you release mongoc_cursor_t structures before calling mongoc_collection_destroy().

mongoc_cursor_t

Client-side cursor abtraction

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_cursor_t mongoc_cursor_t;


mongoc_cursor_t provides access to a MongoDB query cursor. It wraps up the wire protocol negotiation required to initiate a query and retrieve an unknown number of documents.

Cursors are lazy, meaning that no network traffic occurs until the first call to mongoc_cursor_next().

At that point we can:

  • Determine which host we've connected to with mongoc_cursor_get_host().
  • Retrieve more records with repeated calls to mongoc_cursor_next().
  • Clone a query to repeat execution at a later point with mongoc_cursor_clone().
  • Test for errors with mongoc_cursor_error().

Thread Safety

mongoc_cursor_t is NOT thread safe. It may only be used from the thread it was created from.

Example

Query MongoDB and iterate results.INDENT 0.0

/* gcc example-client.c -o example-client $(pkg-config --cflags --libs

* libmongoc-1.0) */ /* ./example-client [CONNECTION_STRING [COLLECTION_NAME]] */ #include <mongoc.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
bson_error_t error;
const bson_t *doc;
const char *uristr = "mongodb://127.0.0.1/?appname=client-example";
const char *collection_name = "test";
bson_t query;
char *str;
mongoc_init ();
if (argc > 1) {
uristr = argv[1];
}
if (argc > 2) {
collection_name = argv[2];
}
client = mongoc_client_new (uristr);
if (!client) {
fprintf (stderr, "Failed to parse URI.\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
bson_init (&query); #if 0
bson_append_utf8 (&query, "hello", -1, "world", -1); #endif
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", collection_name);
cursor = mongoc_collection_find_with_opts (
collection,
&query,
NULL, /* additional options */
NULL); /* read prefs, NULL for default */
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
str = bson_as_json (doc, NULL);
fprintf (stdout, "%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
}
if (mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "Cursor Failure: %s\n", error.message);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
bson_destroy (&query);
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return EXIT_SUCCESS; }



mongoc_database_t

MongoDB Database Abstraction

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_database_t mongoc_database_t;


mongoc_database_t provides access to a MongoDB database. This handle is useful for actions a particular database object. It is not a container for mongoc_collection_t structures.

Read preferences and write concerns are inherited from the parent client. They can be overridden with mongoc_database_set_read_prefs() and mongoc_database_set_write_concern().

WARNING:

It is an error to call mongoc_database_destroy() on a database that has operations pending. It is required that you release mongoc_cursor_t structures before calling mongoc_database_destroy.


Examples

#include <mongoc.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_database_t *database;
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://localhost/");
database = mongoc_client_get_database (client, "test");
mongoc_database_destroy (database);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }


mongoc_delete_flags_t

Flags for deletion operations

Synopsis

typedef enum {

MONGOC_DELETE_NONE = 0,
MONGOC_DELETE_SINGLE_REMOVE = 1 << 0, } mongoc_delete_flags_t;


Deprecated

WARNING:

These flags are deprecated and should not be used in new code.


Please use mongoc_remove_flags_t with mongoc_collection_remove() instead.

mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_t

find_and_modify abstraction

Synopsis

mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_t is a builder interface to construct a find_and_modify command.

It was created to be able to accommodate new arguments to the MongoDB find_and_modify command.

As of MongoDB 3.2, the mongoc_write_concern_t specified on the mongoc_collection_t will be used, if any.

Example

flags.c.INDENT 0.0

void
fam_flags (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_t *opts;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t query = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bson_t *update;
bool success;
/* Find Zlatan Ibrahimovic, the striker */
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "firstname", "Zlatan");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "lastname", "Ibrahimovic");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "profession", "Football player");
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&query, "age", 34);
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (
&query, "goals", (16 + 35 + 23 + 57 + 16 + 14 + 28 + 84) + (1 + 6 + 62));
/* Add his football position */
update = BCON_NEW ("$set", "{", "position", BCON_UTF8 ("striker"), "}");
opts = mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_new ();
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_update (opts, update);
/* Create the document if it didn't exist, and return the updated document */
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_flags (
opts, MONGOC_FIND_AND_MODIFY_UPSERT | MONGOC_FIND_AND_MODIFY_RETURN_NEW);
success = mongoc_collection_find_and_modify_with_opts (
collection, &query, opts, &reply, &error);
if (success) {
char *str;
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
} else {
fprintf (
stderr, "Got error: \"%s\" on line %d\n", error.message, __LINE__);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (update);
bson_destroy (&query);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_destroy (opts); }



bypass.c.INDENT 0.0

void
fam_bypass (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_t *opts;
bson_t reply;
bson_t *update;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t query = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bool success;
/* Find Zlatan Ibrahimovic, the striker */
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "firstname", "Zlatan");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "lastname", "Ibrahimovic");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "profession", "Football player");
/* Bump his age */
update = BCON_NEW ("$inc", "{", "age", BCON_INT32 (1), "}");
opts = mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_new ();
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_update (opts, update);
/* He can still play, even though he is pretty old. */
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_bypass_document_validation (opts, true);
success = mongoc_collection_find_and_modify_with_opts (
collection, &query, opts, &reply, &error);
if (success) {
char *str;
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
} else {
fprintf (
stderr, "Got error: \"%s\" on line %d\n", error.message, __LINE__);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (update);
bson_destroy (&query);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_destroy (opts); }



update.c.INDENT 0.0

void
fam_update (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_t *opts;
bson_t *update;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t query = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bool success;
/* Find Zlatan Ibrahimovic */
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "firstname", "Zlatan");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "lastname", "Ibrahimovic");
/* Make him a book author */
update = BCON_NEW ("$set", "{", "author", BCON_BOOL (true), "}");
opts = mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_new ();
/* Note that the document returned is the _previous_ version of the document
* To fetch the modified new version, use
* mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_flags (opts,
* MONGOC_FIND_AND_MODIFY_RETURN_NEW);
*/
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_update (opts, update);
success = mongoc_collection_find_and_modify_with_opts (
collection, &query, opts, &reply, &error);
if (success) {
char *str;
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
} else {
fprintf (
stderr, "Got error: \"%s\" on line %d\n", error.message, __LINE__);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (update);
bson_destroy (&query);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_destroy (opts); }



fields.c.INDENT 0.0

void
fam_fields (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_t *opts;
bson_t fields = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bson_t *update;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t query = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bool success;
/* Find Zlatan Ibrahimovic */
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "lastname", "Ibrahimovic");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "firstname", "Zlatan");
/* Return his goal tally */
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&fields, "goals", 1);
/* Bump his goal tally */
update = BCON_NEW ("$inc", "{", "goals", BCON_INT32 (1), "}");
opts = mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_new ();
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_update (opts, update);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_fields (opts, &fields);
/* Return the new tally */
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_flags (opts,
MONGOC_FIND_AND_MODIFY_RETURN_NEW);
success = mongoc_collection_find_and_modify_with_opts (
collection, &query, opts, &reply, &error);
if (success) {
char *str;
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
} else {
fprintf (
stderr, "Got error: \"%s\" on line %d\n", error.message, __LINE__);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (update);
bson_destroy (&fields);
bson_destroy (&query);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_destroy (opts); }



sort.c.INDENT 0.0

void
fam_sort (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_t *opts;
bson_t *update;
bson_t sort = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t query = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bool success;
/* Find all users with the lastname Ibrahimovic */
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "lastname", "Ibrahimovic");
/* Sort by age (descending) */
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&sort, "age", -1);
/* Bump his goal tally */
update = BCON_NEW ("$set", "{", "oldest", BCON_BOOL (true), "}");
opts = mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_new ();
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_update (opts, update);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_sort (opts, &sort);
success = mongoc_collection_find_and_modify_with_opts (
collection, &query, opts, &reply, &error);
if (success) {
char *str;
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
} else {
fprintf (
stderr, "Got error: \"%s\" on line %d\n", error.message, __LINE__);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (update);
bson_destroy (&sort);
bson_destroy (&query);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_destroy (opts); }



opts.c.INDENT 0.0

void
fam_opts (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{

mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_t *opts;
bson_t reply;
bson_t *update;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t query = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bson_t extra = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bool success;
/* Find Zlatan Ibrahimovic, the striker */
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "firstname", "Zlatan");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "lastname", "Ibrahimovic");
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&query, "profession", "Football player");
/* Bump his age */
update = BCON_NEW ("$inc", "{", "age", BCON_INT32 (1), "}");
opts = mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_new ();
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_update (opts, update);
/* Abort if the operation takes too long. */
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_set_max_time_ms (opts, 100);
/* Some future findAndModify option the driver doesn't support conveniently
*/
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&extra, "futureOption", 42);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_append (opts, &extra);
success = mongoc_collection_find_and_modify_with_opts (
collection, &query, opts, &reply, &error);
if (success) {
char *str;
str = bson_as_json (&reply, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
} else {
fprintf (
stderr, "Got error: \"%s\" on line %d\n", error.message, __LINE__);
}
bson_destroy (&reply);
bson_destroy (&extra);
bson_destroy (update);
bson_destroy (&query);
mongoc_find_and_modify_opts_destroy (opts); }



fam.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <bcon.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include "flags.c"
#include "bypass.c"
#include "update.c"
#include "fields.c"
#include "opts.c"
#include "sort.c"
int
main (void)
{

mongoc_collection_t *collection;
mongoc_database_t *database;
mongoc_client_t *client;
bson_error_t error;
bson_t *options;
mongoc_init ();
client = mongoc_client_new (
"mongodb://localhost:27017/admin?appname=find-and-modify-opts-example");
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
database = mongoc_client_get_database (client, "databaseName");
options = BCON_NEW ("validator",
"{",
"age",
"{",
"$lte",
BCON_INT32 (34),
"}",
"}",
"validationAction",
BCON_UTF8 ("error"),
"validationLevel",
BCON_UTF8 ("moderate"));
collection = mongoc_database_create_collection (
database, "collectionName", options, &error);
if (!collection) {
fprintf (
stderr, "Got error: \"%s\" on line %d\n", error.message, __LINE__);
return 1;
}
fam_flags (collection);
fam_bypass (collection);
fam_update (collection);
fam_fields (collection);
fam_opts (collection);
fam_sort (collection);
mongoc_collection_drop (collection, NULL);
bson_destroy (options);
mongoc_database_destroy (database);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



Outputs:

{

"lastErrorObject": {
"updatedExisting": false,
"n": 1,
"upserted": {
"$oid": "56562a99d13e6d86239c7b00"
}
},
"value": {
"_id": {
"$oid": "56562a99d13e6d86239c7b00"
},
"age": 34,
"firstname": "Zlatan",
"goals": 342,
"lastname": "Ibrahimovic",
"profession": "Football player",
"position": "striker"
},
"ok": 1 } {
"lastErrorObject": {
"updatedExisting": true,
"n": 1
},
"value": {
"_id": {
"$oid": "56562a99d13e6d86239c7b00"
},
"age": 34,
"firstname": "Zlatan",
"goals": 342,
"lastname": "Ibrahimovic",
"profession": "Football player",
"position": "striker"
},
"ok": 1 } {
"lastErrorObject": {
"updatedExisting": true,
"n": 1
},
"value": {
"_id": {
"$oid": "56562a99d13e6d86239c7b00"
},
"age": 35,
"firstname": "Zlatan",
"goals": 342,
"lastname": "Ibrahimovic",
"profession": "Football player",
"position": "striker"
},
"ok": 1 } {
"lastErrorObject": {
"updatedExisting": true,
"n": 1
},
"value": {
"_id": {
"$oid": "56562a99d13e6d86239c7b00"
},
"goals": 343
},
"ok": 1 } {
"lastErrorObject": {
"updatedExisting": true,
"n": 1
},
"value": {
"_id": {
"$oid": "56562a99d13e6d86239c7b00"
},
"age": 35,
"firstname": "Zlatan",
"goals": 343,
"lastname": "Ibrahimovic",
"profession": "Football player",
"position": "striker",
"author": true
},
"ok": 1 }


mongoc_gridfs_file_list_t

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
typedef struct _mongoc_gridfs_file_list_t mongoc_gridfs_file_list_t;


Description

mongoc_gridfs_file_list_t provides a gridfs file list abstraction. It provides iteration and basic marshalling on top of a regular mongoc_collection_find_with_opts() style query. In interface, it's styled after mongoc_cursor_t.

Example

mongoc_gridfs_file_list_t *list;
mongoc_gridfs_file_t *file;
list = mongoc_gridfs_find (gridfs, query);
while ((file = mongoc_gridfs_file_list_next (list))) {

do_something (file);
mongoc_gridfs_file_destroy (file); } mongoc_gridfs_file_list_destroy (list);


mongoc_gridfs_file_opt_t

Synopsis

typedef struct {

const char *md5;
const char *filename;
const char *content_type;
const bson_t *aliases;
const bson_t *metadata;
uint32_t chunk_size; } mongoc_gridfs_file_opt_t;


Description

This structure contains options that can be set on a mongoc_gridfs_file_t. It can be used by various functions when creating a new gridfs file.

mongoc_gridfs_file_t

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_gridfs_file_t mongoc_gridfs_file_t;


Description

This structure provides a MongoDB GridFS file abstraction. It provides several APIs.

  • readv, writev, seek, and tell.
  • General file metadata such as filename and length.
  • GridFS metadata such as md5, filename, content_type, aliases, metadata, chunk_size, and upload_date.

Thread Safety

This structure is NOT thread-safe and should only be used from one thread at a time.

  • mongoc_client_t
  • mongoc_gridfs_t
  • mongoc_gridfs_file_list_t
  • mongoc_gridfs_file_opt_t

mongoc_gridfs_t

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
typedef struct _mongoc_gridfs_t mongoc_gridfs_t;


Description

mongoc_gridfs_t provides a MongoDB gridfs implementation. The system as a whole is made up of gridfs objects, which contain gridfs_files and gridfs_file_lists. Essentially, a basic file system API.

There are extensive caveats about the kind of use cases gridfs is practical for. In particular, any writing after initial file creation is likely to both break any concurrent readers and be quite expensive. That said, this implementation does allow for arbitrary writes to existing gridfs object, just use them with caution.

mongoc_gridfs also integrates tightly with the mongoc_stream_t abstraction, which provides some convenient wrapping for file creation and reading/writing. It can be used without, but its worth looking to see if your problem can fit that model.

WARNING:

mongoc_gridfs_t does not support read preferences. In a replica set, GridFS queries are always routed to the primary.


Thread Safety

mongoc_gridfs_t is NOT thread-safe and should only be used in the same thread as the owning mongoc_client_t.

Lifecycle

It is an error to free a mongoc_gridfs_t before freeing all related instances of mongoc_gridfs_file_t and mongoc_gridfs_file_list_t.

Example

example-gridfs.c.INDENT 0.0

#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_gridfs_t *gridfs;
mongoc_gridfs_file_t *file;
mongoc_gridfs_file_list_t *list;
mongoc_gridfs_file_opt_t opt = {0};
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_stream_t *stream;
bson_t filter;
bson_t opts;
bson_t child;
bson_error_t error;
ssize_t r;
char buf[4096];
mongoc_iovec_t iov;
const char *filename;
const char *command;
bson_value_t id;
if (argc < 2) {
fprintf (stderr, "usage - %s command ...\n", argv[0]);
return 1;
}
mongoc_init ();
iov.iov_base = (void *) buf;
iov.iov_len = sizeof buf;
/* connect to localhost client */
client =
mongoc_client_new ("mongodb://127.0.0.1:27017?appname=gridfs-example");
assert (client);
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
/* grab a gridfs handle in test prefixed by fs */
gridfs = mongoc_client_get_gridfs (client, "test", "fs", &error);
assert (gridfs);
command = argv[1];
filename = argv[2];
if (strcmp (command, "read") == 0) {
if (argc != 3) {
fprintf (stderr, "usage - %s read filename\n", argv[0]);
return 1;
}
file = mongoc_gridfs_find_one_by_filename (gridfs, filename, &error);
assert (file);
stream = mongoc_stream_gridfs_new (file);
assert (stream);
for (;;) {
r = mongoc_stream_readv (stream, &iov, 1, -1, 0);
assert (r >= 0);
if (r == 0) {
break;
}
if (fwrite (iov.iov_base, 1, r, stdout) != r) {
MONGOC_ERROR ("Failed to write to stdout. Exiting.\n");
exit (1);
}
}
mongoc_stream_destroy (stream);
mongoc_gridfs_file_destroy (file);
} else if (strcmp (command, "list") == 0) {
bson_init (&filter);
bson_init (&opts);
bson_append_document_begin (&opts, "sort", -1, &child);
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&child, "filename", 1);
bson_append_document_end (&opts, &child);
list = mongoc_gridfs_find_with_opts (gridfs, &filter, &opts);
bson_destroy (&filter);
bson_destroy (&opts);
while ((file = mongoc_gridfs_file_list_next (list))) {
const char *name = mongoc_gridfs_file_get_filename (file);
printf ("%s\n", name ? name : "?");
mongoc_gridfs_file_destroy (file);
}
mongoc_gridfs_file_list_destroy (list);
} else if (strcmp (command, "write") == 0) {
if (argc != 4) {
fprintf (stderr, "usage - %s write filename input_file\n", argv[0]);
return 1;
}
stream = mongoc_stream_file_new_for_path (argv[3], O_RDONLY, 0);
assert (stream);
opt.filename = filename;
/* the driver generates a file_id for you */
file = mongoc_gridfs_create_file_from_stream (gridfs, stream, &opt);
assert (file);
id.value_type = BSON_TYPE_INT32;
id.value.v_int32 = 1;
/* optional: the following method specifies a file_id of any
BSON type */
if (!mongoc_gridfs_file_set_id (file, &id, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "%s\n", error.message);
return 1;
}
mongoc_gridfs_file_save (file);
mongoc_gridfs_file_destroy (file);
} else {
fprintf (stderr, "Unknown command");
return 1;
}
mongoc_gridfs_destroy (gridfs);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



mongoc_host_list_t

Synopsis

typedef struct {

mongoc_host_list_t *next;
char host[BSON_HOST_NAME_MAX + 1];
char host_and_port[BSON_HOST_NAME_MAX + 7];
uint16_t port;
int family;
void *padding[4]; } mongoc_host_list_t;


Description

The host and port of a MongoDB server. Can be part of a linked list: for example the return value of mongoc_uri_get_hosts when multiple hosts are provided in the MongoDB URI.

See Also

mongoc_uri_get_hosts and mongoc_cursor_get_host.

mongoc_index_opt_geo_t

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
typedef struct {

uint8_t twod_sphere_version;
uint8_t twod_bits_precision;
double twod_location_min;
double twod_location_max;
double haystack_bucket_size;
uint8_t *padding[32]; } mongoc_index_opt_geo_t;


Description

This structure contains the options that may be used for tuning a GEO index.

See Also

mongoc_index_opt_t

mongoc_index_opt_wt_t

mongoc_index_opt_t

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
typedef struct {

bool is_initialized;
bool background;
bool unique;
const char *name;
bool drop_dups;
bool sparse;
int32_t expire_after_seconds;
int32_t v;
const bson_t *weights;
const char *default_language;
const char *language_override;
mongoc_index_opt_geo_t *geo_options;
mongoc_index_opt_storage_t *storage_options;
const bson_t *partial_filter_expression;
const bson_t *collation;
void *padding[4]; } mongoc_index_opt_t;


Description

This structure contains the options that may be used for tuning a specific index.

See the createIndexes documentations in the MongoDB manual for descriptions of individual options.

NOTE:

dropDups is deprecated as of MongoDB version 3.0.0. This option is silently ignored by the server and unique index builds using this option will fail if a duplicate value is detected.


Example

{

bson_t keys;
bson_error_t error;
mongoc_index_opt_t opt;
mongoc_index_opt_geo_t geo_opt;
mongoc_index_opt_init (&opt);
mongoc_index_opt_geo_init (&geo_opt);
bson_init (&keys);
BSON_APPEND_UTF8 (&keys, "location", "2d");
geo_opt.twod_location_min = -123;
geo_opt.twod_location_max = +123;
geo_opt.twod_bits_precision = 30;
opt.geo_options = &geo_opt;
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "geo_test");
if (mongoc_collection_create_index (collection, &keys, &opt, &error)) {
/* Successfully created the geo index */
}
bson_destroy (&keys);
mongoc_collection_destroy (&collection); }


See Also

mongoc_index_opt_geo_t

mongoc_index_opt_wt_t

mongoc_index_opt_wt_t

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
typedef struct {

mongoc_index_opt_storage_t base;
const char *config_str;
void *padding[8]; } mongoc_index_opt_wt_t;


Description

This structure contains the options that may be used for tuning a WiredTiger specific index.

See Also

mongoc_index_opt_t

mongoc_index_opt_geo_t

mongoc_insert_flags_t

Flags for insert operations

Synopsis

typedef enum {

MONGOC_INSERT_NONE = 0,
MONGOC_INSERT_CONTINUE_ON_ERROR = 1 << 0, } mongoc_insert_flags_t; #define MONGOC_INSERT_NO_VALIDATE (1U << 31)


Description

These flags correspond to the MongoDB wire protocol. They may be bitwise or'd together. They may modify how an insert happens on the MongoDB server.

Flag Values

MONGOC_INSERT_NONE Specify no insert flags.
MONGOC_INSERT_CONTINUE_ON_ERROR Continue inserting documents from the insertion set even if one insert fails.
MONGOC_INSERT_NO_VALIDATE Do not validate insertion documents before performing an insert. Validation can be expensive, so this can save some time if you know your documents are already valid.

mongoc_iovec_t

Synopsis

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
#ifdef _WIN32
typedef struct {

u_long iov_len;
char *iov_base; } mongoc_iovec_t; #else typedef struct iovec mongoc_iovec_t; #endif


The mongoc_iovec_t structure is a portability abstraction for consumers of the mongoc_stream_t interfaces. It allows for scatter/gather I/O through the socket subsystem.

WARNING:

When writing portable code, beware of the ordering of iov_len and iov_base as they are different on various platforms. Therefore, you should not use C initializers for initialization.


mongoc_matcher_t

Client-side document matching abstraction

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_matcher_t mongoc_matcher_t;


mongoc_matcher_t provides a reduced-interface for client-side matching of BSON documents.

It can perform the basics such as $in, $nin, $eq, $neq, $gt, $gte, $lt, and $lte.

WARNING:

mongoc_matcher_t does not currently support the full spectrum of query operations that the MongoDB server supports.


Deprecated

WARNING:

mongoc_matcher_t is deprecated and will be removed in version 2.0.


Example

Filter a sequence of BSON documents from STDIN based on a query.INDENT 0.0

#include <bcon.h>
#include <bson.h>
#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int
main (int argc, char *argv[])
{

mongoc_matcher_t *matcher;
bson_reader_t *reader;
const bson_t *bson;
bson_t *spec;
char *str;
int fd;
mongoc_init (); #ifdef _WIN32
fd = fileno (stdin); #else
fd = STDIN_FILENO; #endif
reader = bson_reader_new_from_fd (fd, false);
spec = BCON_NEW ("hello", "world");
matcher = mongoc_matcher_new (spec, NULL);
while ((bson = bson_reader_read (reader, NULL))) {
if (mongoc_matcher_match (matcher, bson)) {
str = bson_as_json (bson, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
}
}
bson_reader_destroy (reader);
bson_destroy (spec);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return 0; }



mongoc_query_flags_t

Flags for query operations

Synopsis

typedef enum {

MONGOC_QUERY_NONE = 0,
MONGOC_QUERY_TAILABLE_CURSOR = 1 << 1,
MONGOC_QUERY_SLAVE_OK = 1 << 2,
MONGOC_QUERY_OPLOG_REPLAY = 1 << 3,
MONGOC_QUERY_NO_CURSOR_TIMEOUT = 1 << 4,
MONGOC_QUERY_AWAIT_DATA = 1 << 5,
MONGOC_QUERY_EXHAUST = 1 << 6,
MONGOC_QUERY_PARTIAL = 1 << 7, } mongoc_query_flags_t;


Description

These flags correspond to the MongoDB wire protocol. They may be bitwise or'd together. They may modify how a query is performed in the MongoDB server.

Flag Values

MONGOC_QUERY_NONE Specify no query flags.
MONGOC_QUERY_TAILABLE_CURSOR Cursor will not be closed when the last data is retrieved. You can resume this cursor later.
MONGOC_QUERY_SLAVE_OK Allow query of replica set secondaries.
MONGOC_QUERY_OPLOG_REPLAY Used internally by MongoDB.
MONGOC_QUERY_NO_CURSOR_TIMEOUT The server normally times out an idle cursor after an inactivity period (10 minutes). This prevents that.
MONGOC_QUERY_AWAIT_DATA Use with MONGOC_QUERY_TAILABLE_CURSOR. Block rather than returning no data. After a period, time out.
MONGOC_QUERY_EXHAUST Stream the data down full blast in multiple "reply" packets. Faster when you are pulling down a lot of data and you know you want to retrieve it all.
MONGOC_QUERY_PARTIAL Get partial results from mongos if some shards are down (instead of throwing an error).

mongoc_rand

MongoDB Random Number Generator

Synopsis

void
mongoc_rand_add (const void *buf, int num, doubel entropy);
void
mongoc_rand_seed (const void *buf, int num);
int
mongoc_rand_status (void);


Description

The mongoc_rand family of functions provide access to the low level randomness primitives used by the MongoDB C Driver. In particular, they control the creation of cryptographically strong pseudo-random bytes required by some security mechanisms.

While we can usually pull enough entropy from the environment, you may be required to seed the PRNG manually depending on your OS, hardware and other entropy consumers running on the same system.

Entropy

mongoc_rand_add and mongoc_rand_seed allow the user to directly provide entropy. They differ insofar as mongoc_rand_seed requires that each bit provided is fully random. mongoc_rand_add allows the user to specify the degree of randomness in the provided bytes as well.

Status

The mongoc_rand_status function allows the user to check the status of the mongoc PRNG. This can be used to guarantee sufficient entropy at program startup, rather than waiting for runtime errors to occur.

mongoc_read_concern_t

Read Concern abstraction

Synopsis

New in MongoDB 3.2.

The mongoc_read_concern_t allows clients to choose a level of isolation for their reads. The default, MONGOC_READ_CONCERN_LEVEL_LOCAL, is right for the great majority of applications.

You can specify a read concern on connection objects, database objects, or collection objects.

See readConcern on the MongoDB website for more information.

Read Concern is only sent to MongoDB when it has explicitly been set by mongoc_read_concern_set_level to anything other then empty string.

Read Concern Levels

MONGOC_READ_CONCERN_LEVEL_LOCAL Default. Uses read concern level "local".
MONGOC_READ_CONCERN_LEVEL_MAJORITY Uses read concern level "majority".
MONGOC_READ_CONCERN_LEVEL_LINEARIZABLE Uses read concern level "linearizable".

See Read Concern Levels in the MongoDB manual for more information about the individual read concern levels.

mongoc_read_mode_t

Read Preference Modes

Synopsis

typedef enum {

MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY = (1 << 0),
MONGOC_READ_SECONDARY = (1 << 1),
MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY_PREFERRED = (1 << 2) | MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY,
MONGOC_READ_SECONDARY_PREFERRED = (1 << 2) | MONGOC_READ_SECONDARY,
MONGOC_READ_NEAREST = (1 << 3) | MONGOC_READ_SECONDARY, } mongoc_read_mode_t;


Description

This enum describes how reads should be dispatched. The default is MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY.

Please see the MongoDB website for a description of Read Preferences.

mongoc_read_prefs_t

A read preference abstraction

Synopsis

mongoc_read_prefs_t provides an abstraction on top of the MongoDB connection read prefences. It allows for hinting to the driver which nodes in a replica set should be accessed first.

You can specify a read preference mode on connection objects, database objects, collection objects, or per-operation. Generally, it makes the most sense to stick with the global default, MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY. All of the other modes come with caveats that won't be covered in great detail here.

Read Modes

MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY Default mode. All operations read from the current replica set primary.
MONGOC_READ_SECONDARY All operations read from among the nearest secondary members of the replica set.
MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY_PREFERRED In most situations, operations read from the primary but if it is unavailable, operations read from secondary members.
MONGOC_READ_SECONDARY_PREFERRED In most situations, operations read from among the nearest secondary members, but if no secondaries are available, operations read from the primary.
MONGOC_READ_NEAREST Operations read from among the nearest members of the replica set, irrespective of the member's type.

Tag Sets

Tag sets allow you to specify custom read preferences and write concerns so that your application can target operations to specific members.

Custom read preferences and write concerns evaluate tags sets in different ways: read preferences consider the value of a tag when selecting a member to read from. while write concerns ignore the value of a tag to when selecting a member except to consider whether or not the value is unique.

You can specify tag sets with the following read preference modes:

  • primaryPreferred
  • secondary
  • secondaryPreferred
  • nearest

Tags are not compatible with MONGOC_READ_PRIMARY and, in general, only apply when selecting a secondary member of a set for a read operation. However, the nearest read mode, when combined with a tag set will select the nearest member that matches the specified tag set, which may be a primary or secondary.

All interfaces use the same member selection logic to choose the member to which to direct read operations, basing the choice on read preference mode and tag sets.

Max Staleness

When connected to replica set running MongoDB 3.4 or later, the driver estimates the staleness of each secondary based on lastWriteDate values provided in server isMaster responses.

Max Staleness is the maximum replication lag in seconds (wall clock time) that a secondary can suffer and still be eligible for reads. The default is MONGOC_NO_MAX_STALENESS, which disables staleness checks. Otherwise, it must be a positive integer at least MONGOC_SMALLEST_MAX_STALENESS_SECONDS (90 seconds).

Max Staleness is also supported by sharded clusters of replica sets if all servers run MongoDB 3.4 or later.

mongoc_remove_flags_t

Flags for deletion operations

Synopsis

typedef enum {

MONGOC_REMOVE_NONE = 0,
MONGOC_REMOVE_SINGLE_REMOVE = 1 << 0, } mongoc_remove_flags_t;


Description

These flags correspond to the MongoDB wire protocol. They may be bitwise or'd together. They may change the number of documents that are removed during a remove command.

Flag Values

MONGOC_REMOVE_NONE Specify no removal flags. All matching documents will be removed.
MONGOC_REMOVE_SINGLE_REMOVE Only remove the first matching document from the selector.

mongoc_reply_flags_t

Flags from server replies

Synopsis

typedef enum {

MONGOC_REPLY_NONE = 0,
MONGOC_REPLY_CURSOR_NOT_FOUND = 1 << 0,
MONGOC_REPLY_QUERY_FAILURE = 1 << 1,
MONGOC_REPLY_SHARD_CONFIG_STALE = 1 << 2,
MONGOC_REPLY_AWAIT_CAPABLE = 1 << 3, } mongoc_reply_flags_t;


Description

These flags correspond to the wire protocol. They may be bitwise or'd together.

Flag Values

MONGOC_REPLY_NONE No flags set.
MONGOC_REPLY_CURSOR_NOT_FOUND No matching cursor was found on the server.
MONGOC_REPLY_QUERY_FAILURE The query failed or was invalid. Error document has been provided.
MONGOC_REPLY_SHARD_CONFIG_STALE Shard config is stale.
MONGOC_REPLY_AWAIT_CAPABLE If the returned cursor is capable of MONGOC_QUERY_AWAIT_DATA.

mongoc_server_description_t

Server description

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
typedef struct _mongoc_server_description_t mongoc_server_description_t


mongoc_server_description_t holds information about a mongod or mongos the driver is connected to.

See also mongoc_client_get_server_descriptions().

Lifecycle

Clean up with mongoc_server_description_destroy().

mongoc_socket_t

Portable socket abstraction

Synopsis

#include <mongoc.h>
typedef struct _mongoc_socket_t mongoc_socket_t


Synopsis

This structure provides a socket abstraction that is friendlier for portability than BSD sockets directly. Inconsistencies between Linux, various BSDs, Solaris, and Windows are handled here.

mongoc_ssl_opt_t

Synopsis

typedef struct {

const char *pem_file;
const char *pem_pwd;
const char *ca_file;
const char *ca_dir;
const char *crl_file;
bool weak_cert_validation;
bool allow_invalid_hostname;
void *padding[7]; } mongoc_ssl_opt_t;


Description

This structure is used to set the SSL options for a mongoc_client_t or mongoc_client_pool_t.

Beginning in version 1.2.0, once a pool or client has any SSL options set, all connections use SSL, even if ssl=true is omitted from the MongoDB URI. Before, SSL options were ignored unless ssl=true was included in the URI.

As of 1.4.0, the mongoc_client_pool_set_ssl_opts and mongoc_client_set_ssl_opts will not only shallow copy the struct, but will also copy the const char*. It is therefore no longer needed to make sure the values remain valid after setting them.

Client Authentication

When MongoDB is started with SSL enabled, it will by default require the client o provide a client certificate issued by a certificate authority specified by --sslCAFile, or an authority trusted by the native certificate store in use on the server.

To provide the client certificate, the user must configure the pem_file to point at a PEM armored certificate.

mongoc_ssl_opt_t ssl_opts = {0};
ssl_opts.pem_file = "/path/to/client-certificate.pem"

/* Then set the client ssl_opts, when using a single client mongoc_client_t
*/
mongoc_client_pool_set_ssl_opts (pool, &ssl_opts); /* or, set the pool ssl_opts, when using a the thread safe mongoc_client_pool_t
*/ mongoc_client_set_ssl_opts (client, &ssl_opts);


Server Certificate Verification

The MongoDB C Driver will automatically verify the validity of the server certificate, such as issued by configured Certificate Authority, hostname validation, and expiration.

To overwrite this behaviour, it is possible to disable hostname validation, and/or allow otherwise invalid certificates. This behaviour is controlled using the allow_invalid_hostname and weak_cert_validation fields. By default, both are set to false. It is not recommended to change these defaults as it exposes the client to Man In The Middle attacks (when allow_invalid_hostname is set) and otherwise invalid certificates when weak_cert_validation is set to true.

Native TLS Support on Linux (OpenSSL)

The MongoDB C Driver supports the dominating TLS library (OpenSSL) and crypto libraries (OpenSSL's libcrypto) on Linux and Unix platforms.

Support for OpenSSL 1.1 and later was added in 1.4.0.

When compiled against OpenSSL, the driver will attempt to load the system default certificate store, as configured by the distribution, if the ca_file and ca_dir are not set.

Native TLS Support on Windows (Secure Channel)

The MongoDB C Driver supports the Windows native TLS library (Secure Channel, or SChannel), and its native crypto library (Cryptography API: Next Generation, or CNG).

When compiled against the Windows native libraries, the ca_dir option is not supported, and will issue an error if used.

Encrypted PEM files (e.g., requiring pem_pwd) are also not supported, and will result in error when attempting to load them.

When ca_file is provided, the driver will only allow server certificates issued by the authority (or authorities) provided. When no ca_file is provided, the driver will look up the Certificate Authority using the System Local Machine Root certificate store to confirm the provided certificate.

When crl_file is provided, the driver will import the revocation list to the System Local Machine Root certificate store.

Native TLS Support on Mac OS X / Darwin (Secure Transport)

The MongoDB C Driver supports the Darwin (OS X, macOS, iOS, etc.) native TLS library (Secure Transport), and its native crypto library (Common Crypto, or CC).

When compiled against Secure Transport, the ca_dir option is not supported, and will issue an error if used.

When ca_file is provided, the driver will only allow server certificates issued by the authority (or authorities) provided. When no ca_file is provided, the driver will use the Certificate Authorities in the currently unlocked keychains.

See Also

  • mongoc_client_set_ssl_opts
  • mongoc_client_pool_set_ssl_opts

mongoc_stream_buffered_t

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_stream_buffered_t mongoc_stream_buffered_t;


Description

mongoc_stream_buffered_t should be considered a subclass of mongoc_stream_t. It performs buffering on an underlying stream.

See Also

mongoc_stream_buffered_new()

mongoc_stream_destroy()

mongoc_stream_file_t

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_stream_file_t mongoc_stream_file_t


mongoc_stream_file_t is a mongoc_stream_t subclass for working with standard UNIX style file-descriptors.

mongoc_stream_gridfs_t

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_stream_gridfs_t mongoc_stream_gridfs_t


The mongoc_stream_gridfs_t class is an implementation of mongoc_stream_t for files stored in GridFS. It allows for transparently streaming GridFS files from a MongoDB server.

mongoc_stream_socket_t

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_stream_socket_t mongoc_stream_socket_t


mongoc_stream_socket_t should be considered a subclass of mongoc_stream_t that works upon socket streams.

mongoc_stream_t

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_stream_t mongoc_stream_t


mongoc_stream_t provides a generic streaming IO abstraction based on a struct of pointers interface. The idea is to allow wrappers, perhaps other language drivers, to easily shim their IO system on top of mongoc_stream_t.

The API for the stream abstraction is currently private and non-extensible.

Stream Types

There are a number of built in stream types that come with mongoc. The default configuration is a buffered unix stream. If SSL is in use, that in turn is wrapped in a tls stream.

See Also

mongoc_stream_buffered_t

mongoc_stream_file_t

mongoc_stream_socket_t

mongoc_stream_tls_t

mongoc_stream_gridfs_t

mongoc_stream_tls_t

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_stream_tls_t mongoc_stream_tls_t


mongoc_stream_tls_t is a mongoc_stream_t subclass for working with OpenSSL TLS streams.

mongoc_topology_description_t

Status of MongoDB Servers

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_topology_description_t mongoc_topology_description_t;


mongoc_topology_description_t is an opaque type representing the driver's knowledge of the MongoDB server or servers it is connected to. Its API conforms to the SDAM Monitoring Specification.

Applications receive a temporary reference to a mongoc_topology_description_t as a parameter to an SDAM Monitoring callback. See Introduction to Application Performance Monitoring.

mongoc_update_flags_t

Flags for update operations

Synopsis

typedef enum {

MONGOC_UPDATE_NONE = 0,
MONGOC_UPDATE_UPSERT = 1 << 0,
MONGOC_UPDATE_MULTI_UPDATE = 1 << 1, } mongoc_update_flags_t; #define MONGOC_UPDATE_NO_VALIDATE (1U << 31)


Description

These flags correspond to the MongoDB wire protocol. They may be bitwise or'd together. The allow for modifying the way an update is performed in the MongoDB server.

Flag Values

MONGOC_UPDATE_NONE No update flags set.
MONGOC_UPDATE_UPSERT If an upsert should be performed.
MONGOC_UPDATE_MULTI_UPDATE If more than a single matching document should be updated. By default only the first document is updated.
MONGOC_UPDATE_NO_VALIDATE Do not perform client side BSON validations when performing an update. This is useful if you already know your BSON documents are valid.

mongoc_uri_t

Synopsis

typedef struct _mongoc_uri_t mongoc_uri_t;


Description

mongoc_uri_t provides an abstraction on top of the MongoDB connection URI format. It provides standardized parsing as well as convenience methods for extracting useful information such as replica hosts or authorization information.

See Connection String URI Reference on the MongoDB website for more information.

Format

mongodb://                                   <1>

[username:password@] <2>
host1 <3>
[:port1] <4>
[,host2[:port2],...[,hostN[:portN]]] <5>
[/[database] <6>
[?options]] <7>


1.
mongodb is the specifier of the MongoDB protocol.
2.
An optional username and password.
3.
The only required part of the uri. This specifies either a hostname, IP address or UNIX domain socket.
4.
An optional port number. Defaults to :27017.
5.
Extra optional hosts and ports. You would specify multiple hosts, for example, for connections to replica sets.
6.
The name of the database to authenticate if the connection string includes authentication credentials. If /database is not specified and the connection string includes credentials, defaults to the 'admin' database.
7.
Connection specific options.

Replica Set Example

To describe a connection to a replica set named 'test' with the following mongod hosts:

  • db1.example.com on port 27017
  • db2.example.com on port 2500

You would use the connection string that resembles the following.


Connection Options

ssl {true|false}, indicating if SSL must be used. (See also mongoc_client_set_ssl_opts and mongoc_client_pool_set_ssl_opts.)
connectTimeoutMS A timeout in milliseconds to attempt a connection before timing out. This setting applies to server discovery and monitoring connections as well as to connections for application operations. The default is 10 seconds.
socketTimeoutMS The time in milliseconds to attempt to send or receive on a socket before the attempt times out. The default is 5 minutes.

Setting any of the *TimeoutMS options above to 0 will be interpreted as "use the default value".

Server Discovery, Monitoring, and Selection Options

Clients in a mongoc_client_pool_t share a topology scanner that runs on a background thread. The thread wakes every heartbeatFrequencyMS (default 10 seconds) to scan all MongoDB servers in parallel. Whenever an application operation requires a server that is not known--for example, if there is no known primary and your application attempts an insert--the thread rescans all servers every half-second. In this situation the pooled client waits up to serverSelectionTimeoutMS (default 30 seconds) for the thread to find a server suitable for the operation, then returns an error with domain MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER_SELECTION.

Technically, the total time an operation may wait while a pooled client scans the topology is controlled both by serverSelectionTimeoutMS and connectTimeoutMS. The longest wait occurs if the last scan begins just at the end of the selection timeout, and a slow or down server requires the full connection timeout before the client gives up.

A non-pooled client is single-threaded. Every heartbeatFrequencyMS, it blocks the next application operation while it does a parallel scan. This scan takes as long as needed to check the slowest server: roughly connectTimeoutMS. Therefore the default heartbeatFrequencyMS for single-threaded clients is greater than for pooled clients: 60 seconds.

By default, single-threaded (non-pooled) clients scan only once when an operation requires a server that is not known. If you attempt an insert and there is no known primary, the client checks all servers once trying to find it, then succeeds or returns an error with domain MONGOC_ERROR_SERVER_SELECTION. But if you set serverSelectionTryOnce to "false", the single-threaded client loops, checking all servers every half-second, until serverSelectionTimeoutMS.

The total time an operation may wait for a single-threaded client to scan the topology is determined by connectTimeoutMS in the try-once case, or serverSelectionTimeoutMS and connectTimeoutMS if serverSelectionTryOnce is set "false".

heartbeatFrequencyMS The interval between server monitoring checks. Defaults to 10 seconds in pooled (multi-threaded) mode, 60 seconds in non-pooled mode (single-threaded).
serverSelectionTimeoutMS A timeout in milliseconds to block for server selection before throwing an exception. The default is 30 seconds.
serverSelectionTryOnce If "true", the driver scans the topology exactly once after server selection fails, then either selects a server or returns an error. If it is false, then the driver repeatedly searches for a suitable server for up to serverSelectionTimeoutMS milliseconds (pausing a half second between attempts). The default for serverSelectionTryOnce is "false" for pooled clients, otherwise "true". Pooled clients ignore serverSelectionTryOnce; they signal the thread to rescan the topology every half-second until serverSelectionTimeoutMS expires.
socketCheckIntervalMS Only applies to single threaded clients. If a socket has not been used within this time, its connection is checked with a quick "isMaster" call before it is used again. Defaults to 5 seconds.

Setting any of the *TimeoutMS options above to 0 will be interpreted as "use the default value".

Connection Pool Options

These options govern the behavior of a mongoc_client_pool_t. They are ignored by a non-pooled mongoc_client_t.

maxPoolSize The maximum number of clients created by a mongoc_client_pool_t total (both in the pool and checked out). The default value is 100. Once it is reached, mongoc_client_pool_pop blocks until another thread pushes a client.
minPoolSize The number of clients to keep in the pool; once it is reached, mongoc_client_pool_push destroys clients instead of pushing them. The default value, 0, means "no minimum": a client pushed into the pool is always stored, not destroyed.
maxIdleTimeMS Not implemented.
waitQueueMultiple Not implemented.
waitQueueTimeoutMS Not implemented.

Write Concern Options

w 0 The driver will not acknowledge write operations but will pass or handle any network and socket errors that it receives to the client. If you disable write concern but enable the getLastError command’s w option, w overrides the w option.
1 Provides basic acknowledgment of write operations. By specifying 1, you require that a standalone mongod instance, or the primary for replica sets, acknowledge all write operations. For drivers released after the default write concern change, this is the default write concern setting.
majority For replica sets, if you specify the special majority value to w option, write operations will only return successfully after a majority of the configured replica set members have acknowledged the write operation.
n For replica sets, if you specify a number n greater than 1, operations with this write concern return only after n members of the set have acknowledged the write. If you set n to a number that is greater than the number of available set members or members that hold data, MongoDB will wait, potentially indefinitely, for these members to become available.
tags For replica sets, you can specify a tag set to require that all members of the set that have these tags configured return confirmation of the write operation.
wtimeoutMS The time in milliseconds to wait for replication to succeed, as specified in the w option, before timing out. When wtimeoutMS is 0, write operations will never time out.
journal Controls whether write operations will wait until the mongod acknowledges the write operations and commits the data to the on disk journal.
true Enables journal commit acknowledgment write concern. Equivalent to specifying the getLastError command with the j option enabled.
false Does not require that mongod commit write operations to the journal before acknowledging the write operation. This is the default option for the journal parameter.

Read Concern Options

readConcernLevel The level of isolation for read operations. If the level is left unspecified, the server default will be used. See readConcern in the MongoDB Manual for details.

Read Preference Options

When connected to a replica set, the driver chooses which member to query using the read preference:

1.
Choose members whose type matches "readPreference".
2.
From these, if there are any tags sets configured, choose members matching the first tag set. If there are none, fall back to the next tag set and so on, until some members are chosen or the tag sets are exhausted.
3.
From the chosen servers, distribute queries randomly among the server with the fastest round-trip times. These include the server with the fastest time and any whose round-trip time is no more than "localThresholdMS" slower.

readPreference Specifies the replica set read preference for this connection. This setting overrides any slaveOk value. The read preference values are the following: 0.0 • 2 primary (default) • 2 primaryPreferred • 2 secondary • 2 secondaryPreferred • 2 nearest 168u
readPreferenceTags Specifies a tag set as a comma-separated list of colon-separated key-value pairs. Cannot be combined with preference "primary".
localThresholdMS How far to distribute queries, beyond the server with the fastest round-trip time. By default, only servers within 15ms of the fastest round-trip time receive queries.

NOTE:

"localThresholdMS" is ignored when talking to replica sets through a mongos. The equivalent is mongos's localThreshold command line option.


mongoc_write_concern_t

Write Concern abstraction

Synopsis

mongoc_write_concern_t tells the driver what level of acknowledgment to await from the server. The default, MONGOC_WRITE_CONCERN_W_DEFAULT, is right for the great majority of applications.

You can specify a write concern on connection objects, database objects, collection objects, or per-operation. Data-modifying operations typically use the write concern of the object they operate on, and check the server response for a write concern error or write concern timeout. For example, mongoc_collection_drop_index uses the collection's write concern, and a write concern error or timeout in the response is considered a failure.

Exceptions to this principle are the generic command functions:

  • mongoc_client_command
  • mongoc_client_command_simple
  • mongoc_database_command
  • mongoc_database_command_simple
  • mongoc_collection_command
  • mongoc_collection_command_simple

These generic command functions do not automatically apply a write concern, and they do not check the server response for a write concern error or write concern timeout.

See Write Concern on the MongoDB website for more information.

Write Concern Levels

Set the write concern level with mongoc_write_concern_set_w.

MONGOC_WRITE_CONCERN_W_DEFAULT (1) By default, writes block awaiting acknowledgment from MongoDB. Acknowledged write concern allows clients to catch network, duplicate key, and other errors.
MONGOC_WRITE_CONCERN_W_UNACKNOWLEDGED (0) With this write concern, MongoDB does not acknowledge the receipt of write operation. Unacknowledged is similar to errors ignored; however, mongoc attempts to receive and handle network errors when possible.
MONGOC_WRITE_CONCERN_W_MAJORITY (majority) Block until a write has been propagated to a majority of the nodes in the replica set.
n Block until a write has been propagated to at least n nodes in the replica set.

Deprecations

The write concern MONGOC_WRITE_CONCERN_W_ERRORS_IGNORED (value -1) is a deprecated synonym for MONGOC_WRITE_CONCERN_W_UNACKNOWLEDGED (value 0), and will be removed in the next major release.

mongoc_write_concern_set_fsync is deprecated.

Application Performance Monitoring (APM)

The MongoDB C Driver allows you to monitor all the MongoDB operations the driver executes. This event-notification system conforms to two MongoDB driver specs:

  • Command Monitoring: events related to all application operations.
  • SDAM Monitoring: events related to the driver's Server Discovery And Monitoring logic.

To receive notifications, create a mongoc_apm_callbacks_t with mongoc_apm_callbacks_new, set callbacks on it, then pass it to mongoc_client_set_apm_callbacks or mongoc_client_pool_set_apm_callbacks.

Command-Monitoring Example

example-command-monitoring.c.INDENT 0.0

/* gcc example-command-monitoring.c -o example-command-monitoring \

* $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0) */ /* ./example-command-monitoring [CONNECTION_STRING] */ #include <mongoc.h> #include <stdio.h> typedef struct {
int started;
int succeeded;
int failed; } stats_t; void command_started (const mongoc_apm_command_started_t *event) {
char *s;
s = bson_as_json (mongoc_apm_command_started_get_command (event), NULL);
printf ("Command %s started on %s:\n%s\n\n",
mongoc_apm_command_started_get_command_name (event),
mongoc_apm_command_started_get_host (event)->host,
s);
((stats_t *) mongoc_apm_command_started_get_context (event))->started++;
bson_free (s); } void command_succeeded (const mongoc_apm_command_succeeded_t *event) {
char *s;
s = bson_as_json (mongoc_apm_command_succeeded_get_reply (event), NULL);
printf ("Command %s succeeded:\n%s\n\n",
mongoc_apm_command_succeeded_get_command_name (event),
s);
((stats_t *) mongoc_apm_command_succeeded_get_context (event))->succeeded++;
bson_free (s); } void command_failed (const mongoc_apm_command_failed_t *event) {
bson_error_t error;
mongoc_apm_command_failed_get_error (event, &error);
printf ("Command %s failed:\n\"%s\"\n\n",
mongoc_apm_command_failed_get_command_name (event),
error.message);
((stats_t *) mongoc_apm_command_failed_get_context (event))->failed++; } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_apm_callbacks_t *callbacks;
stats_t stats = {0};
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
const char *uristr = "mongodb://127.0.0.1/?appname=cmd-monitoring-example";
const char *collection_name = "test";
bson_t doc;
mongoc_init ();
if (argc > 1) {
uristr = argv[1];
}
client = mongoc_client_new (uristr);
if (!client) {
fprintf (stderr, "Failed to parse URI.\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
callbacks = mongoc_apm_callbacks_new ();
mongoc_apm_set_command_started_cb (callbacks, command_started);
mongoc_apm_set_command_succeeded_cb (callbacks, command_succeeded);
mongoc_apm_set_command_failed_cb (callbacks, command_failed);
mongoc_client_set_apm_callbacks (
client, callbacks, (void *) &stats /* context pointer */);
bson_init (&doc);
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&doc, "_id", 1);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", collection_name);
mongoc_collection_drop (collection, NULL);
mongoc_collection_insert (collection, MONGOC_INSERT_NONE, &doc, NULL, NULL);
/* duplicate key error on the second insert */
mongoc_collection_insert (collection, MONGOC_INSERT_NONE, &doc, NULL, NULL);
printf ("started: %d\nsucceeded: %d\nfailed: %d\n",
stats.started,
stats.succeeded,
stats.failed);
bson_destroy (&doc);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_apm_callbacks_destroy (callbacks);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return EXIT_SUCCESS; }



This example program prints:

Command drop started on 127.0.0.1:
{ "drop" : "test" }
Command drop failed:
"ns not found"
Command insert started on 127.0.0.1:
{ "insert" : "test", "documents" : [ { "_id" : 1 } ] }
Command insert succeeded:
{ "ok" : 1, "n" : 1 }
Command insert started on 127.0.0.1:
{ "insert" : "test", "documents" : [ { "_id" : 1 } ] }
Command insert succeeded:
{ "ok" : 1,

"n" : 0,
"writeErrors" : [ {
"index" : 0, "code" : 11000,
"errmsg" : "E11000 duplicate key error" } ] } started: 3 succeeded: 2 failed: 1


In older versions of the MongoDB wire protocol, queries and write operations are sent to the server with special opcodes, not as commands. To provide consistent event notifications with any MongoDB version, these legacy opcodes are reported as if they had used modern commands.

The final "insert" command is considered successful, despite the writeError, because the server replied to the overall command with "ok": 1.

SDAM Monitoring Example

example-sdam-monitoring.c.INDENT 0.0

/* gcc example-sdam-monitoring.c -o example-sdam-monitoring \

* $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libmongoc-1.0) */ /* ./example-sdam-monitoring [CONNECTION_STRING] */ #include <mongoc.h> #include <stdio.h> typedef struct {
int server_changed_events;
int server_opening_events;
int server_closed_events;
int topology_changed_events;
int topology_opening_events;
int topology_closed_events;
int heartbeat_started_events;
int heartbeat_succeeded_events;
int heartbeat_failed_events; } stats_t; static void server_changed (const mongoc_apm_server_changed_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
const mongoc_server_description_t *prev_sd, *new_sd;
context = (stats_t *) mongoc_apm_server_changed_get_context (event);
context->server_changed_events++;
prev_sd = mongoc_apm_server_changed_get_previous_description (event);
new_sd = mongoc_apm_server_changed_get_new_description (event);
printf ("server changed: %s %s -> %s\n",
mongoc_apm_server_changed_get_host (event)->host_and_port,
mongoc_server_description_type (prev_sd),
mongoc_server_description_type (new_sd)); } static void server_opening (const mongoc_apm_server_opening_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
context = (stats_t *) mongoc_apm_server_opening_get_context (event);
context->server_opening_events++;
printf ("server opening: %s\n",
mongoc_apm_server_opening_get_host (event)->host_and_port); } static void server_closed (const mongoc_apm_server_closed_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
context = (stats_t *) mongoc_apm_server_closed_get_context (event);
context->server_closed_events++;
printf ("server closed: %s\n",
mongoc_apm_server_closed_get_host (event)->host_and_port); } static void topology_changed (const mongoc_apm_topology_changed_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
const mongoc_topology_description_t *prev_td;
const mongoc_topology_description_t *new_td;
mongoc_server_description_t **prev_sds;
size_t n_prev_sds;
mongoc_server_description_t **new_sds;
size_t n_new_sds;
size_t i;
context = (stats_t *) mongoc_apm_topology_changed_get_context (event);
context->topology_changed_events++;
prev_td = mongoc_apm_topology_changed_get_previous_description (event);
prev_sds = mongoc_topology_description_get_servers (prev_td, &n_prev_sds);
new_td = mongoc_apm_topology_changed_get_new_description (event);
new_sds = mongoc_topology_description_get_servers (new_td, &n_new_sds);
printf ("topology changed: %s -> %s\n",
mongoc_topology_description_type (prev_td),
mongoc_topology_description_type (new_td));
if (n_prev_sds) {
printf (" previous servers:\n");
for (i = 0; i < n_prev_sds; i++) {
printf (" %s %s\n",
mongoc_server_description_type (prev_sds[i]),
mongoc_server_description_host (prev_sds[i])->host_and_port);
}
}
if (n_new_sds) {
printf (" new servers:\n");
for (i = 0; i < n_new_sds; i++) {
printf (" %s %s\n",
mongoc_server_description_type (new_sds[i]),
mongoc_server_description_host (new_sds[i])->host_and_port);
}
}
mongoc_server_descriptions_destroy_all (prev_sds, n_prev_sds);
mongoc_server_descriptions_destroy_all (new_sds, n_new_sds); } static void topology_opening (const mongoc_apm_topology_opening_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
context = (stats_t *) mongoc_apm_topology_opening_get_context (event);
context->topology_opening_events++;
printf ("topology opening\n"); } static void topology_closed (const mongoc_apm_topology_closed_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
context = (stats_t *) mongoc_apm_topology_closed_get_context (event);
context->topology_closed_events++;
printf ("topology closed\n"); } static void server_heartbeat_started (const mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_started_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
context =
(stats_t *) mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_started_get_context (event);
context->heartbeat_started_events++;
printf ("%s heartbeat started\n",
mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_started_get_host (event)->host_and_port); } static void server_heartbeat_succeeded (
const mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_succeeded_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
char *reply;
context =
(stats_t *) mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_succeeded_get_context (event);
context->heartbeat_succeeded_events++;
reply = bson_as_json (
mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_succeeded_get_reply (event), NULL);
printf (
"%s heartbeat succeeded: %s\n",
mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_succeeded_get_host (event)->host_and_port,
reply);
bson_free (reply); } static void server_heartbeat_failed (const mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_failed_t *event) {
stats_t *context;
bson_error_t error;
context = (stats_t *) mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_failed_get_context (event);
context->heartbeat_failed_events++;
mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_failed_get_error (event, &error);
printf ("%s heartbeat failed: %s\n",
mongoc_apm_server_heartbeat_failed_get_host (event)->host_and_port,
error.message); } int main (int argc, char *argv[]) {
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_apm_callbacks_t *cbs;
stats_t stats = {0};
const char *uristr = "mongodb://127.0.0.1/?appname=sdam-monitoring-example";
bson_t cmd = BSON_INITIALIZER;
bson_t reply;
bson_error_t error;
mongoc_init ();
if (argc > 1) {
uristr = argv[1];
}
client = mongoc_client_new (uristr);
if (!client) {
fprintf (stderr, "Failed to parse URI.\n");
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
cbs = mongoc_apm_callbacks_new ();
mongoc_apm_set_server_changed_cb (cbs, server_changed);
mongoc_apm_set_server_opening_cb (cbs, server_opening);
mongoc_apm_set_server_closed_cb (cbs, server_closed);
mongoc_apm_set_topology_changed_cb (cbs, topology_changed);
mongoc_apm_set_topology_opening_cb (cbs, topology_opening);
mongoc_apm_set_topology_closed_cb (cbs, topology_closed);
mongoc_apm_set_server_heartbeat_started_cb (cbs, server_heartbeat_started);
mongoc_apm_set_server_heartbeat_succeeded_cb (cbs,
server_heartbeat_succeeded);
mongoc_apm_set_server_heartbeat_failed_cb (cbs, server_heartbeat_failed);
mongoc_client_set_apm_callbacks (
client, cbs, (void *) &stats /* context pointer */);
/* the driver connects on demand to perform first operation */
BSON_APPEND_INT32 (&cmd, "buildinfo", 1);
mongoc_client_command_simple (client, "admin", &cmd, NULL, &reply, &error);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
printf ("Events:\n"
" server changed: %d\n"
" server opening: %d\n"
" server closed: %d\n"
" topology changed: %d\n"
" topology opening: %d\n"
" topology closed: %d\n"
" heartbeat started: %d\n"
" heartbeat succeeded: %d\n"
" heartbeat failed: %d\n",
stats.server_changed_events,
stats.server_opening_events,
stats.server_closed_events,
stats.topology_changed_events,
stats.topology_opening_events,
stats.topology_closed_events,
stats.heartbeat_started_events,
stats.heartbeat_succeeded_events,
stats.heartbeat_failed_events);
bson_destroy (&cmd);
bson_destroy (&reply);
mongoc_apm_callbacks_destroy (cbs);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return EXIT_SUCCESS; }



Start a 3-node replica set on localhost with set name "rs" and start the program:


This example program prints something like:

topology opening
topology changed: Unknown -> ReplicaSetNoPrimary
server opening: localhost:27017
server opening: localhost:27018
localhost:27017 heartbeat started
localhost:27018 heartbeat started
localhost:27017 heartbeat succeeded: { ... reply ... }
server changed: localhost:27017 Unknown -> RSPrimary
server opening: localhost:27019
topology changed: ReplicaSetNoPrimary -> ReplicaSetWithPrimary

new servers:
RSPrimary localhost:27017 localhost:27019 heartbeat started localhost:27018 heartbeat succeeded: { ... reply ... } server changed: localhost:27018 Unknown -> RSSecondary topology changed: ReplicaSetWithPrimary -> ReplicaSetWithPrimary
previous servers:
RSPrimary localhost:27017
new servers:
RSPrimary localhost:27017
RSSecondary localhost:27018 localhost:27019 heartbeat succeeded: { ... reply ... } server changed: localhost:27019 Unknown -> RSSecondary topology changed: ReplicaSetWithPrimary -> ReplicaSetWithPrimary
previous servers:
RSPrimary localhost:27017
RSSecondary localhost:27018
new servers:
RSPrimary localhost:27017
RSSecondary localhost:27018
RSSecondary localhost:27019 topology closed Events:
server changed: 3
server opening: 3
server closed: 0
topology changed: 4
topology opening: 1
topology closed: 1
heartbeat started: 3
heartbeat succeeded: 3
heartbeat failed: 0


The driver discovers the third member, "localhost:27019", and adds it to the topology.

AUTHOR

MongoDB, Inc

COPYRIGHT

2017, MongoDB, Inc

May 23, 2017 1.6.3