mongoc_collection_find()

Synopsis

mongoc_cursor_t *
mongoc_collection_find (mongoc_collection_t       *collection,
                        mongoc_query_flags_t       flags,
                        uint32_t                   skip,
                        uint32_t                   limit,
                        uint32_t                   batch_size,
                        const bson_t              *query,
                        const bson_t              *fields,
                        const mongoc_read_prefs_t *read_prefs)
   BSON_GNUC_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT;

Parameters

collection

A mongoc_collection_t.

flags

A mongoc_query_flags_t.

skip

A uint32_t of number of documents to skip or 0.

limit

A uint32_t of max number of documents to return or 0.

batch_size

A uint32_t containing batch size of document result sets or 0 for default. Default is 100.

query

A bson_t containing the query and options to execute.

fields

A bson_t containing fields to return or NULL.

read_prefs

A mongoc_read_prefs_t or NULL for default read preferences.

Description

This function shall execute a query on the underlying collection.

If no options are necessary, query can simply contain a query such as {a:1}. If you would like to specify options such as a sort order, the query must be placed inside of {"$query": {}} as specified by the server documentation. See the example below for how to properly specify additional options to query.

Returns

A newly allocated mongoc_cursor_t that should be freed with mongoc_cursor_destroy() when no longer in use. If invalid parameters are supplied, NULL may be returned.

Failure to handle the result of this function is a programming error.

Example

Print All Documents in a Collection

#include <mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>

static void
print_all_documents (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{
   mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
   bson_error_t error;
   const bson_t *doc;
   char *str;
   bson_t *query;

   query = BCON_NEW ("$query", "{", "foo", BCON_INT32 (1), "}",
                     "$orderby", "{", "bar", BCON_INT32 (-1), "}");
   cursor = mongoc_collection_find (collection, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, 0, 0, 0, query, NULL, NULL);

   while (mongoc_cursor_more (cursor) && 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, "An error occurred: %s\n", error.message);
   }

   mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
   bson_destroy (query);
}

The "find" command

Queries have historically been sent as OP_QUERY wire protocol messages, but beginning in MongoDB 3.2 queries use the "find" command instead.

The driver automatically converts queries to the new "find" command syntax if needed, so this change is typically invisible to C Driver users. However, an application written exclusively for MongoDB 3.2 and later can choose to use the new syntax directly instead of relying on the driver to convert from the old syntax:

/* MongoDB 3.2+ "find" command syntax */
query = BCON_NEW ("filter", "{", "foo", BCON_INT32 (1), "}",
                  "sort": "{", "bar", BCON_INT32 (-1), "}");
cursor = mongoc_collection_find (collection, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, 0, 0, 0, query, NULL, NULL);

The "find" command takes different options from the traditional OP_QUERY message.

Option

OP_QUERY option

"find" command option

Query

$query

filter

Sort

$orderby

sort

Show record location

$showDiskLoc

showRecordId

Other $-options

$<option name>

<option name>

Most applications should use the OP_QUERY syntax, with "$query", "$orderby", and so on, and rely on the driver to convert to the new syntax if needed. There are two caveats: querying documents by a key named "filter", and using new "find" command options that OP_QUERY does not support.

See Also

The "find" command in the MongoDB Manual.

Finding a document by a key named "filter"

To find a document like { "_id": 1, "filter": "value" }, this query works in MongoDB before 3.2:

/* Fails with MongoDB 3.2+ */
query = BCON_NEW ("filter", BCON_UTF8 ("value"));
cursor = mongoc_collection_find (collection, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, 0, 0, 0, query, NULL, NULL);

Beginning in MongoDB 3.2, the "filter" option has special meaning, and it is no longer assumed to be a field in a document you are querying for. To execute this query on any MongoDB version, wrap it in "$query":

/* Works in all MongoDB versions */
query = BCON_NEW ("$query", "{", "filter", BCON_UTF8 ("value"), "}");
cursor = mongoc_collection_find (collection, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, 0, 0, 0, query, NULL, NULL);

This code works for any MongoDB version. The driver sends it as-is to a MongoDB server older than 3.2, and before sending to MongoDB 3.2 or later converts it to the following:

{ "filter": { "filter": "value" } }

Options specific to the "find" command

The "find" command has new options like "singleBatch" not supported by OP_QUERY. Applications should use the new "find" syntax directly to take advantage of them:

/* MongoDB 3.2+ "find" command syntax */
query = BCON_NEW ("filter", "{", "foo", BCON_INT32 (1), "}",
                  "sort": "{", "bar", BCON_INT32 (-1), "}",
                  "singleBatch", BCON_BOOL (true));
cursor = mongoc_collection_find (collection, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, 0, 0, 0, query, NULL, NULL);

The "explain" command

With MongoDB before 3.2, a query with option $explain: true returns information about the query plan, instead of the query results. Beginning in MongoDB 3.2, there is a separate "explain" command. The driver will not convert "$explain" queries to "explain" commands, you must call the "explain" command explicitly:

/* MongoDB 3.2+, "explain" command syntax */
 command = BCON_NEW ("explain", "{",
                     "find", BCON_UTF8 ("collection_name"),
                     "filter", "{", "foo", BCON_INT32 (1), "}",
                     "}");
mongoc_collection_command_simple (collection, command, NULL, &reply, &error);

See Also

The "explain" command in the MongoDB Manual.