MapReduce is a good approach as per the earlier answer from Chien-Wei. In MongoDB 2.2 you can also consider using the Aggregation Framework.
For example, if you were always matching 11111 then you could $add
the values of the fields of interest and then only $match
those that had at least 4:
db.element.aggregate(
// Could use an initial $match here to find candidate documents (using indexed query)
// Use $project to add calculated total
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
element_id: 1,
// Assume we are matching 11111 and field values are always 0 or 1
total: { $add: [ "$field_1", "$field_2", "$field_3", "$field_4", "$field_5" ] }
}},
// Filter to interesting results (at least 4 fields with '1')
{ $match: {
total : { $gte : 4 }
}}
)
Sample output:
{ "result" : [ { "element_id" : "b", "total" : 4 } ], "ok" : 1 }
If you want a more generic comparison you could use $cond
to conditionally match against a target array, eg:
var targetArray = [1,1,1,1,1];
db.element.aggregate(
// Could use an initial $match here to find candidate documents (using indexed query)
// Use $project to add calculated total
{ $project: {
_id: 0,
element_id: 1,
total: { $add: [
{ $cond:[{$eq:["$field_1", targetArray[0]]}, 1, 0 ]},
{ $cond:[{$eq:["$field_2", targetArray[1]]}, 1, 0 ]},
{ $cond:[{$eq:["$field_3", targetArray[2]]}, 1, 0 ]},
{ $cond:[{$eq:["$field_4", targetArray[3]]}, 1, 0 ]},
{ $cond:[{$eq:["$field_5", targetArray[4]]}, 1, 0 ]}
]}
}},
// Filter to interesting results (at least 4 fields with a match)
{ $match: {
total : { $gte : 4 }
}}
)
For a general comparison of the aggregation options and current limitations, see the related StackOverflow question: MongoDB aggregation comparison: group(), $group and MapReduce.