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as the title says, I want to perform a find (one) for a document, by _id, and if doesn't exist, have it created, then whether it was found or was created, have it returned in the callback.

I don't want to update it if it exists, as I've read findAndModify does. I have seen many other questions on Stackoverflow regarding this but again, don't wish to update anything.

I am unsure if by creating (of not existing), THAT is actually the update everyone is talking about, it's all so confuzzling :(

4 Answers 4

211

Beginning with MongoDB 2.4, it's no longer necessary to rely on a unique index (or any other workaround) for atomic findOrCreate like operations.

This is thanks to the $setOnInsert operator new to 2.4, which allows you to specify updates which should only happen when inserting documents.

This, combined with the upsert option, means you can use findAndModify to achieve an atomic findOrCreate-like operation.

db.collection.findAndModify({
  query: { _id: "some potentially existing id" },
  update: {
    $setOnInsert: { foo: "bar" }
  },
  new: true,   // return new doc if one is upserted
  upsert: true // insert the document if it does not exist
})

As $setOnInsert only affects documents being inserted, if an existing document is found, no modification will occur. If no document exists, it will upsert one with the specified _id, then perform the insert only set. In both cases, the document is returned.

16
  • 3
    @Gank if you're using the mongodb native driver for node the syntax would be more like collection.findAndModify({_id:'theId'}, <your sort opts>, {$setOnInsert:{foo: 'bar'}}, {new:true, upsert:true}, callback). See the docs Jun 3, 2014 at 13:12
  • 8
    Is there a way to know if the document has been updated or inserted ?
    – doom
    Sep 10, 2014 at 23:07
  • 4
    If you want to check if the query above(db.collection.findAndModify({query: {_id: "some potentially existing id"}, update: {$setOnInsert: {foo: "bar"}}, new: true, upsert: true})) insert(upsert)ed a document, you should consider using db.collection.updateOne({_id: "some potentially existing id"}, {$setOnInsert: {foo: "bar"}}, {upsert: true}). It returns {"acknowledged": true, "matchedCount": 0, "modifiedCount": 0, "upsertedId": ObjectId("for newly inserted one")} if the doc inserted, {"acknowledged": true, "matchedCount": 1, "modifiedCount": 0} if the doc already exists. Jul 18, 2016 at 11:38
  • 8
    seems to be deprecated in flavor of findOneAndUpdate, findOneAndReplace or findOneAndDelete Nov 4, 2016 at 12:45
  • 8
    One needs to be careful here, though. This only works if the selector of the findAndModify/findOneAndUpdate/updateOne uniquely identifies one document by _id. Otherwise the upsert is split up on the server into a query and an update/insert. The update will still be atomic. But the query and the update together will not be executed atomically.
    – Anon
    Apr 25, 2017 at 20:14
29

Driver Versions > 2

Using the latest driver (> version 2), you'll use findOneAndUpdate as findAndModify was deprecated. The new method takes 3 arguments, the filter, the update object (which contains your default properties, that should be inserted for a new object), and options where you have to specify the upsert operation.

Using the promise syntax, it looks like this:

const result = await collection.findOneAndUpdate(
  { _id: new ObjectId(id) },
  {
    $setOnInsert: { foo: "bar" },
  },
  {
    returnOriginal: false,
    upsert: true,
  }
);

const newOrUpdatedDocument = result.value;
0
6

Its a bit dirty, but you can just insert it.

Be sure that the key has a unique index on it (if you use the _id it's ok, it's already unique).

In this way if the element is already present it will return an exception that you can catch.

If it isn't present, the new document will be inserted.

Updated: a detailed explanation of this technique on the MongoDB Documentation

3
-2

Here's what I did (Ruby MongoDB driver):

$db[:tags].update_one({:tag => 'flat'}, {'$set' => {:tag => 'earth' }}, { :upsert => true })}

It will update it if it exists, and insert it if it doesn't.

0

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