I have two tables/collections; Users and Groups. A user can be a member of any number of groups and a user can also be an owner of any number of groups. In a relational database I'd probably have a third table called UserGroups with a UserID column, a GroupID column and an IsOwner column.

I'm using MongoDB and I'm sure there is a different approach for this kind of relationship in a document database. Should I embed the list of groups and groups-as-owner inside the Users table as two arrays of ObjectIDs? Should I also store the list of members and owners in the Groups table as two arrays, effectively mirroring the relationship causing a duplication of relationship information?

Or is a bridging UserGroups table a legitimate concept in document databases for many to many relationships?

Thanks

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What I've seen done, and what I currently use are embedded arrays with node id's in each document.

So document user1 has property groups: [id1,id2]

And document group1 has property users: [user1]. Document group2 also has property users: [user1].

This way you get a Group object and easily select all related users, and the same for the User.

This takes a bit more work when creating and updating the object. When you say 2 objects are related, you have to update both objects.

There's also a concept DBReferences in MongoDB and depending on your driver, it'll pull referenced objects automatically when retrieving a document.

http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Database+References#DatabaseReferences-DBRef

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Excellent thanks for pointing me to the docs too. Making sense now, it is a different approach and more flexible and performant it's exciting to get into this stuff. Also mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Schema+Design – Gareth Elms Jan 30 '11 at 11:06
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Just seen Kyle Banker answer my question at 29 minutes into this presentation video : blip.tv/file/3704083. Never use a join table to represent a many-to-many, instead have a list of ObjectIds in both collections – Gareth Elms Jan 30 '11 at 13:20
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