63

I can't find this in the documentation in any of the obvious places. I'd like to know if it is possible to know if Mongo executed an insert or update in the upsert operation?

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5 Answers 5

37

Yes there is, on a safe call (or getLastError) the update function will return an array with an upsert field and a updatedExisting field.

You can read the PHP version of this here: http://php.net/manual/en/mongocollection.insert.php towards the bottom.

As it says within the documentation on upserted:

If an upsert occured, this field will contain the new record's _id field. For upserts, either this field or updatedExisting will be present (unless an error occurred).

So upserted contains the _id of the new record if a insert was done or it will increment updatedExisting if it updated a record.

I am sure a similar thing appears in all drivers.

Edit

It will actually be a boolean in the updatedExisting field of true or false

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11

For reference only, in node.js:

collection.update( source, target, { upsert: true }, function(err, result, upserted) {
  ...
});
3
  • 1
    That looks like mongoose, right? If so, be careful, if you're using the latest version (3.6) the callback parameters are different now: (err, numberAffected, rawResponse)
    – superiggy
    Jul 23, 2013 at 17:28
  • 1
    No, that's mongodb driver direct. However it might have changed since I posted it.
    – user56250
    Jul 24, 2013 at 9:49
  • 2
    The names source and target are a little misleading IMO.
    – UpTheCreek
    Oct 3, 2013 at 12:11
11

For reference only, in node.js using Mongoose 3.6:

model.update( findquery, updatequery, { upsert: true }, function(err, numberAffected, rawResponse) {
  ...
});

Where rawResponse looks like this when it has updated an existing document:

{ updatedExisting: true,
  n: 1,
  connectionId: 222,
  err: null,
  ok: 1 }

And it looks like this when it has created a new document:

{ updatedExisting: false,
  upserted: 51eebc080eb3e2208a630d8e,
  n: 1,
  connectionId: 222,
  err: null,

(Both cases would return numberAffected = 1)

6

The Answer was taken from "MongoDB Applied Design Patterns" Book !determine whether an upsert was an insert or an update

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2

Using MongoDB driver 3.5.9 under Node.js, I found that there are these properties we are interested in after using updateOne with { upsert: true }:

{
  modifiedCount: 0,
  upsertedId: null,
  upsertedCount: 0,
  matchedCount: 1
}

When upsert inserted something, we will get upsertedCount > 0 and upsertedId will hold the newly inserted document ID. When upsert modified something, we will get modifiedCount > 0.

The tutorial for all CRUD operations is here https://mongodb.github.io/node-mongodb-native/3.6/tutorials/crud/

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