283

Given this document saved in MongoDB

{
   _id : ...,
   some_key: { 
        param1 : "val1",
        param2 : "val2",
        param3 : "val3"
   }
}

An object with new information on param2 and param3 from the outside world needs to be saved

var new_info = {
    param2 : "val2_new",
    param3 : "val3_new"
};

I want to merge / overlay the new fields over the existing state of the object so that param1 doesn't get removed

Doing this

db.collection.update(  { _id:...} , { $set: { some_key : new_info  } } 

Will lead to MongoDB is doing exactly as it was asked, and sets some_key to that value. replacing the old one.

{
   _id : ...,
   some_key: { 
      param2 : "val2_new",
      param3 : "val3_new"
   }
}

What is the way to have MongoDB update only new fields (without stating them one by one explicitly)? to get this:

{
   _id : ...,
   some_key: { 
        param1 : "val1",
        param2 : "val2_new",
        param3 : "val3_new"
   }
}

I'm using the Java client, but any example will be appreciated

0

19 Answers 19

154

I solved it with my own function. If you want to update specified field in document you need to address it clearly.

Example:

{
    _id : ...,
    some_key: { 
        param1 : "val1",
        param2 : "val2",
        param3 : "val3"
    }
}

If you want to update param2 only, it's wrong to do:

db.collection.update(  { _id:...} , { $set: { some_key : new_info  } }  //WRONG

You must use:

db.collection.update(  { _id:...} , { $set: { "some_key.param2" : new_info  } } 

So i wrote a function something like that:

function _update($id, $data, $options=array()){

    $temp = array();
    foreach($data as $key => $value)
    {
        $temp["some_key.".$key] = $value;
    } 

    $collection->update(
        array('_id' => $id),
        array('$set' => $temp)
    );

}

_update('1', array('param2' => 'some data'));
3
  • Thanks your response helped guide me. I was abled to modify the value of a specific key of a user in the users collection as follows: db.users.update( { _id: ObjectId("594dbc3186bb5c84442949b1") }, { $set: { resume: { url: "http://i.imgur.com/UFX0yXs.jpg" } } } ) Jun 25, 2017 at 1:51
  • 1
    Is this operation atomic and isolated? Meaning, if 2 parallel threads tries to set 2 different fields of the same document, will that result in race condition and unpredictable result Feb 18, 2020 at 18:06
  • This is now possible using 4.2 aggregation support in update queries - Checkout my answer - stackoverflow.com/a/65007307/2683814
    – s7vr
    Nov 25, 2020 at 15:06
126

If I understand the question correctly, you want to update a document with the contents of another document, but only the fields that are not already present, and completely ignore the fields that are already set (even if to another value).

There is no way to do that in a single command.

You have to query the document first, figure out what you want to $set and then update it (using the old values as a matching filter to make sure you don't get concurrent updates in between).


Another reading of your question would be that you are happy with $set, but do not want to explicitly set all fields. How would you pass in the data then?

You know you can do the following:

db.collection.update(  { _id:...} , { $set: someObjectWithNewData } 
9
  • 1
    If you want to set all fields unconditionally, you can use the $multi parameter, like this: db.collection.update( { _id:...} , { $set: someObjectWithNewData, { $multi: true } } )
    – Villager
    May 11, 2016 at 13:17
  • 18
    There is no $multi parameter. There's a multi option (which is what you linked to), but that does not affect how fields are updated. It controls whether you update a single document, or all documents that match the query parameter.
    – Bob Kerns
    May 25, 2016 at 0:09
  • 2
    This does not make any sense whatsoever. When dealing with mongo it is preferred also for updates to have atomic operations. First reading it causes a dirty read whenever someone else changes your data. And since mongo has no transactions, it will happily corrupt the data for you. Jan 26, 2017 at 10:38
  • 1
    @froginvasion: You can make it atomic by using the old values as a matching filter on the update.That way, your update will fail if there was a conflicting concurrent update in the meantime. You can then detect that and act accordingly. This is called optimistic locking. But yeah, it depends on your application implementing it properly, Mongo itself does not have built-in transactions.
    – Thilo
    Jan 26, 2017 at 23:40
  • 1
    I think this is a more general question of merging two objects in javascript. IIRC the idea is to simply assign the properties of the new one to the old Dec 5, 2018 at 5:09
32

You can use dot-notation to access and set fields deep inside objects, without affecting the other properties of those objects.

Given the object you specified above:

> db.test.insert({"id": "test_object", "some_key": {"param1": "val1", "param2": "val2", "param3": "val3"}})
WriteResult({ "nInserted" : 1 })

We can update just some_key.param2 and some_key.param3:

> db.test.findAndModify({
... query: {"id": "test_object"},
... update: {"$set": {"some_key.param2": "val2_new", "some_key.param3": "val3_new"}},
... new: true
... })
{
    "_id" : ObjectId("56476e04e5f19d86ece5b81d"),
    "id" : "test_object",
    "some_key" : {
        "param1" : "val1",
        "param2" : "val2_new",
        "param3" : "val3_new"
    }
}

You can delve as deep as you like. This is also useful for adding new properties to an object without affecting the existing ones.

1
  • Can i add a new key... like "some key" : {"param1" : "val1", "param2" : "val2_new", "param3" : "val3_new", "param4" : "val4_new", } Apr 18, 2020 at 14:05
30

Starting in Mongo 4.2, db.collection.updateMany() (or db.collection.update()) can accept an aggregation pipeline, which allows using aggregation operators such as $addFields, which outputs all existing fields from the input documents and newly added fields:

var new_info = { param2: "val2_new", param3: "val3_new" }

// { some_key: { param1: "val1", param2: "val2", param3: "val3" } }
// { some_key: { param1: "val1", param2: "val2"                 } }
db.collection.updateMany({}, [{ $addFields: { some_key: new_info } }])
// { some_key: { param1: "val1", param2: "val2_new", param3: "val3_new" } }
// { some_key: { param1: "val1", param2: "val2_new", param3: "val3_new" } }
  • The first part {} is the match query, filtering which documents to update (in this case all documents).

  • The second part [{ $addFields: { some_key: new_info } }] is the update aggregation pipeline:

    • Note the squared brackets signifying the use of an aggregation pipeline.
    • Since this is an aggregation pipeline, we can use $addFields.
    • $addFields performs exactly what you need: updating the object so that the new object will overlay / merge with the existing one:
    • In this case, { param2: "val2_new", param3: "val3_new" } will be merged into the existing some_key by keeping param1 untouched and either add or replace both param2 and param3.
1
  • 1
    wow, this is what I have been searching for since last hour. Thx. This should be the accepted answer and needs more upvote.
    – garg10may
    Mar 8, 2022 at 15:42
27

The best solution is to extract properties from object and make them flat dot-notation key-value pairs. You could use for example this library:

https://www.npmjs.com/package/mongo-dot-notation

It has .flatten function that allows you to change object into flat set of properties that could be then given to $set modifier, without worries that any property of your existing DB object will be deleted/overwritten without need.

Taken from mongo-dot-notation docs:

var person = {
  firstName: 'John',
  lastName: 'Doe',
  address: {
    city: 'NY',
    street: 'Eighth Avenu',
    number: 123
  }
};



var instructions = dot.flatten(person)
console.log(instructions);
/* 
{
  $set: {
    'firstName': 'John',
    'lastName': 'Doe',
    'address.city': 'NY',
    'address.street': 'Eighth Avenu',
    'address.number': 123
  }
}
*/

And then it forms perfect selector - it will update ONLY given properties. EDIT: I like to be archeologist some times ;)

0
12

Mongo lets you update nested documents using a . convention. Take a look: Updating nested documents in mongodb. Here's another question from the past about a merge update, like the one you're looking for I believe: MongoDB atomic update via 'merge' document

0
10

I had success doing it this way:

db.collection.update(  { _id:...} , { $set: { 'key.another_key' : new_info  } } );

I have a function that handles my profile updates dynamically

function update(prop, newVal) {
  const str = `profile.${prop}`;
  db.collection.update( { _id:...}, { $set: { [str]: newVal } } );
}

Note: 'profile' is specific to my implementation, it is just the string of the key that you would like to modify.

6

You can use $mergeObjects in the aggregation based update. Something like

db.collection.update(
   { _id:...},
   [{"$set":{
      "some_key":{
        "$mergeObjects":[
          "$some_key",
          new info or { param2 : "val2_new", param3 : "val3_new"}
       ]
      }
   }}]
)

More examples here

1
  • "Combines multiple documents into a single document." Mar 28, 2021 at 12:18
5

You could rather do a upsert, this operation in MongoDB is utilized to save document into collection. If document matches query criteria then it will perform update operation otherwise it will insert a new document into collection.

something similar as below

db.employees.update(
    {type:"FT"},
    {$set:{salary:200000}},
    {upsert : true}
 )
3
    // where clause DBObject
    DBObject query = new BasicDBObject("_id", new ObjectId(id));

    // modifications to be applied
    DBObject update = new BasicDBObject();

    // set new values
    update.put("$set", new BasicDBObject("param2","value2"));

   // update the document
    collection.update(query, update, true, false); //3rd param->upsertFlag, 4th param->updateMultiFlag

If you have multiple fields to be updated

        Document doc = new Document();
        doc.put("param2","value2");
        doc.put("param3","value3");
        update.put("$set", doc);
0
2

It looks like you can set isPartialObject which might accomplish what you want.

1
  • tried it. it doens't let you save partial objects if I'm not mistaken... but thanks
    – Eran Medan
    Apr 24, 2012 at 1:46
2
db.collection.update(  { _id:...} , { $set: { some_key : new_info  } } 

to

db.collection.update( { _id: ..} , { $set: { some_key: { param1: newValue} } } ); 

Hope this help!

2

You have to use Embedded Documents (stringfy the path object)

let update = {}
Object.getOwnPropertyNames(new_info).forEach(param => {
   update['some_key.' + param] = new_info[param]
})

And so, in JavaScript you can use Spread Operator (...) to update

db.collection.update(  { _id:...} , { $set: { ...update  } } 
1

Yeah, the best way is to convert the object notation to a flat key-value string representation, as mentioned in this comment: https://stackoverflow.com/a/39357531/2529199

I wanted to highlight an alternative method using this NPM library: https://www.npmjs.com/package/dot-object which lets you manipulate different objects using dot notation.

I used this pattern to programatically create a nested object property when accepting the key-value as a function variable, as follows:

const dot = require('dot-object');

function(docid, varname, varvalue){
  let doc = dot.dot({
      [varname]: varvalue 
  });

  Mongo.update({_id:docid},{$set:doc});
}

This pattern lets me use nested as well as single-level properties interchangeably, and insert them cleanly into Mongo.

If you need to play around with JS Objects beyond just Mongo, especially on the client-side but have consistency when working with Mongo, this library gives you more options than the earlier mentioned mongo-dot-notation NPM module.

P.S I originally wanted to just mention this as a comment but apparently my S/O rep isn't high enough to post a comment. So, not trying to muscle in on SzybkiSasza's comment, just wanted to highlight providing an alternative module.

1

I tried findAndModify() to update a particular field in a pre-existing object.

https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/method/db.collection.findAndModify/

0

use $set do this process

.update({"_id": args.dashboardId, "viewData._id": widgetId}, {$set: {"viewData.$.widgetData": widgetDoc.widgetData}})
.exec()
.then(dashboardDoc => {
    return {
        result: dashboardDoc
    };
}); 
0

Make an update object with the property names including the necessary dot path. ("somekey."+ from OP's example), and then use that do the update.

//the modification that's requested
updateReq = { 
   param2 : "val2_new",
   param3 : "val3_new"   
}

//build a renamed version of the update request
var update = {};
for(var field in updateReq){
    update["somekey."+field] = updateReq[field];
}

//apply the update without modifying fields not originally in the update
db.collection.update({._id:...},{$set:update},{upsert:true},function(err,result){...});
0

You should think about updating the object interchangeably and then simply store the object with the updated fields. Something like done below

function update(_id) {
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {

        ObjModel.findOne({_id}).exec((err, obj) => {

            if(err) return reject(err)

            obj = updateObject(obj, { 
                some_key: {
                    param2 : "val2_new",
                    param3 : "val3_new"
                }
            })

            obj.save((err, obj) => {
                if(err) return reject(err)
                resolve(obj)
            })
        })
    })
}


function updateObject(obj, data) {

    let keys = Object.keys(data)

    keys.forEach(key => {

        if(!obj[key]) obj[key] = data[key]

        if(typeof data[key] == 'object') 
            obj[key] = updateObject(obj[key], data[key])
        else
            obj[key] = data[key]
    })

    return obj
}
0

If you want to update multiple fields of an object, you can try this:-

 let fieldsToUpdate = {};
 for (const key in allFields) {
 const fieldName = `flags.${key}`;   // define field as string literal
     fieldsToUpdate[fieldName] = allFields[key];
 }
 db.collection.updateOne(query, { $set: { ...fieldsToUpdate } } );
2
  • 1
    collection.updateOne should be used because collection.update is deprecated.
    – Abdul Rauf
    Feb 24, 2022 at 10:43
  • Hey Abdul, thanks for pointing it out. Solution Updated! Feb 27, 2022 at 8:14

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