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I have a Mongoose "Costs" object created that saves successfully to a Mongo collection. In the Mongoose schema for the Costs object, I specify types for each of the columns:

'use strict';

var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;
var crypto = require('crypto');

var CostsSchema = new Schema({

    property_hash:String,

    month: Number,

    year: Number,

    spend: Number,

    updated_by: String,

    channel: String,

    source: String,

    updated: Date
});

mongoose.model('Costs', CostsSchema);

But when I call Costs.collection.insert() passing an array of objects with all the properties set as strings, They get saved to Mongo without error.

Sample invalid object that gets saved successfully:

{ channel: "websites",
month: "I should be an integer",
property_hash: "1234566",
source: "trade",
spend: "I am an invalid integer",
updated: "I am an invalid date",
updated_by: "fred",
year: "Invalid year" }
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1 Answer 1

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If you have a look at docs you can see that this is not a method implemented in Mongoose, but rather in MongoDB driver, so validation does not happen at all - documents are directly saved to Mongo.

For your need, you'd better use #insertMany method.

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  • even if you use the Mongoose method you still might fall - If you have in the schema a type String property and you try to save a Number into it it will not fail, it will cast it into a String (might not be what you expect or wish). Take a look at this for example: stackoverflow.com/questions/47464220/…
    – Nir Tamir
    Dec 3, 2019 at 11:56

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