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I have the following network/mongodb setup:

  • 1 primary mongodb database (10.0.0.1, not accessible from the Internet) - contains private info in collection A, and a collection B, with documents created by a trusted user. At any point in time, a user can mark any document in collection B as 'public', which changes its property from {'public':false} to {'public':true}.

  • 1 public mongodb database (10.0.0.2, runs a webserver accessible from the Internet via a reverse proxy) - does not contain collection A, but should contain all documents marked as 'public' from collection B. This machine will serve those public documents to users outside the network.

How would I set up mongodb so that when a document in the primary database (10.0.0.1) is updated with {'public':true}, it gets replicated to the public mongodb database (10.0.0.2)?

Other details:

  • I'm using the PHP driver
  • The documents are small, max 2KB
  • The load on these servers will probably never exceed 10 concurrent users
  • Eventual consistency is ok, up to a few minutes, but I'd like to know what my options are.

So, just to reiterate, here's a use case:

John VPNs into our private network, opens http://10.0.0.1/, creates a document (call it D2), marks it as private. John then views an older document, D1, and decides to make it public, by clicking the 'Make public' button. The server automagically makes the document available on the public server example.com (public IP x.y.z.w, internal IP 10.0.0.2).

John sends an e-mail to Sarah and asks her to read document D1 (the one that was made public). Sarah goes to http://example.com and is able to read D1, but never sees D2.

My goal is to achieve this without having to manually write scripts to synchronize those two databases. I suspect it should be possible, but I can't figure it out from what I've read about MongoDB replication.

I welcome any advice.

Thank you!

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    I'm pretty sure you can't filter what gets replicated via the standard replica set configurations. That would be neat, though. Jul 7, 2012 at 2:37
  • I have just found the cloneCollection() command. It looks promising, for a pull style cron job, and it also accepts a query filter.
    – ENC
    Jul 7, 2012 at 14:43
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    Yeah, the trouble with cloneCollection() is it would copy everything every time, rather than doing differential updates. I guess, depending on your data size, that might be fine. Jul 7, 2012 at 14:55
  • That's one of the things I'm concerned about too. I'm thinking I can use the 'query' field to filter on a '_timestamp' property, which would result in cloning only those documents in the primary repository that have a _timestamp greater than max(_timestamp) in the public repository. This should result in some sort of incremental cloning. Currently, I'm wondering if there are concurrency issues involved in this scenario.
    – ENC
    Jul 7, 2012 at 18:26
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    The first thing it does when you do cloneCollection is remove the target collection, so I don't think it will work for incremental cloning. You could do the same thing with a simple for loop script, and maybe mark the fields you've already copied over with a flag of some sort. Jul 7, 2012 at 20:55

1 Answer 1

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MongoDB (as at 2.0.6) does not have support for filtered replication.

However ... it may be possible for you to implement your own scheme to update records based on a tailable cursor of MongoDB's oplog. The local oplog.rs capped collection is the same mechanism used to relay changes to members of a replica set and includes details for inserts, deletes, and updates.

For an example of this technique, see this blog post: Creating Triggers for MongoDB.

In your case the actions would be something like:

  • copy record from collection A to B if it is inserted or updated with public:true
  • remove record from collection B if it is deleted or updated in collection A with public:false

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