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 itD2
), 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 serverexample.com
(public IPx.y.z.w
, internal IP10.0.0.2
).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 readD1
, but never seesD2
.
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!