44

I want to limit a query I'm making to only look in documents that were created in the past 24 hrs.

What is the best way to structure this query? How do I go about limiting based on date?

4

12 Answers 12

56

Add createdAt field, index it, then query

db.getCollection("COLLECTION_NAME").find({"createdAt":{$gt:new Date(Date.now() - 24*60*60 * 1000)}})

This will return all records younger than 86400 seconds.

21

If you're not using any other indexes and are using the default ObjectID as your _id, you can do the following:

var ObjectID = require('mongodb').ObjectID

db.collection.find({
  _id: {
    $gt: ObjectID.createFromTime(Date.now() / 1000 - 24*60*60)
  }
}, callback)
7
  • 2
    JavaScript execution failed: ReferenceError: ObjectID is not defined
    – Daniel W.
    Aug 13, 2013 at 15:04
  • 1
    TypeError: Object function ObjectId() { [native code] } has no method 'createFromTimestamp'
    – Daniel W.
    Aug 13, 2013 at 15:11
  • 2
    my bad, createFromTime. they might have changed it: mongodb.github.io/node-mongodb-native/api-bson-generated/… Aug 13, 2013 at 20:57
  • Getting the same error: ReferenceError: ObjectID is not defined
    – Anthony
    Aug 28, 2015 at 21:27
  • Close, but I think it should be ObjectID.createFromTime(Date.now() \ 1000 - 24 * 60 * 60).
    – bigmac
    Jan 3, 2016 at 20:44
13

For anyone else landing here via google, you can do this in the mongo shell as follows:

db.collection.find({ $where: function () { return Date.now() - this._id.getTimestamp() < (24 * 60 * 60 * 1000)  }  })
2
6

Use this in mongoose

let ObjectId    = require('mongodb').ObjectID;

Property.find({
    _id: {
        $gt: ObjectId.createFromTime(Date.now() / 1000 - 24 * 60 * 60)
    }
}, (err, result) => {
    console.log(err || result);
});
3

first of all it would really help if you will provide people with a schema of your collection.

But just because it already 3 hours passed and no one replied I will try:

Suppose you have you entry and it has a field createdAt which is an ISODate:

{
somefield: "test",
createdAt: ISODate("2012-08-13T04:00:00Z")
}

So what you need to do is to put an index on this field

db.yourColl.ensureIndex({createdAt:1});

Then you get your current time in node.js substitute your 24 hours and get your value of start. (As far as I know there is no analog of NOW in mongdb. Right me someone if I am wrong.)

db.yourColl.find({
   createdAt: {
     $gte: start
   }
});
3

Hope this helps someone. I'm using pymongo to query last 24 hours of data. In my case I had to convert the current time into BSON timestamp.

First I had to import Bson timestamp:

from bson.timestamp import Timestamp

Then in my search query I did the following:

yesterday  = datetime.datetime.now() - datetime.timedelta(days=1)

findQuery = {
    "unix": {
        "$gte": Timestamp(int(yesterday.strftime("%s")),0)
     }
}
1

Starting in Mongo 5.0, it's a nice use case for the new $dateDiff aggregation operator:

// { "_id" : ObjectId("60c8f804fb832fe2f2011657") }
db.collection.aggregate([
  { $match: { $expr:
    { $lt: [{ $dateDiff: { startDate: "$_id", endDate: "$$NOW", unit: "hour" } }, 24 ]}
  }}
])
// { "_id" : ObjectId("60c8f804fb832fe2f2011657") } // if document created within the last 24 hours

A few things to note:

  • Basically, we're $matching items for which the duration ($dateDiff) between their creation date (represented by their _id) and now ($$NOW) is less ($lt) than 24 hours.

  • The start date is the $_id (ObjectId):

    • Indeed, an ObjectId contains the timestamp of its creation
    • And $dateDiff can accept an ObjectId as a temporal representation
  • The end date is $$NOW, which is a variable that returns the current datetime value.

0

"TIME" is field which store timestamp

db.your_collection_name.find({"TIME":{'$lt': new Date(),'$gte':new Date(new Date().setDate(new Date().getDate()-1))}},{}).count();
0

Some solutions are outdate new Date() etc. This will work in 2022 with updated golang:

Remember to include time module

import (
    "time")

Will use basic minute with - operator. Below it means 24 hours multiply with 60 minutes and .Add actually subtracts with minus operator:

"$gt": time.Now().Add(-60 * 24 * time.Minute),

İnclude filters:

filter := bson.M{
            "$and": []bson.M{
        {
            "createdat": bson.M{
                "$gt": time.Now().Add(-60 * 24 * time.Minute),
            },
        },
        {
            "userid": userid,
        },
        }}

Make sure defer cureser

cursor, _ := todoCollection.Find(ctx, filter, findOptions)

    for cursor.Next(ctx) {
        var product models.ProductPost
        cursor.Decode(&product)
        products = append(products, product)
    }
    defer cursor.Close(ctx)

Get the length

fmt.Println(len(products))
0
await db.yourColl.find({
   "timestamp": {
       $lt: new Date(),
       $gte: new Date(new Date().setDate(new Date().getDate()-(24* 60 * 60 * 1000)))
   }
})

Works in my case

-1

I had the same problem and after a lot of searches, the best solution that I found for fetching data from last X days is something like this:

let date_obj = new Date();
let requestedTime = new Date(new Date().setDate(date_obj.getDate() - day));
    
    db.collection.find({
      createdAt: {$gt: requestedTime}
    });

the day variable must be a numeric value of the number of days you want, for example: 1 for one day ago (last 24 hours), 2 for two days ago (last 48 hours), 30 for the last month, 60 for the last two months, and so on. ..

let date_obj = new Date();
let requestedTime = new Date(new Date().setDate(date_obj.getDate() - 1));

document.querySelector("#current_date").innerHTML = `current date: ${date_obj}`
document.querySelector("#last_24H_date").innerHTML = `last 24 hours: ${requestedTime}`
<div id="current_date"></div>
<div id="last_24H_date"></div>

2
  • It's not safe to put date in client side as it can be manipulated
    – Bitdom8
    Mar 13, 2022 at 17:24
  • 1
    @Bitfinicon I didn't say to put date on client side. It's obviously should be on back end. I just wrote it like that so they can see it's output Apr 17, 2022 at 8:54
-1
db.video.find({"timestamp":{$lt: new Date(),$gte: new Date(new Date().setDate(new Date().getDate()-1))}})
2
  • 4
    Code-only answers are not particularly helpful. Please add some descriptions of how this code solves the problem.
    – 4b0
    Jul 20, 2021 at 12:07
  • 3
    To expand on @shree's point, that's especially true here, where there are nine other answers, some with quite a few upvotes, and most with explanations. If a new reader comes to this page and is trying to find a solution, what sets your approach apart from the existing answers? Under what conditions might your answer by preferred? Are you using new syntax that wasn't available when the question was first asked? That's the type of information that will make your answer a useful contribution to this thread. Jul 20, 2021 at 19:02

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