32

I would like to know if there is a way to get the last update/modify time of data (i.e documents) in a collection in MongoDB. More clearly, I want to make a query to retrieve all documents updated after a particular time.

Is there any possible ways to retrieve this last modified timestamp in MongoDB?

Note: For newly created documents, I know that we can retrieve the timestamp from the objectId, but for an update, the id is going to be same. Does MongoDB store the last update time for each document anywhere?

I am using morphia as the java driver, so if there is any possible way from morphia, please let me know.

1

4 Answers 4

19

You need to capture last update time yourself.

For my application, I keep an AuditTrail object, which captures AuditEvents. These events occur on any insert, update, or delete of an object (delete is virtual in my system, just setting a flag).

For each AuditEvent, I keep track of the date, authenticated user, db action, and a description filled in by the application. This is implemented in PersistentObject, so it is automatically called for any database action of any object saved in Mongo.

This actual took very little time to implement, but provides both the ability to get the last update time, and also any other information that you may need for security and customer support for everything in Mongo.

1
  • No - just in my DAO framework. I haven't looked at releasing my code to the community. I don't have any issues about, just never thought of it.
    – Ramesh
    Feb 22, 2017 at 21:12
11

No, MongoDB by itself does not store either creation or update timestamps. You have to do that yourself (and as you have found out, if you use an ObjectID _id then you get the creation date already).

5
  • 12
    Not exacctly true. MongoDB does store the createdTime though.. we can access it via ObjectId("theIdofThedocumen").getTimeStamp() May 11, 2017 at 10:56
  • 1
    @AminMohamedAjani: Only if you use an ObjectId created at document creation time for the _id field (you don't have to).
    – Thilo
    May 11, 2017 at 14:07
  • 3
    Oh yes of course you're right. But I think it's always better if we dont overwrite _id... May 12, 2017 at 10:51
  • 2
    Object creation timestamp, As mentioned by @AminMohamedAjani, ObjectId("507c7f79bcf86cd7994f6c0e").getTimestamp() works, but it's Object creation timestamp.
    – Abhijeet
    Sep 12, 2018 at 9:36
  • here is the tool for retrieving the date from the id steveridout.com/mongo-object-time
    – Matus
    Feb 14, 2023 at 8:13
5

You can either use an audit trail entity as @user1530669 mentioned (I'm calling mine delta - the code is already available somewhere on StackOverflow).

Or you can simply save the last change time. I'm generally using a base entity to set that up and all other entities extend it (for your specific requirement you can probably remove the creationDate as the lastChange is enough for you):

protected Date creationDate;
protected Date lastChange;

// Getters and setters or final setters which don't do anything,
// if you only want to allow the entity to update the values

@PrePersist
public void prePersist() {
    creationDate = (creationDate == null) ? new Date() : creationDate;
    lastChange = (lastChange == null) ? creationDate : new Date();
}

And in your queries you can then add a filter so that the lastChange attribute is more recent than your retrieval limit.

3

You can do the following. With MongoDB version 4.2+, you can now perform aggregation operators like $toDate to extract the timestamp from ObjectId "_id" and update at the same time.

Here we use the aggregate query $toDate to extract the timestamp from MongoDB's ObjectId "_id" field and update the documents using {$replaceRoot: {newRoot: "$$ROOT"}} instead of explicitly stating $set

var collection = "person"

agg_query = [
    {
        "$addFields" : {
            "_last_updated" : {
                "$toDate" : "$_id"
            }
        }
    },
    {
        $replaceRoot: {
            newRoot: "$$ROOT"
        } 
    }
]

db.getCollection(collection).updateMany({}, agg_query, {upsert: true})
1
  • How to find execution time for updateOne operation ?
    – Jet
    Mar 20, 2023 at 9:57

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.