30

Now I get two collections: coll01 and coll02.

And the structure of coll01 is like this:

{
  id: 01,
  name: "xxx",
  age: 30
}

and the structure of coll02 is like:

{
  id: 01,
  name: "XYZ"
  gender: "male"
}

The two id fields in the both collection are indices. And the numbers of documents in these two collections are same.

And what I want to do in traditional SQL is :

update coll01, coll02
set coll01.name = coll02.name
where coll01.id = coll02.id
1
  • This is a very common use case for mongo. When going from SQL to Mongo, often you need to update the int IDs with Mongo ObjectIDs. I don't care what data you're working with-- all data related and is relational. Person documents (and sub-documents) have to correlate order documents somehow.
    – David Betz
    Oct 18, 2016 at 20:44

1 Answer 1

46

Mongodb is not relational database and doesn't support join's. So, you should think a little, do you really need mongodb for your purposes?

Solution for update: you can update each document from coll01 in loop:

db.coll01.find().forEach(function (doc1) {
    var doc2 = db.coll02.findOne({ id: doc1.id }, { name: 1 });
    if (doc2 != null) {
        doc1.name = doc2.name;
        db.coll01.save(doc1);
    }
});

Index for id field in coll02 collection will decrease find() operation execution time inside the loop. Also, see about server-side JavaScript execution: Running .js files via a mongo shell Instance on the Server

2
  • u missing a $and in the query mate
    – G1P
    Feb 24, 2017 at 12:27
  • 2
    you should use findOne instead of find, find returns a cursor to the selected documents.
    – Søren
    May 23, 2017 at 8:56

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