5

Is there anyway in mongoDB using .Net to create some sort of equivalent to the "SQL-Join"? I have read the MongoDB docs (https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/tutorial/model-referenced-one-to-many-relationships-between-documents/) regarding relationships.. and from what I understand you simply add relationships by refering to their IDs. However.. does this also mean that for each relationship you also need to do one additional query?..

1
  • have a look at MongoDB.Entities wrapper library. it has built-in support for one-to-one, one-to-many and many-to-many relationships Jun 2, 2019 at 17:07

2 Answers 2

6

Considering simplest relationship like below:

db.publishers.save({
    _id: "oreilly",
    name: "O'Reilly Media",
    founded: 1980,
    location: "CA"
})

db.books.save({
    _id: 123456789,
    title: "MongoDB: The Definitive Guide",
    author: [ "Kristina Chodorow", "Mike Dirolf" ],
    published_date: ISODate("2010-09-24"),
    pages: 216,
    language: "English",
    publisher_id: "oreilly"
})

In MongoDB you can use $lookup operator to get the data from both collections in one query:

db.books.aggregate([
    {
        $lookup: {
            from: "publishers",
            localField: "publisher_id",
            foreignField: "_id",
            as: "publisher"
        }
    }
])

which returns:

{ 
    "_id" : 123456789, 
    "title" : "MongoDB: The Definitive Guide", 
    "author" : [ "Kristina Chodorow", "Mike Dirolf" ], 
    "published_date" : ISODate("2010-09-24T00:00:00Z"), 
    "pages" : 216, 
    "language" : "English", 
    "publisher_id" : "oreilly", 
    "publisher" : [ { "_id" : "oreilly", "name" : "O'Reilly Media", "founded" : 1980, "location" : "CA" } ] 
}

Using MongoDB .NET Driver you can use LINQ syntax and join operator which will get translated into $lookup:

var books = db.GetCollection<Book>("books");
var publishers = db.GetCollection<Publisher>("publishers");

var q = from book in books.AsQueryable()
        join publisher in publishers.AsQueryable() on
            book.publisher_id equals publisher._id
        select new
        {
            book,
            publisher = publisher
        };

var result = q.ToList();

which is translated into $lookup with $unwind so that you get a single publisher object instead of array

0
2

If you don't mind using a library, MongoDB.Entities can do relationships quite easily without having to do joins manually, unless you really want to :-)

Have a look at the code below, which demonstrates a one-to-many relationship between an author and book entities. the book entity knows nothing of the authors. but you can still get reverse relationship access by supplying either a book ID, an array of book IDs or even an IQueryable of books. [disclaimer: I'm the author of the library]

using System;
using System.Linq;
using MongoDB.Entities;
using MongoDB.Driver.Linq;

namespace StackOverflow
{
    public class Program
    {
        public class Author : Entity
        {
            public string Name { get; set; }
            public Many<Book> Books { get; set; }

            public Author() => this.InitOneToMany(() => Books);
        }

        public class Book : Entity
        {
            public string Title { get; set; }
        }

        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            new DB("test");

            var book = new Book { Title = "The Power Of Now" };
            book.Save();

            var author = new Author { Name = "Eckhart Tolle" };
            author.Save();

            author.Books.Add(book);

            // Build a query for finding all books that have Power in the title.
            var bookQuery = DB.Queryable<Book>()
                              .Where(b => b.Title.Contains("Power"));

            // Find all the authors of books that have a title with Power in them.
            var authors = author.Books
                                .ParentsQueryable<Author>(bookQuery);

            // Get the result
            var result = authors.ToArray();

            // Output the aggregation pipeline
            Console.WriteLine(authors.ToString());

            Console.ReadKey();
        }
    }
}
1
  • 5
    This library seems quite unpopular (yet), which makes it unappealing for using in production code. I mean, 6 forks 30 stars and 5631 nuget downloads does not indicate a mature product. Fingers crossed for your success though!
    – Bartosz
    Nov 11, 2019 at 13:34

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.