22

I would like to know how can I check the existence of an object with mongoDB and C#.

I've found a way to do it but I had to use Linq thanks to Any() method, but I'd like to know if it's possible to do it without Linq ?

database.GetCollection<ApplicationViewModel>("Applications").Find(Query.EQ("Name", applicationName)).Any()

Thanks guys!

1
  • Without Linq because I dont want to process my list of elements in memory.
    – John
    Jun 20, 2011 at 12:43

7 Answers 7

20

Use $count operator to avoid memory issues, it not loading documents from database into memory:

int count = items.FindAs<LedgerDocument>(Query.EQ("name", appName)).Count();

if(count > 0)
{
   //then doc exists
}

Operator $exists in mongodb can be used to identfy that some field exists in a document, but you can't pass query to it:

database.GetCollection<ApplicationViewModel>("Applications")
                  .Find(Query.Exists("Name", true));
8
  • Hi Andrew, how do we filter with what you wrote ? I mean, How can I specify that I want to know if any LedgerDocument.Name == SomethingName exists ?
    – John
    Jun 20, 2011 at 14:01
  • @JohnSmith: Sorry it was my mistake, see i updated my answer with correct code. Jun 20, 2011 at 14:13
  • 1
    In C# Driver, var count = _collection.Find(filter).Limit(1).CountAsync().Result; Nov 21, 2019 at 11:12
  • 2
    A count in any form will count ALL matching documents. This is likely a more complex operation than using the ANY operator that will return immediatly if one matching record is found. Therefore ANY (see @i3arnon) is more efficient for checking the existance. Nov 6, 2020 at 13:16
  • 1
    Sadly my remark was downvoted. Therefore I like to add the following: the Count operation will count all records that match the search term of Find. Internally this will generate more index and data lookups than necessary to check the pure existance of one match. Here the Any operation will inform the database engine that finding just one record is sufficient to satisfy the Find. As a result the IO, cpu and memory footprint is much smaller with Any than with Count. Nov 25, 2020 at 13:58
16

The way to check for existence in the 2.x version of the driver is:

bool exists = collection.Find(_ => _.Name == applicationName).Any();

Or asynchronously:

bool exists = await collection.Find(_ => _.Name == applicationName).AnyAsync();;
1
  • Your examples don't employ $limit, unlike so many other examples. Is that deliberate or an oversight?
    – mkjeldsen
    Jul 4, 2022 at 6:28
10

The simplest, type/refactor-safe option is to use LINQ* with AsQueryable:

var collection = database.GetCollection<ApplicationViewModel>("Applications");
var exists = collection.AsQueryable().Any(avm => avm.Name == applicationName);

This will create a count command and verify it's higher than zero.

In certain cases (where performance is an issue) instead of counting all the matching documents you can simply tell MongoDB to get the first and check whether there is one:

var collection = database.GetCollection<ApplicationViewModel>("Applications");
var exists = collection.AsQueryable().FirstOrDefault(avm => avm.Name == applicationName) != null;

As Robert Stam pointed, both MongoCollection.Exists and Query.Exists are irrelevant in this case.


*As of version 1.4 (2012-03-27) the driver supports LINQ queries (translated to mongo queries, so there are no memory concerns).

1
  • 1
    Mongo driver doesn't support all the linq queries. "Unsupported filter: All({document}{subscribers}.Where(({document}{userId} != \"1234\"))).
    – adi ben
    Feb 12, 2018 at 9:35
2

Use CountDocument method:

long count = await items.CountDocumentsAsync(yourFilter, null, cancellationToken);

if(count > 0)
{
    //document exists
}
1

MongoCollection.Exists checks whether the collection itself exists, not whether a particular document exists.

Query.Exists (the Query builder version of $exists) is used to query whether a document contains a particular field (by name).

There is no "official" way to query whether a document that matches a query exists or not, but the suggestion by Andrew Orsich to use count is probably the best way. They only comment I would add is that if you are going to process the matching document(s) anyway, then you might as well go ahead and query for them using some variation of Find.

1

From this article we read:

However, it is significantly faster to use find() + limit() because findOne() will always read + return the document if it exists. find() just returns a cursor (or not) and only reads the data if you iterate through the cursor.

That means that using something like:

database.GetCollection<ApplicationViewModel>("Applications").Find(Query.EQ("Name", applicationName)).Limit(1)

will probably be fastest.

0

I'll suggest the methods depicted in official tutorial

http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/CSharp+Driver+Tutorial#CSharpDriverTutorial-FindandFindAsmethods

You can find and then count to get existence.

EDIT: For fixing memory issue, it seems it "exists" the Exists method in MongoCollection object ;)

3
  • If memory is the issue, I think this answer is not worth, right?
    – Mauro
    Jun 20, 2011 at 12:45
  • the memory actually isn't really an issue in my case. I'm just curious to know if the C# driver from 10gen offer an "official" way to check for the existence of a document. Because I saw that with mongo syntax, there're the "exist" keyword as you can see here mongodb.org/display/DOCS/… but I don't know if there're something similar in C#...
    – John
    Jun 20, 2011 at 12:51
  • yeah I saw the Exist keyword from MongoCollection, but it doesn't take any parameter, so how can I filter my list of applications by a particular name ?
    – John
    Jun 20, 2011 at 12:53

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

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