MongoQuery is a macro based MongoDB query builder for Scala.
Currently the MongoDB queries API requires to construct DBObjects explicitly.
This makes even simple queries bulky. Even though you are using Casbah DSL
it often still requires to create MongoDBObject
s, and also requires to
study new syntax, instead of using MongoDB queries. The purpose of this
project is to provide a simple API for creating queries from strings. The
goal is to make compile time queries syntax checking (as much as possible).
Since version 0.7 MongoQuery supports only Scala 2.11 and 2.12. If you are still using Scala 2.10 you can use MongoQuery 0.6 (or any version before).
MongoQuery is published to Sonatype maven repository. Add following dependency to libraryDependencies in your SBT build file:
"com.github.limansky" %% "mongoquery-casbah" % "0.7" // for Casbah users
"com.github.limansky" %% "mongoquery-reactive" % "0.7" // for ReactiveMongo users
"com.github.limansky" %% "mongoquery-scala-driver" % "0.7" // for Mongo Scala driver
If you want use latest development version:
"com.github.limansky" %% "mongoquery-casbah" % "0.8-SNAPSHOT" // Casbah users
"com.github.limansky" %% "mongoquery-reactive" % "0.8-SNAPSHOT" // ReactiveMongo users
"com.github.limansky" %% "mongoquery-scala-driver" % "0.8-SNAPSHOT" // for Mongo Scala driver
The mq
string interpolator converts string to the BSON objects. If you use
Casbah it creates DBObjects
:
import com.github.limansky.mongoquery.casbah._
def findByName(name: String) = {
myCollection.find(mq"{ name : $name}")
}
For ReactiveMongo it creates BSONDocument
s:
import com.github.limansky.mongoquery.reactive._
collection.
find(mq"""{ firstName : "Jack" }""", mq"{ lastName : 1, _id : 1 }").
cursor[BSONDocument].
enumerate().apply(Iteratee.foreach { doc =>
println("found document: " + BSONDocument.pretty(doc))
})
For Mongo Scala Driver it creates BsonDocument
s:
import com.github.limansky.mongoquery.scaladriver._
collection.insertOne(mq"""{ name: "John", lastName: "Doe", age : 42 }""")
Since the query is defined inside of the string interpolator, the words started
with $
are handled as variable references. To type MongoDB operator use $$
, e.g:
def makeOlder(age: Int) = {
people.update(mq"""{ age : { $$lt : $age } }""",
mq"""{ $$inc : { age : 1 }}""",
multi = 1)
}
Since the interpolator is implemented using macro it can perform compile time checks of provided queries. The code will not compile if the query is malformed. Also MongoQuery checks if all MongoDB operators are known.
[error] Test.scala:44: Unknown operator '$kte'. Possible you mean '$lte'
[error] val query = mq"{start : {$$kte : $start}}"
[error] ^
[error] Test.scala:49: '{' expected, but Variable found
[error] val q = mq"{ color : {$$in : $colors}"
[error] ^
Unfortunately, some errors messages does not reflect the error itself. I'm working on it, but it seems like the issue in the Scala Parser Combinators library.
MongoQuery supports several MongoDB specific literal types.
- ObjectIds.
mq"""{ clientId : ObjectId("01234567890abcdef1234") }"""
- Booleans.
mq"{ expired : false }"
- Regular expressions (since 0.5).
mq"{ name : /^joe/i }"
mqt
is another one interpolator adding type checking feature. If you have a model
classes, you can check if the query contains only fields available in the class. E.g.:
case class Phone(kind: String, number: String)
case class Person(name: String, age: Int, phones: List[Phone])
// OK
persons.update(mq"{}", mqt"{$$inc : { age : 1 }}"[Person])
// Failed, person doesn't contain field 'nme'
persons.update(mq"{}", mqt"""{$$set : { nme : "Joe" }}"""[Person])
//Failed, name is not indexed field
persons.find(mqt"{ name.1 : 'Joe' }"[Person])
// OK
persons.find(mqt"{ phone.number : '223322' }"[Person])
// Failed, Phone doesn't contain field num
persons.find(mqt"{ phone.num : '223322' }"[Person])
MongoQuery also provides runtime parsers for both backends. It might be useful for testing purposes, or if you generate queries on runtime, or for converting JSON to BSON. For example:
import com.github.limansky.mongoquery.casbah.BSONParser
persons.find(BSONParser.parse("""{ age : { $lt : 42 }}"""))
Any feedback is very welcome! You can ask any questions in MongoQuery mailing list.