I'm a new Mongodb and I have a problem with $lookup with java spring.
I would like to use this shell in Spring data
db.NewFeed.aggregate([
{
$match : {username : "user001"}
},
{
$lookup:
{
from: "NewfeedContent",
localField: "content.contentId",
foreignField: "_id",
as: "NewfeedContent"
}
}
])
I found on Google but no answer yet.
Not every "new" feature makes it immediately into abstraction layers such as spring-mongo.
So instead, all you need do is define a class that uses the AggregationOperation
interface, which will instead take a BSON Object specified directly as it's content:
public class CustomAggregationOperation implements AggregationOperation {
private DBObject operation;
public CustomAggregationOperation (DBObject operation) {
this.operation = operation;
}
@Override
public DBObject toDBObject(AggregationOperationContext context) {
return context.getMappedObject(operation);
}
}
Then you can use in your aggregation like this:
Aggregation aggregation = newAggregation(
match(
Criteria.where("username").is("user001")
),
new CustomAggregationOperation(
new BasicDBObject(
"$lookup",
new BasicDBObject("from", "NewFeedContent")
.append("localField","content.contentId")
.append("foreignField", "_id")
.append("as", "NewFeedContent")
)
)
)
Which shows the custom class mixed with the built in match()
pipeline helper.
All that happens underneath each helper is that they serialize to a BSON representation such as with DBObject
anyway. So the constructor here just takes the object directly, and returns it directly from .toDBObject()
, which is the standard method on the interface that will be called when serializing the pipline contents.
Joining Two Collections with Spring Data MongoDB
Employee Class
class Employee {
private String _id;enter code here
private String name;
private String dept_id;
}
Department Class
class Department {
private String _id;
private String dept_name;
}
Employee Result Class
`
public class EmpDeptResult {
private String _id;
private String name;
private List<Object> departments;
}`
EmployeeSerivce
`public class EmployeeService {
@Autowired
private MongoTemplate mongoTemplate;
private Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(EmployeeService.class);
public void lookupOperation(){
LookupOperation lookupOperation = LookupOperation.newLookup()
.from("Department")
.localField("dept_id")
.foreignField("_id")
.as("departments");
Aggregation aggregation = Aggregation.newAggregation(Aggregation.match(Criteria.where("_id").is("1")) , lookupOperation);
List<EmpDeptResult> results = mongoTemplate.aggregate(aggregation, "Employee", EmpDeptResult.class).getMappedResults();
LOGGER.info("Obj Size " +results.size());
}
}`
Here is an example:
Collection posts
{
"_id" : ObjectId("5a198074ed31adaf5d79fe8a"),
"title" : "Post 1",
"authors" : [1, 2]
},
{
"_id" : ObjectId("5a198074ed31adaf5d79fe8d"),
"title" : "Post 2",
"authors" : [2]
}
Collection users
{
"_id" : ObjectId("5a18b483ed31ada08fd6ed82"),
"userId" : 1,
"name" : "Vinod Kumar"
},
{
"_id" : ObjectId("5a18b483ed31ada08fd6ed83"),
"userId" : 2,
"name" : "Jim Hazel"
},
{
"_id" : ObjectId("5a18b483ed31ada08fd6ed84"),
"userId" : 3,
"name" : "Alex Wong"
}
Mongodb query with lookup and match
db.users.aggregate([
{
$lookup:
{
from: "users",
localField: "userid",
foreignField: "authors",
as: "post"
}
},
{
$match: { "post": { $ne: [] } }
}
]).pretty()
Spring Mongoopration syntax
LookupOperation lookupOperation = LookupOperation.newLookup().
from("posts").
localField("userid").
foreignField("authors").
as("post");
AggregationOperation match = Aggregation.match(Criteria.where("post").size(1));
Aggregation aggregation = Aggregation.newAggregation(lookupOperation, match);
List<BasicDBObject> results = mongoOperation.aggregate(aggregation, "users", BasicDBObject.class).getMappedResults();