Models
Models are fancy constructors compiled from our Schema
definitions. Instances of these models represent documents which can be saved and retreived from our database. All document creation and retreival from the database is handled by these models.
Compiling your first model
var schema = new mongoose.Schema({ name: 'string', size: 'string' });
var Tank = mongoose.model('Tank', schema);
Constructing documents
Documents are instances of our model. Creating them and saving to the database is easy:
var Tank = mongoose.model('Tank', yourSchema);
var small = new Tank({ size: 'small' });
small.save(function (err) {
if (err) return handleError(err);
// saved!
})
// or
Tank.create({ size: 'small' }, function (err, small) {
if (err) return handleError(err);
// saved!
})
Note that no tanks will be created/removed until the connection your model uses is open. In this case we are using mongoose.model()
so let’s open the default mongoose connection:
mongoose.connect('localhost', 'gettingstarted');
Querying
Finding documents is easy with Mongoose, which supports the rich query syntax of MongoDB. Documents can be retreived using each models
find, findById, findOne, or where static methods.
Tank.find({ size: 'small' }).where('createdDate').gt(oneYearAgo).exec(callback);
See the chapter on querying for more details on how to use the Query api.
Removing
Models have a static remove
method available for removing all documents matching conditions
.
Tank.remove({ size: 'large' }, function (err) {
if (err) return handleError(err);
// removed!
});
Updating
Each model
has its own update
method for modifying documents in the database without returning them to your application. See the API docs for more detail.
If you want to update a single document in the db and return it to your application, use findOneAndUpdate instead.
Yet more
The API docs cover many additional methods available like count, mapReduce, aggregate, and more.
Next Up
Now that we’ve covered Models
, let’s take a look at Documents.