Migrating from 4.x to 5.x
There are several backwards-breaking changes you should be aware of when migrating from Mongoose 4.x to Mongoose 5.x.
If you're still on Mongoose 3.x, please read the Mongoose 3.x to 4.x migration guide.
- Version Requirements
- Query Middleware
- Promises and Callbacks for
mongoose.connect()
- Connection Logic and
useMongoClient
- Setter Order
- Checking if a path is populated
- Return Values for
remove()
anddeleteX()
- Aggregation Cursors
- geoNear
- Required URI encoding of connection strings
- Passwords which contain certain characters
- Domain sockets
toObject()
Options- Aggregate Parameters
- Boolean Casting
- Query Casting
- Post Save Hooks Get Flow Control
- The
$pushAll
Operator - Always Use Forward Key Order
- Run setters on queries
- Pre-compiled Browser Bundle
- Save Errors
- Init hook signatures
numAffected
andsave()
remove()
and debouncinggetPromiseConstructor()
- Passing Parameters from Pre Hooks
required
validator for arrays- debug output defaults to stdout instead of stderr
- Overwriting filter properties
bulkWrite()
results- Strict SSL validation
Version Requirements
Mongoose now requires Node.js >= 4.0.0 and MongoDB >= 3.0.0. MongoDB 2.6 and Node.js < 4 where both EOL-ed in 2016.
Query Middleware
Query middleware is now compiled when you call mongoose.model()
or db.model()
. If you add query middleware after calling mongoose.model()
, that middleware will not get called.
const schema = new Schema({ name: String });
const MyModel = mongoose.model('Test', schema);
schema.pre('find', () => { console.log('find!'); });
MyModel.find().exec(function() {
// In mongoose 4.x, the above `.find()` will print "find!"
// In mongoose 5.x, "find!" will **not** be printed.
// Call `pre('find')` **before** calling `mongoose.model()` to make the middleware apply.
});
Promises and Callbacks for `mongoose.connect()`
mongoose.connect()
and mongoose.disconnect()
now return a promise if no callback specified, or null
otherwise. It does not return the mongoose singleton.
// Worked in mongoose 4. Does **not** work in mongoose 5, `mongoose.connect()`
// now returns a promise consistently. This is to avoid the horrible things
// we've done to allow mongoose to be a thenable that resolves to itself.
mongoose.connect('mongodb://localhost:27017/test').model('Test', new Schema({}));
// Do this instead
mongoose.connect('mongodb://localhost:27017/test');
mongoose.model('Test', new Schema({}));
Connection Logic and `useMongoClient`
The useMongoClient
option was
removed in Mongoose 5, it is now always true
. As a consequence, Mongoose 5
no longer supports several function signatures for mongoose.connect()
that
worked in Mongoose 4.x if the useMongoClient
option was off. Below are some
examples of mongoose.connect()
calls that do not work in Mongoose 5.x.
mongoose.connect('localhost', 27017);
mongoose.connect('localhost', 'mydb', 27017);
mongoose.connect('mongodb://host1:27017,mongodb://host2:27017');
In Mongoose 5.x, the first parameter to mongoose.connect()
and mongoose.createConnection()
, if specified, must be a MongoDB connection string. The
connection string and options are then passed down to the MongoDB Node.js driver's MongoClient.connect()
function. Mongoose does not modify the connection string, although mongoose.connect()
and mongoose.createConnection()
support a few additional options in addition to the ones the MongoDB driver supports.
Setter Order
Setters run in reverse order in 4.x:
const schema = new Schema({ name: String });
schema.path('name').
set(() => console.log('This will print 2nd')).
set(() => console.log('This will print first'));
In 5.x, setters run in the order they're declared.
const schema = new Schema({ name: String });
schema.path('name').
set(() => console.log('This will print first')).
set(() => console.log('This will print 2nd'));
Checking if a path is populated
Mongoose 5.1.0 introduced an _id
getter to ObjectIds that lets you get an ObjectId regardless of whether a path
is populated.
const blogPostSchema = new Schema({
title: String,
author: {
type: mongoose.Schema.Types.ObjectId,
ref: 'Author'
}
});
const BlogPost = mongoose.model('BlogPost', blogPostSchema);
await BlogPost.create({ title: 'test', author: author._id });
const blogPost = await BlogPost.findOne();
console.log(blogPost.author); // '5b207f84e8061d1d2711b421'
// New in Mongoose 5.1.0: this will print '5b207f84e8061d1d2711b421' as well
console.log(blogPost.author._id);
await blogPost.populate('author');
console.log(blogPost.author._id); '5b207f84e8061d1d2711b421'
As a consequence, checking whether blogPost.author._id
is no longer viable as a way to check whether author
is populated. Use blogPost.populated('author') != null
or blogPost.author instanceof mongoose.Types.ObjectId
to check whether author
is populated instead.
Note that you can call mongoose.set('objectIdGetter', false)
to change this behavior.
Return Values for `remove()` and `deleteX()`
deleteOne()
, deleteMany()
, and remove()
now resolve to the result object
rather than the full driver WriteOpResult
object.
// In 4.x, this is how you got the number of documents deleted
MyModel.deleteMany().then(res => console.log(res.result.n));
// In 5.x this is how you get the number of documents deleted
MyModel.deleteMany().then(res => res.n);
Aggregation Cursors
The useMongooseAggCursor
option from 4.x is now always on. This is the new syntax for aggregation cursors in mongoose 5:
// When you call `.cursor()`, `.exec()` will now return a mongoose aggregation
// cursor.
const cursor = MyModel.aggregate([{ $match: { name: 'Val' } }]).cursor().exec();
// No need to `await` on the cursor or wait for a promise to resolve
cursor.eachAsync(doc => console.log(doc));
// Can also pass options to `cursor()`
const cursorWithOptions = MyModel.
aggregate([{ $match: { name: 'Val' } }]).
cursor({ batchSize: 10 }).
exec();
geoNear
Model.geoNear()
has been removed because the MongoDB driver no longer supports it
Required URI encoding of connection strings
Due to changes in the MongoDB driver, connection strings must be URI encoded.
If they are not, connections may fail with an illegal character message.
Passwords which contain certain characters
See a full list of affected characters.
If your app is used by a lot of different connection strings, it's possible that your test cases will pass, but production passwords will fail. Encode all your connection strings to be safe.
If you want to continue to use unencoded connection strings, the easiest fix is to use
the mongodb-uri
module to parse the connection strings, and then produce the properly encoded
versions. You can use a function like this:
const uriFormat = require('mongodb-uri')
function encodeMongoURI (urlString) {
if (urlString) {
let parsed = uriFormat.parse(urlString)
urlString = uriFormat.format(parsed);
}
return urlString;
}
}
// Your un-encoded string.
const mongodbConnectString = "mongodb://...";
mongoose.connect(encodeMongoURI(mongodbConnectString))
The function above is safe to use whether the existing string is already encoded or not.
Domain sockets
Domain sockets must be URI encoded. For example:
// Works in mongoose 4. Does **not** work in mongoose 5 because of more
// stringent URI parsing.
const host = '/tmp/mongodb-27017.sock';
mongoose.createConnection(`mongodb://aaron:psw@${host}/fake`);
// Do this instead
const host = encodeURIComponent('/tmp/mongodb-27017.sock');
mongoose.createConnection(`mongodb://aaron:psw@${host}/fake`);
`toObject()` Options
The options
parameter to toObject()
and toJSON()
merge defaults rather than overwriting them.
// Note the `toObject` option below
const schema = new Schema({ name: String }, { toObject: { virtuals: true } });
schema.virtual('answer').get(() => 42);
const MyModel = db.model('MyModel', schema);
const doc = new MyModel({ name: 'test' });
// In mongoose 4.x this prints "undefined", because `{ minimize: false }`
// overwrites the entire schema-defined options object.
// In mongoose 5.x this prints "42", because `{ minimize: false }` gets
// merged with the schema-defined options.
console.log(doc.toJSON({ minimize: false }).answer);
Aggregate Parameters
aggregate()
no longer accepts a spread, you must pass your aggregation pipeline as an array. The below code worked in 4.x:
MyModel.aggregate({ $match: { isDeleted: false } }, { $skip: 10 }).exec(cb);
The above code does not work in 5.x, you must wrap the $match
and $skip
stages in an array.
MyModel.aggregate([{ $match: { isDeleted: false } }, { $skip: 10 }]).exec(cb);
Boolean Casting
By default, mongoose 4 would coerce any value to a boolean without error.
// Fine in mongoose 4, would save a doc with `boolField = true`
const MyModel = mongoose.model('Test', new Schema({
boolField: Boolean
}));
MyModel.create({ boolField: 'not a boolean' });
Mongoose 5 only casts the following values to true
:
true
'true'
1
'1'
'yes'
And the following values to false
:
false
'false'
0
'0'
'no'
All other values will cause a CastError
Query Casting
Casting for update()
, updateOne()
, updateMany()
, replaceOne()
,
remove()
, deleteOne()
, and deleteMany()
doesn't happen until exec()
.
This makes it easier for hooks and custom query helpers to modify data, because
mongoose won't restructure the data you passed in until after your hooks and
query helpers have ran. It also makes it possible to set the overwrite
option
after passing in an update.
// In mongoose 4.x, this becomes `{ $set: { name: 'Baz' } }` despite the `overwrite`
// In mongoose 5.x, this overwrite is respected and the first document with
// `name = 'Bar'` will be replaced with `{ name: 'Baz' }`
User.where({ name: 'Bar' }).update({ name: 'Baz' }).setOptions({ overwrite: true });
Post Save Hooks Get Flow Control
Post hooks now get flow control, which means async post save hooks and child document post save hooks execute before your save()
callback.
const ChildModelSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
text: {
type: String
}
});
ChildModelSchema.post('save', function(doc) {
// In mongoose 5.x this will print **before** the `console.log()`
// in the `save()` callback. In mongoose 4.x this was reversed.
console.log('Child post save');
});
const ParentModelSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
children: [ChildModelSchema]
});
const Model = mongoose.model('Parent', ParentModelSchema);
const m = new Model({ children: [{ text: 'test' }] });
m.save(function() {
// In mongoose 5.xm this prints **after** the "Child post save" message.
console.log('Save callback');
});
The `$pushAll` Operator
$pushAll
is no longer supported and no longer used internally for save()
, since it has been deprecated since MongoDB 2.4. Use $push
with $each
instead.
Always Use Forward Key Order
The retainKeyOrder
option was removed, mongoose will now always retain the same key position when cloning objects. If you have queries or indexes that rely on reverse key order, you will have to change them.
Run setters on queries
Setters now run on queries by default, and the old runSettersOnQuery
option
has been removed.
const schema = new Schema({
email: { type: String, lowercase: true }
});
const Model = mongoose.model('Test', schema);
Model.find({ email: 'FOO@BAR.BAZ' }); // Converted to `find({ email: 'foo@bar.baz' })`
Pre-compiled Browser Bundle
We no longer have a pre-compiled version of mongoose for the browser. If you want to use mongoose schemas in the browser, you need to build your own bundle with browserify/webpack.
Save Errors
The saveErrorIfNotFound
option was removed, mongoose will now always error out from save()
if the underlying document was not found
Init hook signatures
init
hooks are now fully synchronous and do not receive next()
as a parameter.
Document.prototype.init()
no longer takes a callback as a parameter. It
was always synchronous, just had a callback for legacy reasons.
`numAffected` and `save()`
doc.save()
no longer passes numAffected
as a 3rd param to its callback.
`remove()` and debouncing
doc.remove()
no longer debounces
`getPromiseConstructor()`
getPromiseConstructor()
is gone, just use mongoose.Promise
.
Passing Parameters from Pre Hooks
You cannot pass parameters to the next pre middleware in the chain using next()
in mongoose 5.x. In mongoose 4, next('Test')
in pre middleware would call the
next middleware with 'Test' as a parameter. Mongoose 5.x has removed support for this.
`required` validator for arrays
In mongoose 5 the required
validator only verifies if the value is an
array. That is, it will not fail for empty arrays as it would in
mongoose 4.
debug output defaults to stdout instead of stderr
In mongoose 5 the default debug function uses console.info()
to display messages instead of console.error()
.
Overwriting filter properties
In Mongoose 4.x, overwriting a filter property that's a primitive with one that is an object would silently fail. For example, the below code would ignore the where()
and be equivalent to Sport.find({ name: 'baseball' })
Sport.find({ name: 'baseball' }).where({name: {$ne: 'softball'}});
In Mongoose 5.x, the above code will correctly overwrite 'baseball'
with { $ne: 'softball' }
`bulkWrite()` results
Mongoose 5.x uses version 3.x of the MongoDB Node.js driver. MongoDB driver 3.x changed the format of
the result of bulkWrite()
calls so there is no longer a top-level nInserted
, nModified
, etc. property. The new result object structure is described here.
const Model = mongoose.model('Test', new Schema({ name: String }));
const res = await Model.bulkWrite([{ insertOne: { document: { name: 'test' } } }]);
console.log(res);
In Mongoose 4.x, the above will print:
BulkWriteResult {
ok: [Getter],
nInserted: [Getter],
nUpserted: [Getter],
nMatched: [Getter],
nModified: [Getter],
nRemoved: [Getter],
getInsertedIds: [Function],
getUpsertedIds: [Function],
getUpsertedIdAt: [Function],
getRawResponse: [Function],
hasWriteErrors: [Function],
getWriteErrorCount: [Function],
getWriteErrorAt: [Function],
getWriteErrors: [Function],
getLastOp: [Function],
getWriteConcernError: [Function],
toJSON: [Function],
toString: [Function],
isOk: [Function],
insertedCount: 1,
matchedCount: 0,
modifiedCount: 0,
deletedCount: 0,
upsertedCount: 0,
upsertedIds: {},
insertedIds: { '0': 5be9a3101638a066702a0d38 },
n: 1 }
In Mongoose 5.x, the script will print:
BulkWriteResult {
result:
{ ok: 1,
writeErrors: [],
writeConcernErrors: [],
insertedIds: [ [Object] ],
nInserted: 1,
nUpserted: 0,
nMatched: 0,
nModified: 0,
nRemoved: 0,
upserted: [],
lastOp: { ts: [Object], t: 1 } },
insertedCount: 1,
matchedCount: 0,
modifiedCount: 0,
deletedCount: 0,
upsertedCount: 0,
upsertedIds: {},
insertedIds: { '0': 5be9a1c87decfc6443dd9f18 },
n: 1 }
Strict SSL Validation
The most recent versions of the MongoDB Node.js driver use strict SSL validation by default, which may lead to errors if you're using self-signed certificates.
If this is blocking you from upgrading, you can set the tlsInsecure
option to true
.
mongoose.connect(uri, { tlsInsecure: false }); // Opt out of additional SSL validation