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How should I properly use populate with mongoose?

I am learning some node and have been trying to use mongoose. Currently, my goal is to learn how to use populate.

I have a projects definition and milestone require:

projectSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
    id: String,
    title: String,
    description: String,
    owner: String,
    site: String,
    creation_date: Date,
    milestone_ids: Array,
    milestones: [{
        type: mongoose.Schema.Types.ObjectId,
        ref: "Milestone"
    }]
})

Project = mongoose.model("Project", projectSchema)
milestones = require(__dirname + "/milestones.js")();

Then I do this at some point in the projects.js:

Project.find(query, {}, {sort: {_id: -1}},
    function (error, results) {
        callback(results);
    }
).populate("milestones");

How do I populate the milestones?


Here is the project data from mongo:

{
    "title": "sitename",
    "description": "online thing",
    "creation_date": {
        "$date": "2013-07-11T19:45:42.139Z"
    },
    "_id": {
        "$oid": "51df0b66dbdd7c4f14000001"
    },
    "milestones": [],
    "milestone_ids": [],
    "__v": 0
}

And this one is the milestone that is basically connected to the project:

{
    "title": "Proof of concept",
    "description": "Make it work.",
    "due_date": {
        "$date": "2013-07-11T19:46:38.535Z"
    },
    "project_id": "51df0b66dbdd7c4f14000001",
    "_id": {
        "$oid": "51df0b9edbdd7c4f14000002"
    },
    "__v": 0
}

Also, this is the milestone schema:

milestoneschema = new mongoose.Schema({
    id: String,
    title: String,
    description: String,
    owner: String,
    site: String,
    due_date: Date,
    project_id: {
        type: String,
        ref: "Project"
    }
})

Milestone = mongoose.model("Milestone", milestoneschema);
like image 910
Eduárd Moldován Avatar asked Jul 11 '13 16:07

Eduárd Moldován


1 Answers

You need to get the order right of defining query options then executing, and chainable APIs such as mongoose Query can't know what additional methods you might call AFTER the query fires. So when you pass the callback to .find, mongoose sends the query right away.

Pass a callback to find

  • query defined by arguments to find
  • since callback is there, query immediately executes and issues command to DB
  • then .populate happens, but it has no effect as the query has already been sent to mongo

Here's what you need to do:

Project.find(query, {}, {
    sort: {
        _id: -1
    }
}).populate("milestones").exec(function (error, results) {
    callback(results);
});

Or a little more readable:

Project
    .find(query)
    .sort('-_id')
    .populate('milestones')
    .exec(function(error, results) {                  
        callback(results);
    });

Omit callback and use .exec

  • query passed to .find creates query object with parameters
  • additional chained calls to .sort, .populate etc further configure the query
  • .exec tells mongoose you are done configuring the query and mongoose issues the DB command
like image 116
Peter Lyons Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 01:09

Peter Lyons