I cannot manually or automatically populate the creator field on a newly saved object ... the only way I can find is to re-query for the objects I already have which I would hate to do.
This is the setup:
var userSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
name: String,
});
var User = db.model('User', userSchema);
var bookSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
_creator: { type: mongoose.Schema.Types.ObjectId, ref: 'User' },
description: String,
});
var Book = db.model('Book', bookSchema);
This is where I am pulling my hair
var user = new User();
user.save(function(err) {
var book = new Book({
_creator: user,
});
book.save(function(err){
console.log(book._creator); // is just an object id
book._creator = user; // still only attaches the object id due to Mongoose magic
console.log(book._creator); // Again: is just an object id
// I really want book._creator to be a user without having to go back to the db ... any suggestions?
});
});
EDIT: latest mongoose fixed this issue and added populate functionality, see the new accepted answer.
You should be able to use the Model's populate function to do this: http://mongoosejs.com/docs/api.html#model_Model.populate In the save handler for book, instead of:
book._creator = user;
you'd do something like:
Book.populate(book, {path:"_creator"}, function(err, book) { ... });
Probably too late an answer to help you, but I was stuck on this recently, and it might be useful for others.
The solution for me was to use execPopulate
, like so
const t = new MyModel(value)
return t.save().then(t => t.populate('my-path').execPopulate())
In case that anyone is still looking for this.
Mongoose 3.6 has introduced a lot of cool features to populate:
book.populate('_creator', function(err) {
console.log(book._creator);
});
or:
Book.populate(book, '_creator', function(err) {
console.log(book._creator);
});
see more at: https://github.com/LearnBoost/mongoose/wiki/3.6-Release-Notes#population
But this way you would still query for the user again.
A little trick to accomplish it without extra queries would be:
book = book.toObject();
book._creator = user;
book._creator = user;
after the save()
is the only correct answer among all the current answers, all other answers require an additional query.
The solution which returns a promise (no callbacks):
Use Document#populate
book.populate('creator').execPopulate();
// summary
doc.populate(options); // not executed
doc.populate(options).execPopulate() // executed, returns promise
Possible Implementation
var populatedDoc = doc.populate(options).execPopulate();
populatedDoc.then(doc => {
...
});
Read about document population here.
Just to elaborate and give another example, as it helped me out. This might help those who want to to retrieve partially populated objects after save. The method is slightly different as well. Spent more than an hour or two looking for the correct way to do it.
post.save(function(err) {
if (err) {
return res.json(500, {
error: 'Cannot save the post'
});
}
post.populate('group', 'name').populate({
path: 'wallUser',
select: 'name picture'
}, function(err, doc) {
res.json(doc);
});
});
I thought I'd add to this to clarify things for complete noobs like myself.
What's massively confusing if you're not careful is that there are three very different populate methods. They are methods of different objects (Model vs. Document), take different inputs and give different outputs (Document vs. Promise).
Here they are for those that are baffled:
Document.prototype.populate()
This one works on documents and returns a document. In the original example, it would look like this:
book.save(function(err, book) {
book.populate('_creator', function(err, book) {
// Do something
})
});
Because it works on documents and returns a document, you can chain them together like so:
book.save(function(err, book) {
book
.populate('_creator')
.populate('/* Some other ObjectID field */', function(err, book) {
// Do something
})
});
But don't be silly, like me, and try to do this:
book.save(function(err, book) {
book
.populate('_creator')
.populate('/* Some other ObjectID field */')
.then(function(book) {
// Do something
})
});
Remember: Document.prototype.populate() returns a document, so this is nonsense. If you want a promise, you need...
Document.prototype.execPopulate()
This one works on documents BUT it returns a promise that resolves to the document. In other words, you can use it like this:
book.save(function(err, book) {
book
.populate('_creator')
.populate('/* Some other ObjectID field */')
.execPopulate()
.then(function(book) {
// Do something
})
});
That's better. Finally, there's...
Model.populate()
This one works on models and returns a promise. It's therefore used a bit differently:
book.save(function(err, book) {
Book // Book not book
.populate(book, { path: '_creator'})
.then(function(book) {
// Do something
})
});
Hope that's helped some other newcomers.
Unfortunetly this is a long standing issue with mongoose which I believe is not solved yet:
https://github.com/LearnBoost/mongoose/issues/570
What you can do is to write you own custom getter/setter ( and set real _customer
in a seperate property ) for this. For example:
var get_creator = function(val) {
if (this.hasOwnProperty( "__creator" )) {
return this.__creator;
}
return val;
};
var set_creator = function(val) {
this.__creator = val;
return val;
};
var bookSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
_creator: {
type: mongoose.Schema.Types.ObjectId,
ref: 'User',
get: get_creator,
set: set_creator
},
description: String,
});
NOTE: I didn't test it and it might work strangely with .populate
and when setting pure id.
Mongoose 5.2.7
This works for me (just a lot of headache !)
exports.create = (req, res, next) => {
const author = req.userData;
const postInfo = new Post({
author,
content: req.body.content,
isDraft: req.body.isDraft,
status: req.body.status,
title: req.body.title
});
postInfo.populate('author', '_id email role display_name').execPopulate();
postInfo.save()
.then(post => {
res.status(200).json(post);
}).catch(error => {
res.status(500).json(error);
});
};
Probably sth. like
Book.createAsync(bookToSave).then((savedBook) => savedBook.populateAsync("creator"));
Would be the nicest and least problematic way to make this work (Using Bluebird promises).
ended up writing some curry-able Promise functions where you declare your schema, query_adapter, data_adapter functions and populate string in advance. For a shorter / simpler implementation easier on.
It's probably not super efficient, but I thought the execution bit was quite elegant.
github file: curry_Promises.js
declartion
const update_or_insert_Item = mDB.update_or_insert({
schema : model.Item,
fn_query_adapter : ({ no })=>{return { no }},
fn_update_adapter : SQL_to_MDB.item,
populate : "headgroup"
// fn_err : (e)=>{return e},
// fn_res : (o)=>{return o}
})
execution
Promise.all( items.map( update_or_insert_Item ) )
.catch( console.error )
.then( console.log )
Save document in model and then populate
chatRoom = await chatRoom.save();
const data = await chatRoom
.populate("customer", "email dp")
.populate({
path: "admin",
select: "name logo",
})
.execPopulate();
It's worked for me
let post = await PostModel.create({
...req.body, author: userId
})
post = await post.populate('author', 'name')
res.status(200).json({
status: 'success',
data: { post }
})
In Mongoose 6.x you can simply do:
const t = await MyModel.create(value).then((t) =>
t.populate('my-path')
);
The execPopulate()
method has now been removed.
Nothing worked for me so I saved and then used findById to get that data with populate back again
const data: any = await Model.findById(id)
.populate("name")
I'm not adding anything new here.
It's just a cleaner way of writing this using async/await:
const newCourse = new Course(new_course_data);
const populate_options = [
// Here write your populate options
];
const created_course = await newCourse.save();
await created_course.populate(populate_options).execPopulate();
Success story sharing
creator.profile