I'm a beginner in both go and mongodb. I try to decode a DocumentResult
into a struct using bson tags, and it does not work for a custom type wrapping a string. Can it be done without changing the field's type to a string?
import (
"context"
"github.com/mongodb/mongo-go-driver/mongo"
)
type MyDoc struct {
SomeInt int `bson:"some_int"`
SomeString string `bson:"some_string,omitempty"`
CustomType MyType `bson:"custom_type,omitempty"`
}
type MyType string
const myType MyType = "ABCD"
func main() {
//Connect to db
client, _ := mongo.Connect(context.Background(), "mongodb://localhost:27017", nil)
db := client.Database("example_db")
collection := db.Collection("col")
//Insert document
docToInsert := MyDoc{42, "The Answer", myType}
collection.InsertOne(nil, docToInsert)
//Retrieve document
filterDoc := MyDoc{SomeInt: 42}
resultDoc := &MyDoc{}
result := collection.FindOne(nil, filterDoc)
result.Decode(resultDoc)
println(resultDoc.SomeInt, resultDoc.SomeString, resultDoc.CustomType)
PRINTED RESULT: "42 The Answer" //"ABCD" is missing
Thanks in advance
I try to decode a DocumentResult into a struct using bson tags, and it does not work for a custom type wrapping a string
With your current MyType
, the document that would be stored in MongoDB would be as below:
{
"_id": ObjectId("..."),
"some_int": NumberLong("42"),
"some_string": "The Answer",
"custom_type": "ABCD"
}
Even though the underlying type is a string
, this could be tricky to decode with the current version of mongo-go-driver (v0.0.12) due to the type wrapping.
However, if you would like to have a custom type as such, you could change the struct into an embedded field instead. For example:
type MyDoc struct {
SomeInt int `bson:"some_int"`
SomeString string `bson:"some_string,omitempty"`
CustomType MyType `bson:"custom_type,omitempty"`
}
type MyType struct {
Value string `bson:"value,omitempty"`
}
var myType = MyType{Value: "ABCD"}
docToInsert := MyDoc{42, "The Answer", "ABCD"}
insertResult, err := collection.InsertOne(nil, docToInsert)
resultDoc := collection.FindOne(context.Background(), nil)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
elem := &MyDoc{}
err = resultDoc.Decode(elem)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(elem.SomeInt, elem.SomeString, elem.CustomType.Value)
// 42 The Answer ABCD
The document would be stored in MongoDB as below:
{
"_id": ObjectId("..."),
"some_int": NumberLong("42"),
"some_string": "The Answer",
"custom_type": {
"value": "ABCD"
}
}
Otherwise just use string
type directly because the resulting document in the database would be the same as the type wrapping version:
type MyDoc struct {
SomeInt int `bson:"some_int"`
SomeString string `bson:"some_string,omitempty"`
CustomType string `bson:"custom_type,omitempty"`
}
You may also find MongoDB Data Modeling a useful reference.
Foreword: Custom types having string
as their underlying types are now handled automatically by the driver. This answer predates the driver 1.x
versions where this was necessary.
Unfortunately you're out of luck. The current state of the official mongo go driver does not support unmarshaling string
values from BSON to a Go value whose type is a custom type having string
as its underlying type. This may change in the future, but for now this is not supported.
The way decoding into a struct field is handled is implemented in bson/decode.go
, currently line #387 :
case 0x2:
str := v.StringValue()
switch containerType {
case tString, tEmpty:
val = reflect.ValueOf(str)
case tJSONNumber:
_, err := strconv.ParseFloat(str, 64)
if err != nil {
return val, err
}
val = reflect.ValueOf(str).Convert(tJSONNumber)
case tURL:
u, err := url.Parse(str)
if err != nil {
return val, err
}
val = reflect.ValueOf(u).Elem()
default:
return val, nil
}
0x02
is the BSON string type. It is only attempted to decode into the struct field if the struct field's type is any of the following: string
, interface{}
, json.Number
or url.URL
(or a pointer to these).
Unfortunately implementing bson.Unmarshaler
on your custom type does not help either, as it is not checked in case of struct fields, only if the struct itself implements it. But implementing on the struct itself, you would have to duplicate the struct with the field being one of the above listed supported types (or use a map or a bson.Document
type).
This is a serious limitation on the library's part which can very easily be solved, so let's hope for the best that they add support for this in the near future.
With the 1.x versions of MongoDB driver for Go (latest version at the time of writing is 1.3.1) it is fully possible to encode and decode aliased types.
Your example now works as expected, given one adjusts the mongo.Connect
to match new 1.x
API.
package main
import (
"context"
"go.mongodb.org/mongo-driver/mongo"
"go.mongodb.org/mongo-driver/mongo/options"
)
type MyDoc struct {
SomeInt int `bson:"some_int"`
SomeString string `bson:"some_string,omitempty"`
CustomType MyType `bson:"custom_type,omitempty"`
}
type MyType string
const myType MyType = "ABCD"
func main() {
// Connect to db
clientOpts := options.Client().
ApplyURI("mongodb://localhost/example_db")
client, _ := mongo.Connect(context.Background(), clientOpts)
db := client.Database("example_db")
collection := db.Collection("col")
// Insert document
docToInsert := MyDoc{42, "The Answer", myType}
collection.InsertOne(nil, docToInsert)
// Retrieve document
filterDoc := MyDoc{SomeInt: 42}
resultDoc := &MyDoc{}
result := collection.FindOne(nil, filterDoc)
result.Decode(resultDoc)
println(resultDoc.SomeInt, resultDoc.SomeString, resultDoc.CustomType)
}
This returns: 42 The Answer ABCD
as expected
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