340 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
340 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
= Introduction
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This is the 10gen-supported Ruby driver for MongoDB[http://www.mongodb.org].
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Here's a quick code sample. See the MongoDB Ruby Tutorial
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(http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Ruby+Tutorial) for much more.
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require 'rubygems'
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require 'mongo'
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include Mongo
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db = Connection.new.db('sample-db')
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coll = db.collection('test')
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coll.remove
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3.times do |i|
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coll.insert({'a' => i+1})
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end
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puts "There are #{coll.count()} records. Here they are:"
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coll.find().each { |doc| puts doc.inspect }
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= Installation
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The driver's gems are hosted on Gemcutter[http://gemcutter.org]. If you haven't
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installed a gem from Gemcutter before, you'll need to set up Gemcutter first:
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$ gem install gemcutter
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$ gem tumble
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Once you've installed Gemcutter, install the mongo gem as follows:
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$ gem install mongo
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For a significant performance boost, you should also install the driver's C
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extensions:
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$ gem install mongo_ext
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=== From the GitHub source
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The source code is available at http://github.com/mongodb/mongo-ruby-driver.
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You can either clone the git repository or download a tarball or zip file.
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Once you have the source, you can use it from wherever you downloaded it or
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you can install it as a gem from the source by typing
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$ rake gem:install
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To install the C extensions from source, type this instead:
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$ rake gem:install_extensions
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That's all there is to it!
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= Examples
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For extensive examples, see the MongoDB Ruby Tutorial
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(http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Ruby+Tutorial).
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Bundled with the driver are many examples, located in the "examples" subdirectory. Samples include using
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the driver and using the GridFS class GridStore. MongoDB must be running for
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these examples to work, of course.
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Here's how to start MongoDB and run the "simple.rb" example:
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$ cd path/to/mongo
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$ ./mongod run
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... then in another window ...
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$ cd path/to/mongo-ruby-driver
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$ ruby examples/simple.rb
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See also the test code, especially test/test_db_api.rb.
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= GridStore
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The GridStore class is a Ruby implementation of MongoDB's GridFS file storage
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system. An instance of GridStore is like an IO object. See the RDocs for
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details, and see examples/gridfs.rb for code that uses many of the GridStore
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features (metadata, content type, rewind/seek/tell, etc).
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Note that the GridStore class is not automatically required when you require
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'mongo'. You also need to require 'mongo/gridfs'
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Example code:
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include GridFS
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# Store the text "Hello, world!" in the grid store.
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GridStore.open(database, 'filename', 'w') do |f|
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f.puts "Hello, world!"
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end
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# Output "Hello, world!"
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GridStore.open(database, 'filename', 'r') do |f|
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puts f.read
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end
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# Add text to the grid store.
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GridStore.open(database, 'filename', 'w+') do |f|
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f.puts "But wait, there's more!"
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end
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# Retrieve everything, outputting "Hello, world!\nBut wait, there's more!\n"
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GridStore.open(database, 'filename', 'r') do |f|
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puts f.read
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end
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= Notes
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== Thread Safety
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The driver is thread-safe.
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== Connection Pooling
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As of 0.18, the driver implements connection pooling. By default, only one
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socket connection will be opened to MongoDB. However, if you're running a
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multi-threaded application, you can specify a maximum pool size and a maximum
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timeout for waiting for old connections to be released to the pool.
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To set up a pooled connection to a single MongoDB instance:
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@conn = Connection.new("localhost", 27017, :pool_size => 5, :timeout => 5)
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A pooled connection to a paired instance would look like this:
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@conn = Connection.new({:left => ["db1.example.com", 27017],
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:right => ["db2.example.com", 27017]}, nil,
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:pool_size => 20, :timeout => 5)
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Though the pooling architecture will undoubtedly evolve, it currently owes much credit
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to the connection pooling implementations in ActiveRecord and PyMongo.
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== Using with Phusion Passenger
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When passenger is in smart spawning mode you need to be sure that child
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processes forked by passenger will create a new connection to the database.
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activerecord-mongo-adapter handles this for you, so if you are using that
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you shouldn't need to worry about it. Otherwise you'll either need to use
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conservative spawning[http://www.modrails.org/documentation/Users%20guide.html#RailsSpawnMethod]
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or handle reconnecting when passenger forks a new process:
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if defined?(PhusionPassenger)
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PhusionPassenger.on_event(:starting_worker_process) do |forked|
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if forked
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# Call db.connect_to_master to reconnect here
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end
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end
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end
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The above code should be put in _environment.rb_ or in an initialization
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script.
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See this thread[http://groups.google.com/group/mongodb-user/browse_thread/thread/f31e2d23de38136a]
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for more details on this issue.
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== String Encoding
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The BSON ("Binary JSON") format used to communicate with Mongo requires that
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strings be UTF-8 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8).
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Ruby 1.9 has built-in character encoding support. All strings sent to Mongo
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and received from Mongo are converted to UTF-8 when necessary, and strings
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read from Mongo will have their character encodings set to UTF-8.
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When used with Ruby 1.8, the bytes in each string are written to and read from
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Mongo as-is. If the string is ASCII all is well, because ASCII is a subset of
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UTF-8. If the string is not ASCII, it may not be a well-formed UTF-8
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string.
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== Primary Keys
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The field _id is a primary key. It is treated specially by the database, and
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its use makes many operations more efficient. The value of an _id may be of
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any type. The database itself inserts an _id value if none is specified when
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a record is inserted.
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=== Primary Key Factories
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A primary key factory is a class you supply to a DB object that knows how to
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generate _id values. If you want to control _id values or even their types,
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using a PK factory lets you do so.
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You can tell the Ruby Mongo driver how to create primary keys by passing in
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the :pk_factory option to the Connection#db method.
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db = Mongo::Connection.new.db('dbname', :pk_factory => MyPKFactory.new)
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A primary key factory object must respond to :create_pk, which should take a
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hash and return a hash which merges the original hash with any primary key
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fields the factory wishes to inject.
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NOTE: if the object already has a primary key, the factory should not inject
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a new key; this means that the object may already exist in the database.
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The idea here is that whenever a record is inserted,
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the :pk_factory object's +create_pk+ method will be called and
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the new hash returned will be inserted.
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Here is a sample primary key factory, taken from the tests:
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class TestPKFactory
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def create_pk(row)
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row['_id'] ||= Mongo::ObjectID.new
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row
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end
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end
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Here's a slightly more sophisticated one that handles both symbol and string
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keys. This is the PKFactory that comes with the MongoRecord code (an
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ActiveRecord-like framework for non-Rails apps) and the AR Mongo adapter code
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(for Rails):
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class PKFactory
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def create_pk(row)
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return row if row[:_id]
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row.delete(:_id) # in case it exists but the value is nil
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row['_id'] ||= Mongo::ObjectID.new
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row
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end
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end
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A database's PK factory object may be set either when a DB object is created
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or immediately after you obtain it, but only once. The only reason it is
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changeable at all is so that libraries such as MongoRecord that use this
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driver can set the PK factory after obtaining the database but before using it
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for the first time.
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== The DB Class
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=== Primary Key factories
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See the section on "Primary Keys" above.
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=== Strict mode
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Each database has an optional strict mode. If strict mode is on, then asking
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for a collection that does not exist will raise an error, as will asking to
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create a collection that already exists. Note that both these operations are
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completely harmless; strict mode is a programmer convenience only.
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To turn on strict mode, either pass in :strict => true when obtaining a DB
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object or call the :strict= method:
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db = Connection.new.db('dbname', :strict => true)
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# I'm feeling lax
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db.strict = false
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# No, I'm not!
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db.strict = true
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The method DB#strict? returns the current value of that flag.
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== Cursors
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Random cursor fun facts:
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- Cursors are enumerable.
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- The query doesn't get run until you actually attempt to retrieve data from a
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cursor.
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- Cursors have a to_a method.
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= Testing
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If you have the source code, you can run the tests. There's a separate rake task for testing with
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the mongo_ext C extension enabled.
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$ rake test:c
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Or, to test without the extension:
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$ rake test:ruby
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These will run both unit and functional tests. To run these tests alone:
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$ rake test:unit
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$ rake test:functional
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To run any individual rake tasks with the C extension enabled, just pass C_EXT=true to the task:
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$ rake test:unit C_EXT=true
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If you want to test replica pairs, you can run the following tests
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individually:
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$ rake test:pair_count
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$ rake test:pair_insert
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$ rake test:pair_query
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It's also possible to test replica pairs with connection pooling:
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$ rake test:pooled_pair_insert
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===Shoulda and Mocha
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Running the test suite requires shoulda and mocha. You can install them as follows:
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$ gem install shoulda
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$ gem install mocha
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The tests assume that the Mongo database is running on the default port. You
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can override the default host (localhost) and port (Connection::DEFAULT_PORT) by
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using the environment variables MONGO_RUBY_DRIVER_HOST and
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MONGO_RUBY_DRIVER_PORT.
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= Documentation
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This documentation is available online at http://api.mongodb.org/ruby. You can
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generate the documentation if you have the source by typing
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$ rake ydoc
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Then open the file +ydoc/index.html+.
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= Release Notes
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See HISTORY.
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= Credits
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See CREDITS.
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= License
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Copyright 2008-2010 10gen Inc.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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You may obtain a copy of the License at
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http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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limitations under the License.
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