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MongoDB

This guide discusses the concepts behind using Prisma ORM and MongoDB, explains the commonalities and differences between MongoDB and other database providers, and leads you through the process for configuring your application to integrate with MongoDB using Prisma ORM.

info

To connect Prisma ORM with MongoDB, refer to our Getting Started documentation.

What is MongoDB?

MongoDB is a NoSQL database that stores data in BSON format, a JSON-like document format designed for storing data in key-value pairs. It is commonly used in JavaScript application development because the document model maps easily to objects in application code, and there is built in support for high availability and horizontal scaling.

MongoDB stores data in collections that do not need a schema to be defined in advance, as you would need to do with tables in a relational database. The structure of each collection can also be changed over time. This flexibility can allow rapid iteration of your data model, but it does mean that there are a number of differences when using Prisma ORM to work with your MongoDB database.

Commonalities with other database providers

Some aspects of using Prisma ORM with MongoDB are the same as when using Prisma ORM with a relational database. You can still:

Differences to consider

MongoDB's document-based structure and flexible schemas means that using Prisma ORM with MongoDB differs from using it with a relational database in a number of ways. These are some areas where there are differences that you need to be aware of:

  • Defining IDs: MongoDB documents have an _id field (that often contains an ObjectID). Prisma ORM does not support fields starting with _, so this needs to be mapped to a Prisma ORM field using the @map attribute. For more information, see Defining IDs in MongoDB.

  • Migrating existing data to match your Prisma schema: In relational databases, all your data must match your schema. If you change the type of a particular field in your schema when you migrate, all the data must also be updated to match. In contrast, MongoDB does not enforce any particular schema, so you need to take care when migrating. For more information, see How to migrate old data to new schemas.

  • Introspection and Prisma ORM relations: When you introspect an existing MongoDB database, you will get a schema with no relations and will need to add the missing relations in manually. For more information, see How to add in missing relations after Introspection.

  • Filtering for null and missing fields: MongoDB makes a distinction between setting a field to null and not setting it at all, which is not present in relational databases. Prisma ORM currently does not express this distinction, which means that you need to be careful when filtering for null and missing fields. For more information, see How to filter for null and missing fields

  • Enabling replication: Prisma ORM uses MongoDB transactions internally to avoid partial writes on nested queries. When using transactions, MongoDB requires replication of your data set to be enabled. To do this, you will need to configure a replica set — this is a group of MongoDB processes that maintain the same data set. Note that it is still possible to use a single database, by creating a replica set with only one node in it. If you use MongoDB's Atlas hosting service, the replica set is configured for you, but if you are running MongoDB locally you will need to set up a replica set yourself. For more information, see MongoDB's guide to deploying a replica set.

How to use Prisma ORM with MongoDB

This section provides instructions for how to carry out tasks that require steps specific to MongoDB.

How to migrate existing data to match your Prisma schema

Migrating your database over time is an important part of the development cycle. During development, you will need to update your Prisma schema file (for example, to add new fields), then update the data in your development environment’s database, and eventually push both the updated schema and the new data to the production database.

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When using MongoDB, be aware that the “coupling” between your schema and the database is purposefully designed to be less rigid than with with SQL databases; MongoDB will not enforce the schema, so you have to verify data integrity.

These iterative tasks of updating the schema and the database can result in inconsistencies between your schema and the actual data in the database. Let’s look at one scenario where this can happen, and then examine several strategies for you and your team to consider for handling these inconsistencies.

Scenario: you need to include a phone number for users, as well as an email. You currently have the following User model in your schema.prisma file:

prisma/schema.prisma
model User {
id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
email String
}

There are a number of strategies you could use for migrating this schema:

  • "On-demand" updates: with this strategy, you and your team have agreed that updates can be made to the schema as needed. However, in order to avoid migration failures due to inconsistencies between the data and schema, there is agreement in the team that any new fields added are explicitly defined as optional.

    In our scenario above, you can add an optional phoneNumber field to the User model in your Prisma schema:

    prisma/schema.prisma
    model User {
    id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
    email String
    phoneNumber String?
    }

    Then regenerate your Prisma Client using the npx prisma generate command. Next, update your application to reflect the new field, and redeploy your app.

    As the phoneNumber field is optional, you can still query the old users where the phone number has not been defined. The records in the database will be updated "on demand" as the application's users begin to enter their phone number in the new field.

    Another option is to add a default value on a required field, for example:

    prisma/schema.prisma
    model User {
    id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
    email String
    phoneNumber String @default("000-000-0000")
    }

    Then when you encounter a missing phoneNumber, the value will be coerced into 000-000-0000.

  • "No breaking changes" updates: this strategy builds on the first one, with further consensus amongst your team that you don't rename or delete fields, only add new fields, and always define the new fields as optional. This policy can be reinforced by adding checks in the CI/CD process to verify that there are no backwards-incompatible changes to the schema.

  • "All-at-once" updates: this strategy is similar to traditional migrations in relational databases, where all data is updated to reflect the new schema. In the scenario above, you would create a script to add a value for the phone number field to all existing users in your database. You can then make the field a required field in the application because the schema and the data are consistent.

How to add in missing relations after Introspection

After introspecting an existing MongoDB database, you will need to manually add in relations between models. MongoDB does not have the concept of defining relations via foreign keys, as you would in a relational database. However, if you have a collection in MongoDB with a "foreign-key-like" field that matches the ID field of another collection, Prisma ORM will allow you to emulate relations between the collections.

As an example, take a MongoDB database with two collections, User and Post. The data in these collections has the following format, with a userId field linking users to posts:

User collection:

  • _id field with a type of objectId
  • email field with a type of string

Post collection:

  • _id field with a type of objectId
  • title field with a type of string
  • userId with a type of objectID

On introspection with db pull, this is pulled in to the Prisma schema file as follows:

prisma/schema.prisma
model Post {
id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
title String
userId String @db.ObjectId
}

model User {
id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
email String
}

This is missing the relation between the User and Post models. To fix this, manually add a user field to the Post model with a @relation attribute using userId as the fields value, linking it to the User model, and a posts field to the User model as the back relation:

prisma/schema.prisma
model Post {
id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
title String
userId String @db.ObjectId
user User @relation(fields: [userId], references: [id])
}

model User {
id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
email String
posts Post[]
}

For more information on how to use relations in Prisma ORM, see our documentation.

How to filter for null and missing fields

To understand how MongoDB distinguishes between null and missing fields, consider the example of a User model with an optional name field:

model User {
id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
email String
name String?
}

First, try creating a record with the name field explicitly set to null. Prisma ORM will return name: null as expected:

const createNull = await prisma.user.create({
data: {
email: '[email protected]',
name: null,
},
})
console.log(createNull)
Show CLI results

If you check your MongoDB database directly, you will also see a new record with name set to null:

{
"_id": "6242c4af032bc76da250b207",
"email": "[email protected]",
"name": null
}

Next, try creating a record without explicitly setting the name field:

const createMissing = await prisma.user.create({
data: {
email: '[email protected]',
},
})
console.log(createMissing)
Show CLI results

Prisma ORM still returns name: null, but if you look in the database directly you will see that the record has no name field defined at all:

{
"_id": "6242c4af032bc76da250b208",
"email": "[email protected]"
}

Prisma ORM returns the same result in both cases, because we currently don't have a way to specify this difference in MongoDB between fields that are null in the underlying database, and fields that are not defined at all — see this Github issue for more information.

This means that you currently have to be careful when filtering for null and missing fields. Filtering for records with name: null will only return the first record, with the name explicitly set to null:

const findNulls = await prisma.user.findMany({
where: {
name: null,
},
})
console.log(findNulls)
Show CLI results

This is because name: null is checking for equality, and a non-existing field isn't equal to null.

To include missing fields as well, use the isSet filter to explicitly search for fields which are either null or not set. This will return both records:

const findNullOrMissing = await prisma.user.findMany({
where: {
OR: [
{
name: null,
},
{
name: {
isSet: false,
},
},
],
},
})
console.log(findNullOrMissing)
Show CLI results

More on using MongoDB with Prisma ORM

The fastest way to start using MongoDB with Prisma ORM is to refer to our Getting Started documentation:

These tutorials will take you through the process of connecting to MongoDB, pushing schema changes, and using Prisma Client.

Further reference information is available in the MongoDB connector documentation.

For more information on how to set up and manage a MongoDB database, see the Prisma Data Guide.

Example

To connect to a MongoDB server, configure the datasource block in your Prisma schema file:

schema.prisma
datasource db {
provider = "mongodb"
url = env("DATABASE_URL")
}

The fields passed to the datasource block are:

warning

The MongoDB database connector uses transactions to support nested writes. Transactions require a replica set deployment. The easiest way to deploy a replica set is with Atlas. It's free to get started.

Connection details

Connection URL

The MongoDB connection URL can be configured in different ways depending on how you are hosting your database. The standard configuration is made up of the following components:

Structure of the MongoDB connection URL

Base URL and path

The base URL and path sections of the connection URL are made up of your authentication credentials followed by the host (and optionally, a port number) and database.

mongodb://USERNAME:PASSWORD@HOST/DATABASE

The following components make up the base URL of your database:

NamePlaceholderDescription
UserUSERNAMEName of your database user, e.g. janedoe
PasswordPASSWORDPassword for your database user
HostHOSTThe host where a mongod instance is running. If you are running a sharded cluster this will a mongos instance. This can be a hostname, IP address or UNIX domain socket.
PortPORTPort on which your database server is running, e.g. 1234. If none is provided the default 27017 is used.
DatabaseDATABASEName of the database to use. If none is specified but the authSource option is set then the authSource database name is used. If neither the database in the connection string nor the authSource option is specified then it defaults to admin

Arguments

A connection URL can also take arguments. The following example sets three arguments:

  • An ssl connection
  • A connectTimeoutMS
  • And the maxPoolSize
mongodb://USERNAME:PASSWORD@HOST/DATABASE?ssl=true&connectTimeoutMS=5000&maxPoolSize=50

Refer to the MongoDB connection string documentation for a complete list of connection string arguments. There are no Prisma ORM-specific arguments.

Using ObjectId

It is common practice for the _id field of a MongoDB document to contain an ObjectId:

{
"_id": { "$oid": "60d599cb001ef98000f2cad2" },
"createdAt": { "$date": { "$numberLong": "1624611275577" } },
"email": "[email protected]",
"name": "Ella",
"role": "ADMIN"
}

Any field (most commonly IDs and relation scalar fields) that maps to an ObjectId in the underlying database:

  • Must be of type String or Bytes
  • Must include the @db.ObjectId attribute
  • Can optionally use @default(auto()) to auto-generate a valid ObjectId on document creation

Here is an example that uses String:

model User {
id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
// Other fields
}

And here is another example that uses Bytes:

model User {
id Bytes @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
// Other fields
}

See also: Defining ID fields in MongoDB

Generating ObjectId

To generate a valid ObjectId (for testing purposes or to manually set an ID field value) in your application, use the bson package.

npm install --save bson
import { ObjectId } from 'bson'

const id = new ObjectId()

Differences to connectors for relational databases

This section covers ways in which the MongoDB connector differs from Prisma ORM connectors for relational databases.

No support for Prisma Migrate

Currently, there are no plans to add support for Prisma Migrate as MongoDB projects do not rely on internal schemas where changes need to be managed with an extra tool. Management of @unique indexes is realized through db push.

No support for @@id and autoincrement()

The @@id attribute (an ID for multiple fields) is not supported because primary keys in MongoDB are always on the _id field of a model.

The autoincrement() function (which creates incrementing @id values) is not supported because autoincrement() does not work with the ObjectID type that the _id field has in MongoDB.

Cyclic references and referential actions

If you have cyclic references in your models, either from self-relations or a cycle of relations between models, and you use referential actions, you must set a referential action of NoAction to prevent an infinite loop of actions.

See Special rules for referential actions for more details.

Replica set configuration

MongoDB only allows you to start a transaction on a replica set. Prisma ORM uses transactions internally to avoid partial writes on nested queries. This means we inherit the requirement of needing a replica set configured.

When you try to use Prisma ORM's MongoDB connector on a deployment that has no replica set configured, Prisma ORM shows the message Error: Transactions are not supported by this deployment. The full text of the error message is the following:

PrismaClientUnknownRequestError2 [PrismaClientUnknownRequestError]:
Invalid `prisma.post.create()` invocation in
/index.ts:9:21

6 await prisma.$connect()
7
8 // Create the first post
→ 9 await prisma.post.create(
Error in connector: Database error. error code: unknown, error message: Transactions are not supported by this deployment
at cb (/node_modules/@prisma/client/runtime/index.js:34804:17)
at processTicksAndRejections (internal/process/task_queues.js:97:5) {
clientVersion: '3.xx.0'
}

To resolve this, we suggest you change your deployment to one with a replica set configured.

One simple way for this is to use MongoDB Atlas to launch a free instance that has replica set support out of the box.

There's also an option to run the replica set locally with this guide: https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/tutorial/convert-standalone-to-replica-set

Type mapping between MongoDB and the Prisma schema

The MongoDB connector maps the scalar types from the Prisma ORM data model to MongoDB's native column types as follows:

Alternatively, see Prisma schema reference for type mappings organized by Prisma type.

Native type mapping from Prisma ORM to MongoDB

Prisma ORMMongoDB
Stringstring
Booleanbool
Intint
BigIntlong
Floatdouble
DecimalCurrently unsupported
DateTimetimestamp
BytesbinData
Json

MongoDB types that are currently unsupported:

  • Decimal128
  • Undefined
  • DBPointer
  • Null
  • Symbol
  • MinKey
  • MaxKey
  • Object
  • Javascript
  • JavascriptWithScope
  • Regex

Mapping from MongoDB to Prisma ORM types on Introspection

When introspecting a MongoDB database, Prisma ORM uses the relevant scalar types. Some special types also get additional native type annotations:

MongoDB (Type | Aliases)Prisma ORMSupportedNative database type attributeNotes
objectIdString✔️@db.ObjectId

Introspection adds native database types that are not yet supported as Unsupported fields:

schema.prisma
model Example {
id String @id @default(auto()) @map("_id") @db.ObjectId
name String
regex Unsupported("RegularExpression")
}