/simplymongo

A very simple MongoDB Wrapper that gets you the database basics in seconds.

Primary LanguageJavaScriptGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

Simply Mongo is the simplest way to use MongoDB without knowing how to use MongoDB.

Store your client data in collections and fetch and modify data easily.

Originally created for the https://altv.mp/ community.

Installation

Prerequisites

Install

$ npm install simplymongo

Starting Usage

Here are some generalized steps for getting started.

  1. Add callback for ready statement.
  2. Create new sm.Database.
  3. Connection establishment will trigger ready statement.
  4. Ready statement imports rest of the files.
  5. Establish database instances where needed with sm.fetchDatabaseInstance().

Additional information can be found below. 👇🏻

🔽 Importing

I recommend importing the entire library of simplymongo.

import * as sm from 'simplymongo';

🔗 Establish Connection

After a connection is established. You may use sm.onReady to listen for the ready status.

import * as sm from 'simplymongo';

new sm.Database('mongodb://localhost:27017', 'databasename', ['accounts', 'vehicles', 'characters']);

// OR
new sm.Database('mongodb://localhost:27017', 'databasename', ['accounts', 'vehicles', 'characters'], 'user', 'pass');

🤝🏼 Handling Connection to Simply Mongo

There is an onReady callback register that will assist you establishing Database connection before loading other files.

Register callback with this function, then import the rest of your files.

main.js

import * as sm from 'simplymongo';

sm.onReady(loadRestOfCode);

async function loadRestOfCode() {
    await import('somefile');
}

somefile.js

import * as sm from 'simplymongo';

const db = sm.getDatabase();

// OR
// No Params Required if fetching established db.
const db = new sm.Database();

♻️ Fetching Database Instance after Connection

This no longer requires an wait.

Use sm first and load the rest of your files.

Rest of your files will automatically fetch the correct instance.

somefile.js

import * as sm from 'simplymongo';

const db = sm.getDatabase();

// OR
// No Params Required if fetching established db.
const db = new sm.Database();

📝 Regular Usage

These are just some general examples of deleting, updating, etc.

Think of this as your basic CRUD lesson.

This example is targetting usage with https://altv.mp/

Check ./example/example.js for more explanation.

import * as sm from 'simplymongo';

const db = sm.getDatabase();

async function someAsyncFunction(player) {
    // We can now use player.data.id to update any changes to this document.
    player.data.money = 50000;
    await db.updatePartialData(player.data.id, { money: player.data.money }, 'accounts');
}

// Let's assume we're looking for this player's id now.
async function someUsernamePassed(player) {
    // Returns a document with { _id, username, bank }
    player.data = await db.insertData({ username: 'johnny', bank: 0 }, 'accounts', true);

    // Find the username in the database
    const matches = await db.fetchAllByField('username', player.data.username, 'accounts');

    // Check if it exists. Create it if it doe snot.
    if (matches.length <= 0) {
        // Account does not exist. Create it.
        player.data = await db.insertData({ username: 'johnny2' }, 'accounts', true);
    } else {
        // Account exists. Assign to player object.
        player.data = matches[0];
    }

    // Create money element and update bank element.
    player.data.money = 50000;
    player.data.bank = 10;

    // Update two entries for a player.
    await db.updatePartialData(player.data.id, { money: player.data.money, bank: player.data.bank }, 'accounts');

    // Update all entries for a player.
    await db.updatePartialData(player.data.id, { ...player.data }, 'accounts');

    // Delete the account!
    await db.deleteById(player.data._id.toString(), 'accounts');

    // Fetch all accounts in the accounts collection.
    const accounts = await db.fetchAllData('accounts');

    for (let i = 0; i < accounts.length; i++) {
        const account = accounts[i];
        console.log(account);
    }
}