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@iterpro/loopback-connector-mongodb

v2.0.0-rc2

Published

Iterpro fork from the official Loopback v3 MongoDB connector. Based on v6.2.0, it allows compatibility for MongoDB v6 with Loopback v3.

Downloads

134

Readme

loopback-connector-mongodb

Iterpro fork from the official Loopback v3 MongoDB connector. Based on v6.2.0, it allows compatibility for MongoDB v6 with Loopback v3.

Installation

In your application root directory, enter this command to install the connector:

npm install @iterpro/loopback-connector-mongodb --save

For correctly work on your project you must install and paste this on server.js file:

const moduleAlias = require('module-alias');
// ? Set alias since loopback needs the original module name to work,
// ? @iterpro/loopback-connector-mongodb contains useful modifications to make mongodb v6 work with lb3
moduleAlias.addAlias('loopback-connector-mongodb', '@iterpro/loopback-connector-mongodb');

This installs the module from npm and adds it as a dependency to the application's package.json file.

If you create a MongoDB data source using the data source generator as described below, you don't have to do this, since the generator will run npm install for you.

Compatible with LoopBack 3

This connector is compatible with LoopBack 3.

**This version of the connector is compatible with LoopBack 3. **

This module adopts the Module Long Term Support (LTS) policy, with the following End Of Life (EOL) dates:

| Version | Status | Published | EOL | LoopBack | Juggler | | ------------ | -------------------- | --------- | -------------------- | ---------|----------| | 2.0(@iterpro)| Current | Sep 2024 | Apr 2024 (minimum) | 3, 4 | 3.x | | 6.x | Forked | Mar 2021 | Apr 2024 (minimum) | 4 | 4.x | | 5.x | Active LTS | Jun 2019 | Apr 2023 | 3, 4 | 3.x, 4.x | | 4.x | Maintenance LTS | Nov 2018 | Apr 2021 | 3, 4 | 3.x, 4.x |

Creating a MongoDB data source

For LoopBack 4 users, use the LB4 Command-line interface to generate a DataSource with MongoDB connector to your LB4 application. Run lb4 datasource, it will prompt for configurations such as host, post, etc. that are required to connect to a MongoDB database.

After setting it up, the configuration can be found under src/datasources/<DataSourceName>.datasource.ts, which would look like this:

const config = {
  name: 'db',
  connector: 'mongodb',
  url: '',
  host: 'localhost',
  port: 27017,
  user: '',
  password: '',
  database: 'testdb',
};

If your username or password contains special characters like @, $ etc, encode the whole username or password using encodeURIComponent.

Eg: pa$$wd would become pa%24%24wd.

Connection properties

| Property | Type   | Description | | ---------- | ---------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | connector | String | Connector name, either "loopback-connector-mongodb" or "mongodb". | | database | String | Database name | | host | String | Database host name | | name | String | Name of the datasource in the app | | password | String | Password to connect to database | | port | Number | Database TCP port | | url | String | Connection URL of form mongodb://user:password@host/db. Overrides other connection settings (see below). | | user | String | Username to connect to database | | authSource | String | Optional. Authentification database name. Usually "admin" value. |

If you run a MongoDB with authentification (Docker's example here), you need to specify which database to authenticate against. More details can be found in MongoDB documentation on Authentification Methods. The default value is usually "admin", like in the official docker image.

NOTE: In addition to these properties, you can use additional Single Server Connection parameters supported by node-mongodb-native.

Additional properties

Setting the url property in datasource.ts

You can set the url property to a connection URL in <datasourceName>.datasources.ts to override individual connection parameters such as host, user, and password. E.g loopback:pa55w0rd@localhost:27017/testdb.

Using the mongodb+srv protocol

MongoDB supports a protocol called mongodb+srv for connecting to replica sets without having to give the hostname of every server in the replica set. To use mongodb+srv as the protocol set the protocol connection property in the datasource.json to mongodb+srv. For example:

const config = {
  name: 'db',
  connector: 'mongodb',
  host: 'myserver',
  database: 'testdb',
  protocol: 'mongodb+srv',
};

Note: the port is not specified when using the mongodb+srv protocol and will be ignored if given.

TLS/SSL Connections

Note: SSL options deprecated since MongoDB 4.2

const config = {
  name: 'db',
  connector: 'mongodb',
  url: '',
  host: 'localhost',
  port: 27017,
  user: '',
  password: '',
  database: 'testdb',
  tls: true,
  tlsCertificateKeyFile: '/local/path/to/pem-file',
  tlsCAFile: '/local/path/to/ca-file',
};

Security Considerations

MongoDB Driver allows the $where operator to pass in JavaScript to execute on the Driver which can be used for NoSQL Injection. See MongoDB: Server-side JavaScript for more on this MongoDB feature.

To protect users against this potential vulnerability, LoopBack will automatically remove the $where and mapReduce operators from a query before it's passed to the MongoDB Driver. If you need to use these properties from within LoopBack programmatically, you can disable the sanitization by passing in an options object with disableSanitization property set to true.

Example:

await PostRepository.find(
  { where: { $where: "function() { /*JS function here*/}" } },
  { disableSanitization: true }
);

Type mappings

See LoopBack 4 types (or LoopBack 3 types) for details on LoopBack's data types.

LoopBack to MongoDB types

Type conversion is mainly handled by MongoDB. See 'node-mongodb-native' for details.

Update Operators

Except the comparison and logical operators LoopBack supports in the operator list of Where filter, you can also enable MongoDB update operators for update* methods by setting the flag allowExtendedOperators to true in the datasource configuration.

Here is an example of updating the price for all the products under category furniture if their current price is lower than 100:

await productRepo.updateAll({ $max: { price: 100 }}, { category: {eq: 'furniture'} // where clause goes in here });

{% include tip.html content="you will not need the dollar sign '$' for operators in the Where clause." %}

Handling ObjectId

MongoDB uses ObjectId for its primary key, which is an object instead of a string. In queries, string values must be cast to ObjectId, otherwise they are not considered as the same value. Therefore, you might want to specify the data type of properties to enforce ObjectId coercion. Such coercion would make sure the property value converts from ObjectId-like string to ObjectId when it accesses to the database and converts ObjectId to ObjectId-like string when the app gets back the value. (An ObjectId-like string is a string that has length 12 or 24 and has the format of an ObjectId i.e /^[0-9a-fA-F]{24}$/.)

LoopBack provides two scopes to handle such coercion: per model or per property. Please check the following to see which configuration meets your requirements.

{% include important.html content="please make sure you are using loopback-connector-mongodb package version 5.2.1 or above to handle ObjectId properly." %}

  • No ObjectId coercion: CRUD operations can be operated with non-ObjectId-like string or ObjectId-like string ids.

  • Enforce ObjectId coercion: the property value can only be ObjectId or ObjectId-like string, otherwise it will be rejected.

Enforcing ObjectId coercion can be done by setting the flag strictObjectIDCoercion in the model definition or by specifying dataType: ObjecId in the property definition.

Model scope

This scope would do the conversion for all properties in the model.

@model({settings: {
  strictObjectIDCoercion: true
}})
export class User extends Entity {
@property({
    type: 'string',
    id: true,
  })
  id: string;
...
}

Property scope

This scope would only convert an ObjectId-like string to ObjectId with a certain property in the model.

@property({
    type: 'string',
    id: true,
    mongodb: {dataType: 'ObjectId'}
  }
  id: string;

Also notice that for RELATIONS, if the primary key/source key has set to enforce ObjectId coercion (no matter by strictObjectIDCoercion: true or dataType: 'ObjectId'). The corresponding foreign key will need to have it set as well to make sure relations work smoothly.

@model()
export class User extends Entity {
// source key
@property({
    type: 'string',
    id: true,
    mongodb: {dataType: 'ObjectId'}
  })
  id: string;
...
}

@model(// )
export class Address extends Entity {
  ...
  // foreign key
  @belongsTo(() => User,
   {}, //relation metadata goes in here
   {// property definition goes in here
    mongodb: {dataType: 'ObjectId'}
  })
  UserId: string;
}

Customize collection/field names

loopback-connector-mongodb allows you to have different collection and field names from the models. Such configurations can be added to the model definition and the property definition respectively as mongodb:{ <field>: <customValue>}. For example, the following setting would define a collection with custom name Custom_Collection_User, and it has a custom field name Custom_Name in the database:

{% include code-caption.html content="/src/models/User.model.ts" %}

@model({
  settings: {
    // model definition goes in here
    mongodb: { collection: "Custom_Collection_User" },
  },
})
export class User extends Entity {
  @property({
    type: "string",
    id: true,
    generated: true,
  })
  id: string;

  @property({
    type: "string",
    mongodb: {
      fieldName: "Custom_Name",
    },
  })
  name?: string;
}

{% include important.html content="Since in MongoDB _id is reserved for the primary key, LoopBack does not allow customization of the field name for the id property. Please use id as is. Customizing the id property would cause errors." %}

Running tests

Own instance

If you have a local or remote MongoDB instance and would like to use that to run the test suite, use the following command:

  • Linux
MONGODB_HOST=<HOST> MONGODB_PORT=<PORT> MONGODB_DATABASE=<DATABASE> CI=true npm test
  • Windows
SET MONGODB_HOST=<HOST> SET MONGODB_PORT=<PORT> SET MONGODB_DATABASE=<DATABASE> SET CI=true npm test

Docker

If you do not have a local MongoDB instance, you can also run the test suite with very minimal requirements.

  • Assuming you have Docker installed, run the following script which would spawn a MongoDB instance on your local:
source setup.sh <HOST> <PORT> <DATABASE>

where <HOST>, <PORT> and <DATABASE> are optional parameters. The default values are localhost, 27017 and testdb respectively.

  • Run the test:
npm test

Leak detection

Tests run for 100 iterations by default, but can be increased by setting the env var ITERATIONS.

make leak-detection # run 100 iterations (default)

or

ITERATIONS=1000 make leak-detection # run 1000 iterations

Running benchmarks

Benchmarks must be run on a Unix-like operating system.

make benchmarks

The results will be output in ./benchmarks/results.md.

Release notes

  • 1.1.7 - Do not return MongoDB-specific _id to client API, except if specifically specified in the model definition