seal-mongo makes it easy to connect to MongoDB reliably.
$ npm install seal-mongo
First you need to add a reference to seal-mongo to your application.
const mongo = require('seal-mongo');
Then you can use its db
function to connect to a MongoDB server. Provide the connection string and a callback as parameters.
mongo.db('mongodb://localhost:27017/mydb', (err, db) => {
// ...
});
If no connection can be established, seal-mongo retries to connect ten times, with a pause of 1 second between two connection attempts.
If you need to pass options to the MongoDB connection, e.g. for setting write concerns, provide an additional options
object. For details see the MongoClient.connect documentation.
Additionally the following options can be set:
-
connectionRetries
is the number of retries to connect to MongoDB server, a value of 0 tries to connect only once without retries, default is 10. -
waitTimeBetweenRetries
is the time in milliseconds waiting between the retries, default is 1000 ms
mongo.db('mongodb://localhost:27017/mydb', {
connectionRetries: 1
// ...
}, (err, db) => {
// ...
});
Now you can use the db
object to access the database. Please note that this is the very same object as the one that the node-mongodb-native driver provides.
Please note that if you call db
twice with the same connection string, both calls will use the same underlying connection.
If you need to access GridFS, simply call the db
object's gridfs
function.
const gridfs = db.gridfs();
createReadStream(fileName, callback)
- fileName
String
Name of the file to read - callback (err, stream, metadata)
Function
Called on error or when stream is ready
Opens the file fileName
for reading and calls callback
as soon the file is opened. The callback provides the data of the file as a Readable
stream as well as its metadata.
gridfs.createReadStream('My file.txt', (err, stream, metadata) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
const chunk = stream.read();
// ...
});
createWriteStream(fileName, metadata, callback)
- fileName
String
Name of the file to write - metadata
Object
Optional metadata, can be left out - callback (err, stream)
Function
Called on error or when stream is ready
Opens the file fileName
for writing and calls callback
as soon the file is opened. The content of the file can be written with the Writable
stream provided by the callback. The stream emits a close
event when all data is written and the file is closed.
Please note: The file content is not fully written when the finish
event occurs. So, do not rely on it.
gridfs.createWriteStream('My file.txt', { foo: 'bar' }, (err, stream) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
stream.on('close', (err) => {
if (err) {
// Handle error on file close
}
});
stream.write('Hello World');
stream.end();
});
exists(fileName, callback)
- fileName
String
Name of the file to check - callback (err, doExist)
Function
Called on error or when check finished
Checks if file fileName
does exist. The callback provides an possible error and a boolean value. If doExist
is false the file does not exist, otherwise it exists.
gridfs.exist('My file.txt', (err, doExist) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
if (doExist) {
// File does exist
} else {
// File does not exist
}
});
unlink(fileName, callback)
- fileName
String
Name of the file to delete - callback (err, fileFound)
Function
Called on error or delete finished
Deletes the file fileName
. The callback provides an error object if the unlink operation fails. Otherwise the fileFound
indicates whether the file did exist or not.
gridfs.unlink('My file.txt', (err, fileFound) => {
if (err) {
throw err;
}
if (fileFound) {
// File did exist and has been removed
} else {
// File does not exist
}
});
The module uses plossys/seal-tlscert to obtain certificates for an encrypted connection to the database. The connection will only be encrypted if TLS_UNPROTECTED
is set to none
or loopback
. Otherwise it is assumed that an unencrypted connection is save. If seal-tlscert
provides a CA certificate, the host's certificate will be transmitted to the database server in order to allow client verification.
To build this module use roboter.
'''bash $ bot '''