Reputation: 6004
Following is my user
schema in user.js
model -
var userSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
local: {
name: { type: String },
email : { type: String, require: true, unique: true },
password: { type: String, require:true },
},
facebook: {
id : { type: String },
token : { type: String },
email : { type: String },
name : { type: String }
}
});
var User = mongoose.model('User',userSchema);
module.exports = User;
This is how I am using it in my controller -
var user = require('./../models/user.js');
This is how I am saving it in the db -
user({'local.email' : req.body.email, 'local.password' : req.body.password}).save(function(err, result){
if(err)
res.send(err);
else {
console.log(result);
req.session.user = result;
res.send({"code":200,"message":"Record inserted successfully"});
}
});
Error -
{"name":"MongoError","code":11000,"err":"insertDocument :: caused by :: 11000 E11000 duplicate key error index: mydb.users.$email_1 dup key: { : null }"}
I checked the db collection and no such duplicate entry exists, let me know what I am doing wrong ?
FYI - req.body.email
and req.body.password
are fetching values.
I also checked this post but no help STACK LINK
If I removed completely then it inserts the document, otherwise it throws error "Duplicate" error even I have an entry in the local.email
Upvotes: 373
Views: 634043
Reputation: 1124
This is related with indexes in Mobgo DB, which you created previously. If you don't want to drop your collection you can check and remove some indexes withe the help of MongoDB Compass
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 29
Problem is that you have same values null in mongodb database for different Documents. If you can give different values to different documents then this problem will not come.
I was facing this error when i was using passport.js and want to add google auth in my project and I solved it !
How ???
See here everyone in above answer is saying just drop that collection from mongodb, But it is not the final solution of this problem. After Droping collection you will get that error again after some time.
Try to remove that field from the document of mogodb, I mean remove from schema of your collection.
If that field is important then try to write your document in this way. Let's take a example :
const userSchema = mongoose.Schema({
email:{
Type:String,
unique:true, //Dont write this line Or Remove if this exists in code
},
//Write Other Fields which you want to add ....
});
Read More About It: Source MongoDB Official
And Other way is Just give some values to this email field in document so that it can store in mongodb and it will not generate problem for you. Before Storing Data in mongodb Try to give some unique value or just some value in email field. Be Ensure that you are not using unique:true option in Schema.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 341
I have the same issue however I discovered having set the email to be unique i.e email : { type: String, require: true, unique: true }, means I have to have a different email on every entry.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 450
Here's how I solved same issue in September 2020. There is a super-fast and easy way from the mongodb atlas (cloud and desktop). Probably it was not that easy before? That is why I feel like I should write this answer in 2020.
First of all, I read above some suggestions of changing the field "unique" on the mongoose schema. If you came up with this error I assume you already changed your schema, but despite of that you got a 500 as your response, and notice this: specifying duplicated KEY!. If the problem was caused by schema configuration and assuming you have configurated a decent middleware to log mongo errors the response would be a 400.
Why is that? In my case was simple, that field on the schema it used to accept only unique values but I just changed it to accept repeated values. Mongodb creates indexes for fields with unique values in order to retrieve the data faster, so on the past mongo created that index for that field, and so even after setting "unique" property as "false" on schema, mongodb was still using that index, and treating it as it had to be unique.
Dropping that index. You can do it in 2 seconds from Mongo Atlas or executing it as a command on mongo shell. For the sack of simplicity I will show the first one for users that are not using mongo shell.
Go to your collection. By default you are on "Find" tab. Just select the next one on the right: "Indexes". You will see how there is still an index given to the same field is causing you trouble. Just click the button "Drop Index". Done.
I believe this is a better option than just dropping your entire database or even collection. Basically because this is why it works after dropping the entire collection. Because mongo is not going to set an index for that field if your first entry is using your new schema with "unique: false".
Upvotes: 28
Reputation: 57
Go to your database and click on that particular collection and delete all the indexes except id.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 11
in my case, i just forgot to return res.status(400) after finding that user with req.email already exists
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2165
I have solved my problem by this way.
Just go in your mongoDB
account -> Atlast collection then drop your database column. Or go mongoDB compass
then drop your database,
It happed sometimes when you have save something null inside database.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 29
If you are in the early stages of development: Eliminate the collection. Otherwise: add this to each attribute that gives you error (Note: my English is not good, but I try to explain it)
index:true,
unique:true,
sparse:true
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 894
Drop you database, then it will work.
You can perform the following steps to drop your database
step 1 : Go to mongodb installation directory, default dir is "C:\Program Files\MongoDB\Server\4.2\bin"
step 2 : Start mongod.exe directly or using command prompt and minimize it.
step 3 : Start mongo.exe directly or using command prompt and run the following command
i) use yourDatabaseName (use show databases if you don't remember database name)
ii) db.dropDatabase()
This will remove your database. Now you can insert your data, it won't show error, it will automatically add database and collection.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 361
It's not a big issue but beginner level developers as like me, we things what kind of error is this and finally we weast huge time for solve it.
Actually if you delete the db and create the db once again and after try to create the collection then it's will be work properly.
➜ mongo
use dbName;
db.dropDatabase();
exit
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 891
In this situation, log in to Mongo find the index that you are not using anymore (in OP's case 'email'). Then select Drop Index
Upvotes: 49
Reputation: 3291
I have also faced this issue and I solved it. This error shows that email is already present here. So you just need to remove this line from your Model for email attribute.
unique: true
This might be possible that even if it won't work. So just need to delete the collection from your MongoDB and restart your server.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 4817
Well basically this error is saying, that you had a unique index on a particular field for example: "email_address", so mongodb expects unique email address value for each document in the collection.
So let's say, earlier in your schema the unique index was not defined, and then you signed up 2 users with the same email address or with no email address (null value).
Later, you saw that there was a mistake. so you try to correct it by adding a unique index to the schema. But your collection already has duplicates, so the error message says that you can't insert a duplicate value again.
You essentially have three options:
Drop the collection
db.users.drop();
Find the document which has that value and delete it. Let's say the value was null, you can delete it using:
db.users.remove({ email_address: null });
Drop the Unique index:
db.users.dropIndex(indexName)
I Hope this helped :)
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 2406
I had a similar problem and I realized that by default mongo only supports one schema per collection. Either store your new schema in a different collection or delete the existing documents with the incompatible schema within the your current collection. Or find a way to have more than one schema per collection.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2549
I want to explain the answer/solution to this like I am explaining to a 5-year-old , so everyone can understand .
I have an app.I want people to register with their email,password and phone number . In my MongoDB database , I want to identify people uniquely based on both their phone numbers and email - so this means that both the phone number and the email must be unique for every person.
However , there is a problem : I have realized that everyone has a phonenumber but not everyone has an email address .
Those that don`t have an email address have promised me that they will have an email address by next week. But I want them registered anyway - so I tell them to proceed registering their phonenumbers as they leave the email-input-field empty .
They do so .
My database NEEDS an unique email address field - but I have a lot of people with 'null' as their email address . So I go to my code and tell my database schema to allow empty/null email address fields which I will later fill in with email unique addresses when the people who promised to add their emails to their profiles next week .
So its now a win-win for everyone (but you ;-] ): the people register, I am happy to have their data ...and my database is happy because it is being used nicely ...but what about you ? I am yet to give you the code that made the schema .
Here is the code : NOTE : The sparse property in email , is what tells my database to allow null values which will later be filled with unique values .
var userSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
local: {
name: { type: String },
email : { type: String, require: true, index:true, unique:true,sparse:true},
password: { type: String, require:true },
},
facebook: {
id : { type: String },
token : { type: String },
email : { type: String },
name : { type: String }
}
});
var User = mongoose.model('User',userSchema);
module.exports = User;
I hope I have explained it nicely . Happy NodeJS coding / hacking!
Upvotes: 59
Reputation: 13500
The error message is saying that there's already a record with null
as the email. In other words, you already have a user without an email address.
The relevant documentation for this:
If a document does not have a value for the indexed field in a unique index, the index will store a null value for this document. Because of the unique constraint, MongoDB will only permit one document that lacks the indexed field. If there is more than one document without a value for the indexed field or is missing the indexed field, the index build will fail with a duplicate key error.
You can combine the unique constraint with the sparse index to filter these null values from the unique index and avoid the error.
Sparse indexes only contain entries for documents that have the indexed field, even if the index field contains a null value.
In other words, a sparse index is ok with multiple documents all having null
values.
From comments:
Your error says that the key is named mydb.users.$email_1
which makes me suspect that you have an index on both users.email
and users.local.email
(The former being old and unused at the moment). Removing a field from a Mongoose model doesn't affect the database. Check with mydb.users.getIndexes()
if this is the case and manually remove the unwanted index with mydb.users.dropIndex(<name>)
.
Upvotes: 347
Reputation: 33
I had the same issue when i tried to modify the schema defined using mangoose. I think the issue is due to the reason that there are some underlying process done when creating a collection like describing the indices which are hidden from the user(at least in my case).So the best solution i found was to drop the entire collection and start again.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1077
I had the same issue. Tried debugging different ways couldn't figure out. I tried dropping the collection and it worked fine after that. Although this is not a good solution if your collection has many documents. But if you are in the early state of development try dropping the collection.
db.users.drop();
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 386
I faced similar issues , I Just clear the Indexes of particular fields then its works for me . https://docs.mongodb.com/v3.2/reference/method/db.collection.dropIndexes/
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 661
same issue after removing properties from a schema after first building some indexes on saving. removing property from schema leads to an null value for a non existing property, that still had an index. dropping index or starting with a new collection from scratch helps here.
note: the error message will lead you in that case. it has a path, that does not exist anymore. im my case the old path was ...$uuid_1 (this is an index!), but the new one is ....*priv.uuid_1
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 3570
I got this same issue when I had the following configuration in my config/models.js
module.exports.models = {
connection: 'mongodb',
migrate: 'alter'
}
Changing migrate from 'alter' to 'safe' fixed it for me.
module.exports.models = {
connection: 'mongodb',
migrate: 'safe'
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 8258
This is because there is already a collection with the same name with configuration..Just remove the collection from your mongodb through mongo shell and try again.
db.collectionName.remove()
now run your application it should work
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 13490
If you are still in your development environment, I would drop the entire db and start over with your new schema.
From the command line
➜ mongo
use dbName;
db.dropDatabase();
exit
Upvotes: 102
Reputation: 535
Check collection indexes.
I had that issue due to outdated indexes in collection for fields, which should be stored by different new path.
Mongoose adds index, when you specify field as unique.
Upvotes: 34
Reputation: 93
This is my relavant experience:
In 'User' schema, I set 'name' as unique key and then ran some execution, which I think had set up the database structure.
Then I changed the unique key as 'username', and no longer passed 'name' value when I saved data to database. So the mongodb may automatically set the 'name' value of new record as null which is duplicate key. I tried the set 'name' key as not unique key {name: {unique: false, type: String}}
in 'User' schema in order to override original setting. However, it did not work.
At last, I made my own solution:
Just set a random key value that will not likely be duplicate to 'name' key when you save your data record. Simply Math method '' + Math.random() + Math.random()
makes a random string.
Upvotes: 5