Reputation: 412
I've been fighting with trying to get Mongoose to return data from my local MongoDB instance; I can run the same command in the MongoDB shell and I get results back. I have found a post on stackoverflow that talks about the exact problem I'm having here; I've followed the answers on this post but I still can't seem to get it working. I created a simple project to try and get something simple working and here's the code.
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;
var userSchema = new Schema({
userId: Number,
email: String,
password: String,
firstName: String,
lastName: String,
addresses: [
{
addressTypeId: Number,
address: String,
address2: String,
city: String,
state: String,
zipCode: String
}
],
website: String,
isEmailConfirmed: { type: Boolean, default: false },
isActive: { type: Boolean, default: true },
isLocked: { type: Boolean, default: false },
roles: [{ roleName: String }],
claims: [{ claimName: String, claimValue: String }]
});
var db = mongoose.connect('mongodb://127.0.0.1:27017/personalweb');
var userModel = mongoose.model('user', userSchema);
userModel.findOne({ email: '[email protected]' }, function (error, user) {
console.log("Error: " + error);
console.log("User: " + user);
});
And here is the response of the 2 console.log statements:
Error: null
User: null
When the connect method is called I see the connection being made to my Mongo instance but when the findOne command is issued nothing appears to happen. If I run the same command through the MongoDB shell I get the user record returned to me. Is there anything I'm doing wrong?
Thanks in advance.
Upvotes: 20
Views: 25940
Reputation: 39
I know 7 years pass, however I'm starting to develop in node JS with MongoDB using mongoose, so searching for solution to the same problem, result = null.
After read this post and all the answers, I release that I totally forget to include the DB name in the string of the connection, 'mongodb://localhost:27017/DB name'
so that solved my case. I guessed this can be help other clueless like me! :)
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 151072
Mongoose pluralizes the name of the model as it considers this good practice for a "collection" of things to be a pluralized name. This means that what you are currently looking for in code it a collection called "users" and not "user" as you might expect.
You can override this default behavior by specifying the specific name for the collection you want in the model definition:
var userModel = mongoose.model('user', userSchema, 'user');
The third argument there is the collection name to be used rather than what will be determined based on the model name.
Upvotes: 21