CFMongoDB is both partial wrapper for the MongoDB Java driver and a document-struct mapper for ColdFusion. It attempts to remove the need for constant javacasting in your CFML when working with MongoDB. Additionally, there’s a simple DSL which provides ColdFusion developers the ability to easily search MongoDB document collections.
CFMongoDB works with Adobe ColdFusion 9.0.1+ and Railo 3.2+
As of August 20, 2011, collection.update(), collection.findAndModify(), and “sort” all introduced breaking changes!
They no longer wrap documents in {$set} automatically.
You will need to change your “update” documents like so:
old: {newField="hey"}
new: { “$set” = {newField="hey"} }
Sort must now be a structure… string support is no longer supported.
old: find(sort=“TS=-1”)
new: find(sort={"TS"=-1})
One of the most appealing aspects is that data can be created as a ColdFusion structure and persisted almost verbatim. Example:
<cfscript>
//save
col = mongo.getDBCollection( 'my_collection' );
my_struct = {
name = 'Orc #getTickCount()#'
foo = 'bar'
bar = 123
'tags'=[ 'cool', 'distributed', 'fast' ]
};
col.save( my_struct );
//query
result = col.query().startsWith('name','Orc').find(limit=20);
writeOutput("Found #result.size()# of #result.totalCount()# Orcs");
//use the native mongo cursor. it is case sensitive!
cursor = result.asCursor();
while( cursor.hasNext() ){
thisOrc = cursor.next();
writeOutput(" name = #thisOrc['name']# <br>");
}
//use a ColdFusion array of structs. this is not case sensitive
orcs = result.asArray();
for(orc in orcs){
writeOutput(" name = #orc.name# <br>");
}
</cfscript>
See examples/gettingstarted.cfm to start.
Additional examples are in the various subdirectories in examples/
Check out the wiki for additional info: http://wiki.github.com/marcesher/cfmongodb/
We have a Google group: http://groups.google.com/group/cfmongodb
Please limit conversations to MongoDB and ColdFusion. General MongoDB questions are best asked on the MongoDB group at http://groups.google.com/group/mongodb-user
Post issues to the github issue tracker for the project. Better: post fixes. Best: post fixes with unit tests.
Collaboration is welcome. Fork — Commit — Request a pull. For bug fixes and feature additions, commits with unit tests are much more likely to be accepted.
Code well.