Efficient paging in MongoDB using mgo

Unfortunately the mgo.v2 driver does not provide API calls to specify cursor.min().

But there is a solution. The mgo.Database type provides a Database.Run() method to run any MongoDB commands. The available commands and their documentation can be found here: Database commands

Starting with MongoDB 3.2, a new find command is available which can be used to execute queries, and it supports specifying the min argument that denotes the first index entry to start listing results from.

Good. What we need to do is after each batch (documents of a page) generate the min document from the last document of the query result, which must contain the values of the index entry that was used to execute the query, and then the next batch (the documents of the next page) can be acquired by setting this min index entry prior to executing the query.

This index entry –let’s call it cursor from now on– may be encoded to a string and sent to the client along with the results, and when the client wants the next page, he sends back the cursor saying he wants results starting after this cursor.

Doing it manually (the “hard” way)

The command to be executed can be in different forms, but the command name (find) must be first in the marshaled result, so we’ll use bson.D (which preserves order in contrast to bson.M):

limit := 10
cmd := bson.D{
    {Name: "find", Value: "users"},
    {Name: "filter", Value: bson.M{"country": "USA"}},
    {Name: "sort", Value: []bson.D{
        {Name: "name", Value: 1},
        {Name: "_id", Value: 1},
    },
    {Name: "limit", Value: limit},
    {Name: "batchSize", Value: limit},
    {Name: "singleBatch", Value: true},
}
if min != nil {
    // min is inclusive, must skip first (which is the previous last)
    cmd = append(cmd,
        bson.DocElem{Name: "skip", Value: 1},
        bson.DocElem{Name: "min", Value: min},
    )
}

The result of executing a MongoDB find command with Database.Run() can be captured with the following type:

var res struct {
    OK       int `bson:"ok"`
    WaitedMS int `bson:"waitedMS"`
    Cursor   struct {
        ID         interface{} `bson:"id"`
        NS         string      `bson:"ns"`
        FirstBatch []bson.Raw  `bson:"firstBatch"`
    } `bson:"cursor"`
}

db := session.DB("")
if err := db.Run(cmd, &res); err != nil {
    // Handle error (abort)
}

We now have the results, but in a slice of type []bson.Raw. But we want it in a slice of type []*User. This is where Collection.NewIter() comes handy. It can transform (unmarshal) a value of type []bson.Raw into any type we usually pass to Query.All() or Iter.All(). Good. Let’s see it:

firstBatch := res.Cursor.FirstBatch
var users []*User
err = db.C("users").NewIter(nil, firstBatch, 0, nil).All(&users)

We now have the users of the next page. Only one thing left: generating the cursor to be used to get the subsequent page should we ever need it:

if len(users) > 0 {
    lastUser := users[len(users)-1]
    cursorData := []bson.D{
        {Name: "country", Value: lastUser.Country},
        {Name: "name", Value: lastUser.Name},
        {Name: "_id", Value: lastUser.ID},
    }
} else {
    // No more users found, use the last cursor
}

This is all good, but how do we convert a cursorData to string and vice versa? We may use bson.Marshal() and bson.Unmarshal() combined with base64 encoding; the use of base64.RawURLEncoding will give us a web-safe cursor string, one that can be added to URL queries without escaping.

Here’s an example implementation:

// CreateCursor returns a web-safe cursor string from the specified fields.
// The returned cursor string is safe to include in URL queries without escaping.
func CreateCursor(cursorData bson.D) (string, error) {
    // bson.Marshal() never returns error, so I skip a check and early return
    // (but I do return the error if it would ever happen)
    data, err := bson.Marshal(cursorData)
    return base64.RawURLEncoding.EncodeToString(data), err
}

// ParseCursor parses the cursor string and returns the cursor data.
func ParseCursor(c string) (cursorData bson.D, err error) {
    var data []byte
    if data, err = base64.RawURLEncoding.DecodeString(c); err != nil {
        return
    }

    err = bson.Unmarshal(data, &cursorData)
    return
}

And we finally have our efficient, but not so short MongoDB mgo paging functionality. Read on…

Using github.com/icza/minquery (the “easy” way)

The manual way is quite lengthy; it can be made general and automated. This is where github.com/icza/minquery comes into the picture (disclosure: I’m the author). It provides a wrapper to configure and execute a MongoDB find command, allowing you to specify a cursor, and after executing the query, it gives you back the new cursor to be used to query the next batch of results. The wrapper is the MinQuery type which is very similar to mgo.Query but it supports specifying MongoDB’s min via the MinQuery.Cursor() method.

The above solution using minquery looks like this:

q := minquery.New(session.DB(""), "users", bson.M{"country" : "USA"}).
    Sort("name", "_id").Limit(10)
// If this is not the first page, set cursor:
// getLastCursor() represents your logic how you acquire the last cursor.
if cursor := getLastCursor(); cursor != "" {
    q = q.Cursor(cursor)
}

var users []*User
newCursor, err := q.All(&users, "country", "name", "_id")

And that’s all. newCursor is the cursor to be used to fetch the next batch.

Note #1: When calling MinQuery.All(), you have to provide the names of the cursor fields, this will be used to build the cursor data (and ultimately the cursor string) from.

Note #2: If you’re retrieving partial results (by using MinQuery.Select()), you have to include all the fields that are part of the cursor (the index entry) even if you don’t intend to use them directly, else MinQuery.All() will not have all the values of the cursor fields, and so it will not be able to create the proper cursor value.

Check out the package doc of minquery here: https://godoc.org/github.com/icza/minquery, it is rather short and hopefully clean.

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