This project provides a very simple plugin for Play 2.1 that allows easy access of mongo-jackson-mapper wrapped connections to MongoDB. MongoDB Jackson Mapper is a lightweight POJO mapper that uses Jackson to serialise/deserialise MongoDB documents. Because it uses Jackson, with bson4jackson to parse responses, it is fast, very flexible and performant. It provides most of the same CRUB methods that the MongoDB Java driver provides, plus a more convenient query and updating interface.
For any questions, please use the MongoDB Jackson Mapper users mailing list.
Add the following dependency to your dependencies:
"net.vz.mongodb.jackson" %% "play-mongo-jackson-mapper" % "1.1.0"
for example, in Build.scala
:
val appDependencies = Seq(
"net.vz.mongodb.jackson" %% "play-mongo-jackson-mapper" % "1.1.0"
)
import org.codehaus.jackson.annotate.JsonProperty
import reflect.BeanProperty
import javax.persistence.Id
import play.api.Play.current
import play.modules.mongodb.jackson.MongoDB
import scala.collection.JavaConversions._
class BlogPost(@ObjectId @Id val id: String,
@BeanProperty @JsonProperty("date") val date: Date,
@BeanProperty @JsonProperty("title") val title: String,
@BeanProperty @JsonProperty("author") val author: String,
@BeanProperty @JsonProperty("content") val content: String,
@BeanProperty @JsonProperty("comments") val comments: List[Comment]) {
@ObjectId @Id def getId = id;
}
object BlogPost {
private lazy val db = MongoDB.collection("blogposts", classOf[BlogPost], classOf[String])
def save(blogPost: BlogPost) { db.save(blogPost) }
def findById(id: String) = Option(db.findOneById(id))
def findByAuthor(author: String) = db.find().is("author", author).asScala
}
A few notes:
MongoDB.collection
has an implicitApplication
argument. The easiest way to ensure you have an implicitApplication
available is to importplay.api.Play.current
. Alternatively, usegetCollection
, and the current application will automatically be used.- MongoDB requires ids to have the name
_id
, however, Scala won't let you annotate a field that starts with an underscore as@BeanProperty
. The simplest solution is to use the@Id
annotation, but then you also need to provide your own getter, otherwise when you serialise it, Jackson won't know that theid
field should be serialised as@Id
. - The reason each property needs to be
@JsonProperty
annotated is that the JVM doesn't allow putting method parameter names into bytecode, so Jackson can't reflect on the constructor to find out which argument is for which field. - Queries are returned as Java iterables, so you probably want to convert them to Scala iterables.
- Returning single results as an
Option
allows more idiomatic use of the result.
# Configure the database name
mongodb.database=databasename
# Configure credentials
mongodb.credentials="user:pass"
# Configure the servers
mongodb.servers=host1.example.com:27017,host2.example.com,host3.example.com:19999
# Configure a custom ObjectMapper to use
mongodb.objectMapperConfigurer=foo.bar.MyObjectMapperConfigurer
The database name defaults to play. The servers defaults to localhost. Specifying a port number is optional, it defaults to the default MongoDB port. If you specify one server, MongoDB will be used as a single server, if you specify multiple, it will be used as a replica set.
If you specify an object mapper configurer, it must be a class with a noarg constructor that implements the trait ObjectMapperConfigurer
. This trait has two methods, one for configuring the global object mapper that will be used for all collections, and another for configuring object mappers per collection. An example implementation might look like this:
class MyObjectMapperConfigurer extends ObjectMapperConfigurer {
def configure(defaultMapper: ObjectMapper) =
defaultMapper.configure(DeserializationConfig.Feature.FAIL_ON_UNKNOWN_PROPERTIES, false)
def configure(globalMapper: ObjectMapper, collectionName: String, objectType: Class[_], keyType: Class[_]) = {
if (collectionName == "something") {
// Because object mapper is mutable, and doesn't provide a simple way to just copy it's configuration, if
// you want to configure one for a specific collection, you probably have to create a new one from scratch.
val mapper = configure(MongoJacksonMapperModule.configure(new ObjectMapper).withModule(new DefaultScalaModule))
return mapper.configure(DeserializationConfig.Feature.ACCEPT_SINGLE_VALUE_AS_ARRAY, true)
}
return globalMapper
}
}
For documentation on how to use the Mongo Jackson Mapper itself, please visit the Mongo Jackson Mapper site. In particular, the tutorial might be a good place to start.
- Manages lifecycle of MongoDB connection pool
- Caches JacksonDBCollection instances, so looking up a JacksonDBCollection is cheap
- Configures Jackson to use the FasterXML
DefaultScalaModule
, so scala mapping works out of the box. - Allows configuring a custom object mapper