Book Image

Mastering MongoDB 4.x - Second Edition

By : Alex Giamas
Book Image

Mastering MongoDB 4.x - Second Edition

By: Alex Giamas

Overview of this book

MongoDB is the best platform for working with non-relational data and is considered to be the smartest tool for organizing data in line with business needs. The recently released MongoDB 4.x supports ACID transactions and makes the technology an asset for enterprises across the IT and fintech sectors. This book provides expertise in advanced and niche areas of managing databases (such as modeling and querying databases) along with various administration techniques in MongoDB, thereby helping you become a successful MongoDB expert. The book helps you understand how the newly added capabilities function with the help of some interesting examples and large datasets. You will dive deeper into niche areas such as high-performance configurations, optimizing SQL statements, configuring large-scale sharded clusters, and many more. You will also master best practices in overcoming database failover, and master recovery and backup procedures for database security. By the end of the book, you will have gained a practical understanding of administering database applications both on premises and on the cloud; you will also be able to scale database applications across all servers.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Basic MongoDB – Design Goals and Architecture
4
Section 2: Querying Effectively
10
Section 3: Administration and Data Management
15
Section 4: Scaling and High Availability

Summary

In this chapter, we dived deep into the aggregation framework. We discussed why and when we should use aggregation as opposed to simply using MapReduce or querying the database. We went through the vast array of options and functionalities for aggregation.

We discussed the aggregation stages and the various operators, such as Boolean operators, comparison operators, set operators, array operators, date operators, string operators, expression arithmetic operators, aggregation accumulators, conditional expressions, and variables, and the literal parsing data type operators.

Using the Ethereum use case, we went through aggregation with working code and learned how to approach an engineering problem to solve it.

Finally, we learned about the limitation that the aggregation framework currently has and when to avoid it.

In the next chapter, we will move on to the topic of indexing...