Provider to fetch data from a MongoDb instance. It can access any database/collection on your instance by assigning the id
route-parameter a delimited value in the form of database-name::collection-name
.
As per MongoDB specifications, each document/record in your dataset will have a unique-identifier, _id
. At insert time, you can choose to assign this value manually, or allow Mongo to generate it automatically. In terms of your provider metadata, this means that you could always use _id
as the value of your provider's idField
(an attribute used to flag which GeoJSON property is the unique-identifier).
If your data has a geometry, you should consider using geospatial index. While not necessary, it will likely speed any queries including a geometry operation.
Register the provider with Koop:
const Koop = require('@koopjs/koop-core');
const koop = new Koop({ logLevel: 'info'});
const mongoProvider = require('@koopjs/provider-mongodb');
koop.register(mongoProvider, { connnectString, databases });
The provider can be configured with registration options or the use of the config
module with an entry key "mongodb"
in the JSON configuration document. See below, for an example of using the config
approach
A MongoDB connection string, e.g., mongodb://localhost:27017
.
A key/value populated object that serves as a metadata lookup/dictionary for any database/collection on your MongoDB instance that you wish to provide access. For example, if imagine you have a database called db1
and it has a collection called my-collection
. You can set up the databases
object so as to provide metadata for my-collection
:
{
db1: {
'my-collection': {
geometryField: 'location', // field holding a record's GeoJSON geometry.
idField: '_id', // field to treat as the unique-id. Default: `_id`.
cacheTtl: 0, // number of seconds to cache results from MongoDb. Default: 0.
crs: 4326, // Coordinate reference system of geometry. Default: 4326.
maxRecordCount: 2000, // Max number of records to return in a page. Default: 2000.
}
}
}
Note that for each collection, you may configure the options above. If you do not assign a field to geometryField
, the collection will be treated like tabular data, and the GeoJSON generated will have no geometry,
This setting determines if the database/collection must appear in the databases
parameter to be accessed. Defaults to true
.
Koop allows providers to use the config
module. The settings above can be stored in a config JSON under the key mongodb
:
{
"mongodb": {
"connectString": "mongodb://localhost:27017",
"databases": {
"cdf-sample-data": {
"fires": {
"geometryField": "location",
"idField": "_id",
"cacheTtl": 0,
"crs": 4326,
"maxRecordCount": 2000
}
}
}
}
}
Once registered with Koop, the provide will expose routes with an id
parameter. For example:
/mongodb/rest/services/:id/FeatureServer
The id
parameter should be filled with a ::
delimited string with the target <database>::<collection>
. For example, a request like:
/mongodb/rest/services/sample-db::fires/FeatureServer/0/query
would return records from the fires
collection in the sample-db
database.
The repository includes a demonstration project. To run the demo you will need Docker installed on your computer. Once installed you can following the steps below to create a local Elastic instance and load it with sample data:
> npm install
> cd demo
# use Docker to run Elastic/Kibana
> docker-compose up -d
# load sample data; this will create an MongoDB database called "sample-data' with a collection named "fires"
> node loader.js
# start the Koop application
> node index.js