Provided by: libmongodb-perl_1.2.2-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       MongoDB::BulkWrite - MongoDB bulk write interface

VERSION

       version v1.2.2

SYNOPSIS

           use Safe::Isa;
           use Try::Tiny;

           my $bulk = $collection->initialize_ordered_bulk_op;

           $bulk->insert_one( $doc );
           $bulk->find( $query )->upsert->replace_one( $doc )
           $bulk->find( $query )->update( $modification )

           my $result = try {
               $bulk->execute;
           }
           catch {
               if ( $_->$isa("MongoDB::WriteConcernError") ) {
                   warn "Write concern failed";
               }
               else {
                   die $_;
               }
           };

DESCRIPTION

       This class constructs a list of write operations to perform in bulk for a single
       collection.  On a MongoDB 2.6 or later server with write command support this allow
       grouping similar operations together for transit to the database, minimizing network
       round-trips.

       To begin a bulk operation, use one these methods from MongoDB::Collection:

       •   initialize_ordered_bulk_op

       •   initialize_unordered_bulk_op

   Ordered Operations
       With an ordered operations list, MongoDB executes the write operations in the list
       serially. If an error occurs during the processing of one of the write operations, MongoDB
       will return without processing any remaining write operations in the list.

   Unordered Operations
       With an unordered operations list, MongoDB can execute in parallel, as well as in a
       nondeterministic order, the write operations in the list. If an error occurs during the
       processing of one of the write operations, MongoDB will continue to process remaining
       write operations in the list.

ATTRIBUTES

   collection (required)
       The MongoDB::Collection where the operations are to be performed.

   ordered (required)
       A boolean for whether or not operations should be ordered (true) or unordered (false).

   bypassDocumentValidation
       A boolean for whether or not operations should bypass document validation.  Default is
       false.

METHODS

   find
           $view = $bulk->find( $query_document );

       The "find" method returns a MongoDB::BulkWriteView object that allows write operations
       like "update" or "remove", constrained by a query document.

       A query document is required.  Use an empty hashref for no criteria:

           $bulk->find( {} )->remove; # remove all documents!

       An exception will be thrown on error.

   insert_one
           $bulk->insert_one( $doc );

       Queues a document for insertion when "execute" is called.  The document may be a hash
       reference, an array reference (with balanced key/value pairs) or a Tie::IxHash object.  If
       the document does not have an "_id" field, one will be added to the original.

       The method has an empty return on success; an exception will be thrown on error.

   execute
           my $result = $bulk->execute;

       Executes the queued operations.  The order and semantics depend on whether the bulk object
       is ordered or unordered:

       •   ordered — operations are executed in order, but operations of the same type (e.g.
           multiple inserts) may be grouped together and sent to the server.  If the server
           returns an error, the bulk operation will stop and an error will be thrown.

       •   unordered — operations are grouped by type and sent to the server in an unpredictable
           order.  After all operations are sent, if any errors occurred, an error will be
           thrown.

       When grouping operations of a type, operations will be sent to the server in batches not
       exceeding 16MiB or 1000 items (for a version 2.6 or later server) or individually (for
       legacy servers without write command support).

       This method returns a MongoDB::BulkWriteResult object if the bulk operation executes
       successfully.

       Typical errors might include:

       •   "MongoDB::WriteError" — one or more write operations failed

       •   "MongoDB::WriteConcernError" - all writes were accepted by a primary, but the write
           concern failed

       •   "MongoDB::DatabaseError" — a command to the database failed entirely

       See MongoDB::Error for more on error handling.

       NOTE: it is an error to call "execute" without any operations or to call "execute" more
       than once on the same bulk object.

AUTHORS

       •   David Golden <david@mongodb.com>

       •   Mike Friedman <friedo@friedo.com>

       •   Kristina Chodorow <k.chodorow@gmail.com>

       •   Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is Copyright (c) 2016 by MongoDB, Inc..

       This is free software, licensed under:

         The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004