Provided by: libmongoc-doc_1.26.0-1.1ubuntu2_all bug

SYNOPSIS

          mongoc_cursor_t *
          mongoc_cursor_new_from_command_reply_with_opts (mongoc_client_t *client,
                                                          bson_t *reply,
                                                          const bson_t *opts);

PARAMETERS

client: A mongoc_client_t.

       • reply:  The  reply to a command, such as "aggregate", "find", or "listCollections", that
         returns     a     cursor     document.     The      reply      is      destroyed      by
         mongoc_cursor_new_from_command_reply_with_opts and must not be accessed afterward.

       • opts: A bson_t.

       opts  may  be NULL or a BSON document with additional options, which have the same meaning
       for this function as for mongoc_collection_find_with_opts():

       • awaitDatabatchSizelimitmaxAwaitTimeMSserverIdsessionIdskiptailable

DESCRIPTION

       Some MongoDB commands return a  "cursor"  document.  For  example,  given  an  "aggregate"
       command:

          { "aggregate" : "collection", "pipeline" : [], "cursor" : {}}

       The server replies:

          {
             "cursor" : {
                "id" : 1234,
                "ns" : "db.collection",
                "firstBatch" : [ ]
             },
             "ok" : 1
          }

       mongoc_cursor_new_from_command_reply_with_opts  is a low-level function that initializes a
       mongoc_cursor_t from such a reply.

       When synthesizing a completed cursor response that has no more batches (i.e.  with  cursor
       id  0),  serverId  may  be  0. If the cursor response is not completed (i.e. with non-zero
       cursor id), pass the serverId of the server used to create the cursor.

       Use this function only for building a language  driver  that  wraps  the  C  Driver.  When
       writing  applications  in  C, higher-level functions such as mongoc_collection_aggregate()
       are more appropriate, and ensure compatibility with a range of MongoDB versions.

RETURNS

       A mongoc_cursor_t. On  failure,  the  cursor's  error  is  set.  Check  for  failure  with
       mongoc_cursor_error().

AUTHOR

       MongoDB, Inc

COPYRIGHT

       2017-present, MongoDB, Inc

1.26.0                                     Mar 3MONGOC4CURSOR_NEW_FROM_COMMAND_REPLY_WITH_OPTS(3)