Provided by: libmongodb-perl_0.702.1+ds-1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       MongoDB::DataTypes - The data types used with MongoDB

VERSION

       version 0.702.1

DESCRIPTION

       This goes over the types you can save to the database and use for queries in the Perl
       driver.  If you are using another language, please refer to that language's documentation
       (<http://api.mongodb.org>).

NOTES FOR SQL PROGRAMMERS

   You must query for data using the correct type.
       For example, it is perfectly valid to have some records where the field "foo" is 123
       (integer) and other records where "foo" is "123" (string).  Thus, you must query for the
       correct type.  If you save "{"foo" => "123"}", you cannot query for it with "{"foo" =>
       123}".  MongoDB is strict about types.

       If the type of a field is ambiguous and important to your application, you should document
       what you expect the application to send to the database and convert your data to those
       types before sending.  There are some object-document mappers that will enforce certain
       types for certain fields for you.

       You generally shouldn't save numbers as strings, as they will behave like strings (e.g.,
       range queries won't work correctly) and the data will take up more space.  If you set
       "looks_like_number" in MongoDB::BSON, the driver will automatically convert everything
       that looks like a number to a number before sending it to the database.

       Numbers are the only exception to the strict typing: all number types stored by MongoDB
       (32-bit integers, 64-bit integers, 64-bit floating point numbers) will match each other.

TYPES

   Numbers
       By default, numbers with a decimal point will be saved as doubles (64-bit).

       32-bit Platforms

       Numbers without decimal points will be saved as 32-bit integers.  To save a number as a
       64-bit integer, use bigint:

           use bigint;

           $collection->insert({"user_id" => 28347197234178})

       The driver will die if you try to insert a number beyond the signed 64-bit range:
       -9,223,372,036,854,775,808 to +9,223,372,036,854,775,807.

       Numbers that are saved as 64-bit integers will be decoded as doubles.

       64-bit Platforms

       Numbers without a decimal point will be saved and returned as 64-bit integers.  Note that
       there is no way to save a 32-bit int on a 64-bit machine.

       Keep in mind that this can cause some weirdness to ensue if some machines are 32-bit and
       others are 64-bit.  Take the following example:

       •   Programmer 1 saves an int on a 32-bit platform.

       •   Programmer 2 retrieves the document on a 64-bit platform and re-saves it, effectively
           converting it to a 64-bit int.

       •   Programmer 1 retrieves the document on their 32-bit machine, which decodes the 64-bit
           int as a double.

       Nothing drastic, but good to be aware of.

       64-bit integers in the shell

       The Mongo shell has one numeric type: the 8-byte float.  This means that it cannot always
       represent an 8-byte integer exactly.  Thus, when you display a 64-bit integer in the
       shell, it will be wrapped in a subobject that indicates it might be an approximate value.
       For instance, if we run this Perl on a 64-bit machine:

           $coll->insert({_id => 1});

       then look at it in the shell, we see:

           > db.whatever.findOne()
           {
               "_id" :
                   {
                       "floatApprox" : 1
                   }
           }

       This doesn't mean that we saved a float, it just means that the float value of a 64-bit
       integer may not be exact.

       Dealing with numbers and strings in Perl

       Perl is very flexible about whether something is number or a string: it generally infers
       the type from context.  Unfortunately, the driver doesn't have any context when it has to
       choose how to serialize a variable.  Therefore, the default behavior is to introspect the
       flags that are set on that variable and decide what the user meant, which are generally
       affected by the last operation.

           my $var = "4";
           # stored as the string "4"
           $collection->insert({myVar => $var});

           $var = int($var) if (int($var) eq $var);
           # stored as the int 4
           $collection->insert({myVar => $var});

       Because of this, users often find that they end up with more strings than they wanted in
       their database.

       If you would like to have everything that looks like a number saved as a number, set the
       "looks_like_number" in MongoDB::BSON option.

           $MongoDB::BSON::looks_like_number = 1;

           my $var = "4";
           # stored as the int 4
           $collection->insert({myVar => $var});

       This will send anything that "looks like" a number as a number.  It can recognize anything
       that Scalar::Util's "looks_like_number" function can recognize.

       On the other hand, sometimes there is data that looks like a number but should be saved as
       a string.  For example, suppose we were storing zip codes.  If we wanted to generally
       convert strings to numbers, we might have something like:

           $MongoDB::BSON::looks_like_number = 1;

           # zip is stored as an int: 4101
           $collection->insert({city => "Portland", "zip" => "04101"});

       To force a "number" to be saved as a string with aggressive number conversion on, bless
       the string as a "MongoDB::BSON::String" type:

           my $z = "04101";
           my $zip = bless(\$z, "MongoDB::BSON::String");

           # zip is stored as "04101"
           $collection->insert({city => "Portland",
               zip => bless(\$zip, "MongoDB::BSON::String")});

       Additionally, there are two utility functions, "force_int" and c<force_double>, to
       explicitly set Perl's internal type flags to Integer ("IV") and Double ("NV")
       respectively, thus triggering MongoDB's recognition of the values as Int32/Int64
       (depending on the platform) or Double:

           my $x = 1.0;
           MongoDB::force_int($x);
           $coll->insert({x => $x}); # Inserts an integer

           MongoDB::force_double($x);
           $coll->insert({x => $x}); # Inserts a double

   Strings
       All strings must be valid UTF-8 to be sent to the database.  If a string is not valid, it
       will not be saved.  If you need to save a non-UTF-8 string, you can save it as a binary
       blob (see the Binary Data section below).

       All strings returned from the database have the UTF-8 flag set.

       Unfortunately, due to Perl weirdness, UTF-8 is not very pretty.  For example, suppose we
       have a UTF-8 string:

           my $str = 'Aaland Islands';

       Now, let's print it:

           print "$str\n";

       You can see in the output:

           "\x{c5}land Islands"

       Lovely, isn't it?  This is how Perl prints UTF-8.  To make it "pretty," there are a couple
       options:

           my $pretty_str = utf8::encode($str);

       This, unintuitively, clears the UTF-8 flag.

       You can also just run

           binmode STDOUT, ':utf8';

       and then the string (and all future UTF-8 strings) will print "correctly."

       You can also turn off $MongoDB::BSON::utf_flag_on, and the UTF-8 flag will not be set when
       strings are decoded:

           $MongoDB::BSON::utf8_flag_on = 0;

   Arrays
       Arrays must be saved as array references ("\@foo", not @foo).

   Embedded Documents
       Embedded documents are of the same form as top-level documents: either hash references or
       Tie::IxHashs.

   Dates
       The DateTime or DateTime::Tiny packages can be used to insert and query for dates. Dates
       stored in the database will be returned as instances of one of these classes, depending on
       the "dt_type" setting of the connection:

           $conn->dt_type( 'DateTime::Tiny' );

       An example of storing and retrieving a date:

           use DateTime;

           my $now = DateTime->now;
           $collection->insert({'ts' => $now});

           my $obj = $collection->find_one;
           print "Today is ".$obj->{'ts'}->ymd."\n";

       An example of querying for a range of dates:

           my $start = DateTime->from_epoch( epoch => 100000 );
           my $end = DateTime->from_epoch( epoch => 500000 );

           my $cursor = $collection->query({event => {'$gt' => $start, '$lt' => $end}});

       Warning: creating Perl DateTime objects is extremely slow.  Consider saving dates as
       numbers or "DateTime::Tiny" objects and converting the numbers to DateTimes only when
       needed.  A single DateTime field can make deserialization up to 10 times slower.

       For example, you could use the time function to store seconds since the epoch:

           $collection->update($criteria, {'$set' => {"last modified" => time()}})

       This will be faster to deserialize.

       Note that (at least, as of "DateTime::Tiny" version 1.04) there is no time-zone attribute
       for "DateTime::Tiny" objects.  We therefore consider all such times to be in the "UTC"
       time zone.  Likewise, "DateTime::Tiny" has no notion of milliseconds (yet?), so the
       milliseconds portion of the datetime will be set to zero.

   Regular Expressions
       Use "qr/.../" to use a regular expression in a query:

           my $cursor = $collection->query({"name" => qr/[Jj]oh?n/});

       Regular expressions will match strings saved in the database.

       You can also save and retrieve regular expressions themselves:

           $collection->insert({"regex" => qr/foo/i});
           $obj = $collection->find_one;
           if ("FOO" =~ $obj->{'regex'}) { # matches
               print "hooray\n";
           }

       Note for Perl 5.8 users: flags are lost when regular expressions are retrieved from the
       database (this does not affect queries or Perl 5.10+).

   Booleans
       Use the boolean package to get boolean values.  "boolean::true" and "boolean::false" are
       the only parts of the package used, currently.

       An example of inserting boolean values:

           use boolean;

           $collection->insert({"okay" => true, "name" => "fred"});

       An example using boolean values for query operators (only returns documents where the name
       field exists):

           my $cursor = $collection->query({"name" => {'$exists' => boolean::true}});

       Most of the time, you can just use 1 or 0 instead of "true" and "false", such as for
       specifying fields to return.  boolean is the only way to save booleans to the database,
       though.

       By default, booleans are returned from the database as integers.  To return booleans as
       booleans, set $MongoDB::BSON::use_boolean to 1.

   MongoDB::OID
       "OID" stands for "Object ID", and is a unique id that is automatically added to documents
       if they do not already have an "_id" field before they are saved to the database.  They
       are 12 bytes which are guarenteed to be unique.  Their string form is a 24-character
       string of hexidecimal digits.

       To create a unique id:

           my $oid = MongoDB::OID->new;

       To create a MongoDB::OID from an existing 24-character hexidecimal string:

           my $oid = MongoDB::OID->new("value" => "123456789012345678901234");

   Binary Data
       By default, all database strings are UTF8.  To save images, binaries, and other non-UTF8
       data, you need to store it as binary data.  There are two ways to do this.

       String Refs

       In general, you can pass the string as a reference.  For example:

           # non-utf8 string
           my $string = "\xFF\xFE\xFF";

           $collection->insert({"photo" => \$string});

       This will save the variable as binary data, bypassing the UTF8 check.

       Binary data can be matched exactly by the database, so this query will match the object we
       inserted above:

           $collection->find({"photo" => \$string});

       MongoDB::BSON::Binary type

       You can also use the MongoDB::BSON::Binary class.  This allows you to preserve the subtype
       of your data.  Binary data in MongoDB stores a "type" field, which can be any integer
       between 0 and 255.  Identical data will only match if the subtype is the same.

       Perl uses the default subtype of "SUBTYPE_GENERIC".

       The driver defaults to returning binary data as strings, not instances of
       MongoDB::BSON::Binary (or even string references) for backwards compatibility reasons.  If
       you need to round-trip binary data, set the "MongoDB::BSON::use_binary" flag:

           $MongoDB::BSON::use_binary = 1;

       Comparisons (e.g., $gt, $lt) may not work as you expect with binary data, so it is worth
       experimenting.

   MongoDB::Code
       MongoDB::Code is used to represent JavaScript code and, optionally, scope.  To create one:

           use MongoDB::Code;

           my $code = MongoDB::Code->new("code" => "function() { return 'hello, world'; }");

       Or, with a scope:

           my $code = MongoDB::Code->new("code" => "function() { return 'hello, '+name; }",
               "scope" => {"name" => "Fred"});

       Which would then return "hello, Fred" when run.

   MongoDB::MinKey
       "MongoDB::MinKey" is "less than" any other value of any type.  This can be useful for
       always returning certain documents first (or last).

       "MongoDB::MinKey" has no methods, fields, or string form.  To create one, it is sufficient
       to say:

           bless $minKey, "MongoDB::MinKey";

   MongoDB::MaxKey
       "MongoDB::MaxKey" is "greater than" any other value of any type.  This can be useful for
       always returning certain documents last (or first).

       "MongoDB::MaxKey" has no methods, fields, or string form.  To create one, it is sufficient
       to say:

           bless $minKey, "MongoDB::MaxKey";

   MongoDB::Timestamp
           my $ts = MongoDB::Timestamp->new({sec => $seconds, inc => $increment});

       Timestamps are used internally by MongoDB's replication.  You can see them in their
       natural habitat by querying "local.main.$oplog".  Each entry looks something like:

           { "ts" : { "t" : 1278872990000, "i" : 1 }, "op" : "n", "ns" : "", "o" : { } }

       In the shell, timestamps are shown in milliseconds, although they are stored as seconds.
       So, to represent this document in Perl, we would do:

           my $oplog = {
               "ts" => MongoDB::Timestamp->new("sec" => 1278872990, "inc" => 1),
               "op" => "n",
               "ns" => "",
               "o" => {}
           }

       Timestamps are not dates.  You should not use them unless you are doing something low-
       level with replication.  To save dates or times, use a number, DateTime object, or
       DateTime::Tiny object.

AUTHORS

       •   Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>

       •   Kristina Chodorow <kristina@mongodb.org>

       •   Mike Friedman <mike.friedman@10gen.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is Copyright (c) 2013 by 10gen, Inc..

       This is free software, licensed under:

         The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004

POD ERRORS

       Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below:

       Around line 203:
           Non-ASCII character seen before =encoding in ''Aaland'. Assuming UTF-8