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What's New in Mongoose 5.7?

Mongoose 5.7.0 was released on September 9 and is packed with new features. One major highlight is that Mongoose 5.7 supports the newly released MongoDB 4.2, which means transactions on sharded clusters. In this article, I'll cover two other major improvements: conditionally immutable properties and much faster document arrays.

Conditionally Immutable Properties

Mongoose 5.6 introduced immutable properties, which are properties that cannot change after the document is stored in the database.

const Model = mongoose.model('Test', new Schema({
 createdById: {
   type: Number,
   immutable: true // Mark `createdById` as immutable
 }
}));

const doc = await Model.create({ createdById: 1 });

// Trying to modify createdById is a no-op
doc.createdById = 2;
doc.createdById; // 1
await doc.save(); // Doesn't change createdById

// Also does nothing since createdById is immutable
await Model.updateOne({}, { createdById: 2 });

However, immutability in Mongoose 5.6 was all or nothing: either a property was immutable for all instances of a model, or it wasn't. With Mongoose 5.7, you can set the immutable option to a function that takes the document as a parameter. For example, this means you can make a field immutable based on a user's role:

// Only an admin can modify the number of credits they have
const User = mongoose.model('User', new Schema({
 numCredits: {
   type: Number,
   default: 0,
   immutable: doc => doc.role !== 'ADMIN'
 },
 role: {
   type: String,
   default: 'USER',
   enum: ['USER', 'MODERATOR', 'ADMIN'],
   immutable: true
 }
}));

const user1 = await Model.create({ role: 'USER' });
user1.set({ numCredits: 25 });
user1.numCredits; // 0

const user2 = await Model.create({ role: 'ADMIN' });
user2.set({ numCredits: 25 });
user2.numCredits; // 25

Faster Document Arrays

In Mongoose 5.6.0, we overhauled Mongoose's array class to use ES6 array inheritance as opposed to mixins. In some rudimentary benchmarks this resulted in a 20% performance improvement. This change was long overdue: ES6 introduced the ability to subclass the built-in Array class, which enables faster custom array classes. In Mongoose 5.7.0, we refactored the document array class to use ES6 array inheritance as well.

For example, consider the below script that creates a document array with 100 elements, each with 5 keys, 5000 times.

'use strict';

const mongoose = require('mongoose');

const subdocs = 100;
const reps = 5000;

const SubdocSchema = mongoose.Schema({ a: String, b: String, c: String, d: String, e: String });
const Schema = mongoose.Schema({ name: String, subdocs: { type: [SubdocSchema] } });
const Model = mongoose.model('Test', Schema);
const data = {
 _id: new mongoose.Types.ObjectId(),
 name: 'test',
 subdocs: Array(subdocs).fill({a: 'a', b: 'b', c: 'c', d: 'd', e: 'e' })
};
const model = new Model();

for (let i = 0; i < reps; i++) {
 model.init(data);
}

Mongoose 5.7 is about 35% faster than Mongoose 5.6 on the above script.

$ npm install mongoose@5.6

real   0m10.878s
user   0m11.444s
sys   0m0.293s
$
$ npm install mongoose@5.7

  • mongoose@5.7.0 added 1 package, removed 1 package and updated 1 package in 0.648s $ $ time node test.js

real   0m6.940s
user   0m7.087s
sys   0m0.053s
$

Moving On

Conditionally immutable properties and faster document arrays are just 2 of the 9 new improvements and features in Mongoose 5.7.0. We also introduced MongoDB 4.2 support, middleware for query validation, and a Query#get() function. Make sure you upgrade to take advantage of all the new features!

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