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Mastering MongoDB 6.x

You're reading from   Mastering MongoDB 6.x Expert techniques to run high-volume and fault-tolerant database solutions using MongoDB 6.x

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803243863
Length 460 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Alex Giamas Alex Giamas
Author Profile Icon Alex Giamas
Alex Giamas
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1 – Basic MongoDB – Design Goals and Architecture
2. Chapter 1: MongoDB – A Database for the Modern Web FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Schema Design and Data Modeling 4. Part 2 – Querying Effectively
5. Chapter 3: MongoDB CRUD Operations 6. Chapter 4: Auditing 7. Chapter 5: Advanced Querying 8. Chapter 6: Multi-Document ACID Transactions 9. Chapter 7: Aggregation 10. Chapter 8: Indexing 11. Part 3 – Administration and Data Management
12. Chapter 9: Monitoring, Backup, and Security 13. Chapter 10: Managing Storage Engines 14. Chapter 11: MongoDB Tooling 15. Chapter 12: Harnessing Big Data with MongoDB 16. Part 4 – Scaling and High Availability
17. Chapter 13: Mastering Replication 18. Chapter 14: Mastering Sharding 19. Chapter 15: Fault Tolerance and High Availability 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Modeling data for atomic operations

MongoDB is relaxing many of the typical Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, and Durability (ACID) constraints found in RDBMS. The default operation mode does not support transactions, making it important to keep the state consistent across operations, especially in the event of failures.

Some operations are atomic at the document operation level:

  • update()
  • findandmodify()
  • remove()

These are all atomic (all-or-nothing) for a single document.

This means that, if we embed information in the same document, we can make sure they are always in sync.

An example would be an inventory application, with a document per item in our inventory. Every time a product is placed in a user’s shopping cart, we decrement the available_now value by one and append the userid value to the shopping_cart_by array.

With total_available = 5, available_now = 3, and shopping_cart_count = 2, this use case could look like the following:

...
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