I have two collections, as follows:
db.ships
document format: { mmsi: Long, …some other fields }
indexes: { {mmsi: 1}, {unique: true} }
db.navUpdates
document format: { mmsi: Long, time: ISODate, …some other fields }
indexes: { mmsi: 1 }, { time: 1 }
For each document within db.ships, I need to find the most recent document within db.navUpdates that matches by mmsi. I cannot use _id to find most recent as documents are not necessarily entered in chronological (as defined by timestamp time) order.
E.g.:
ship document:
{ mmsi: 12345 }
navUpdate documents:
{ mmsi: 12345, time: ISODate("2012-09-19T12:00:00.000Z") }
{ mmsi: 12345, time: ISODate("2012-09-18T12:00:00.000Z") }
{ mmsi: 54321, time: ISODate("2012-09-19T12:00:00.000Z") }
So for the ship with mmsi:12345, the most recent navUpdate is the first document in the list above, with time:ISODate("2012-09-19T12:00:00.000Z").
I tried the following mongo shell script, but it’s incredibly slow (multiple seconds for just 10 queries), and messages appearing on the server indicate I’m missing an index.
db.ships.find().limit(10).forEach(function(ship) {
var n = db.navUpdates.find({mmsi:ship.mmsi}).count();
if (n==0) { return; }
var t = db.navUpdates.find({mmsi:ship.mmsi}).sort({time:-1}).limit(1)[0].time;
print(t);
});
Why is this query so slow? I tried adding a {time: -1} index to navUpdate, thinking perhaps the sort({time: -1}) might be the culprit, but still no improvement.
Also, can this query be optimized? I have the count() call in there because there are some ship documents whose mmsis are not found within navUpdates.
A single query can only use one index, so you should add a compound index of
{ mmsi: 1, time: -1 }tonavUpdatesthat can be used for both your find and sort needs.Then use
.explain()to determine if your indexes are being used in your queries.