Aggregation Framework Examples#
This document provides a number of practical examples that display the capabilities of the aggregation framework.
The Aggregations using the Zip Codes Data Set examples uses a publicly available data set of all zipcodes and populations in the United States. These data are available at: zips.json.
Requirements#
Let’s check if everything is installed.
Use the following command to load zips.json data set into mongod instance:
$ mongoimport --drop -d test -c zipcodes zips.json
Let’s use the MongoDB shell to verify that everything was imported successfully.
$ mongo test
connecting to: test
> db.zipcodes.count()
29467
> db.zipcodes.findOne()
{
"_id" : "35004",
"city" : "ACMAR",
"loc" : [
-86.51557,
33.584132
],
"pop" : 6055,
"state" : "AL"
}
Aggregations using the Zip Codes Data Set#
Each document in this collection has the following form:
{
"_id" : "35004",
"city" : "Acmar",
"state" : "AL",
"pop" : 6055,
"loc" : [-86.51557, 33.584132]
}
In these documents:
The
_id
field holds the zipcode as a string.The
city
field holds the city name.The
state
field holds the two letter state abbreviation.The
pop
field holds the population.The
loc
field holds the location as a[latitude, longitude]
array.
States with Populations Over 10 Million#
To get all states with a population greater than 10 million, use the following aggregation pipeline:
#include <mongoc/mongoc.h>
#include <stdio.h>
static void
print_pipeline (mongoc_collection_t *collection)
{
mongoc_cursor_t *cursor;
bson_error_t error;
const bson_t *doc;
bson_t *pipeline;
char *str;
pipeline = BCON_NEW ("pipeline",
"[",
"{",
"$group",
"{",
"_id",
"$state",
"total_pop",
"{",
"$sum",
"$pop",
"}",
"}",
"}",
"{",
"$match",
"{",
"total_pop",
"{",
"$gte",
BCON_INT32 (10000000),
"}",
"}",
"}",
"]");
cursor = mongoc_collection_aggregate (
collection, MONGOC_QUERY_NONE, pipeline, NULL, NULL);
while (mongoc_cursor_next (cursor, &doc)) {
str = bson_as_canonical_extended_json (doc, NULL);
printf ("%s\n", str);
bson_free (str);
}
if (mongoc_cursor_error (cursor, &error)) {
fprintf (stderr, "Cursor Failure: %s\n", error.message);
}
mongoc_cursor_destroy (cursor);
bson_destroy (pipeline);
}
int
main (void)
{
mongoc_client_t *client;
mongoc_collection_t *collection;
const char *uri_string =
"mongodb://localhost:27017/?appname=aggregation-example";
mongoc_uri_t *uri;
bson_error_t error;
mongoc_init ();
uri = mongoc_uri_new_with_error (uri_string, &error);
if (!uri) {
fprintf (stderr,
"failed to parse URI: %s\n"
"error message: %s\n",
uri_string,
error.message);
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
client = mongoc_client_new_from_uri (uri);
if (!client) {
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
mongoc_client_set_error_api (client, 2);
collection = mongoc_client_get_collection (client, "test", "zipcodes");
print_pipeline (collection);
mongoc_uri_destroy (uri);
mongoc_collection_destroy (collection);
mongoc_client_destroy (client);
mongoc_cleanup ();
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
You should see a result like the following:
{ "_id" : "PA", "total_pop" : 11881643 }
{ "_id" : "OH", "total_pop" : 10847115 }
{ "_id" : "NY", "total_pop" : 17990455 }
{ "_id" : "FL", "total_pop" : 12937284 }
{ "_id" : "TX", "total_pop" : 16986510 }
{ "_id" : "IL", "total_pop" : 11430472 }
{ "_id" : "CA", "total_pop" : 29760021 }
The above aggregation pipeline is build from two pipeline operators: $group
and $match
.
The $group
pipeline operator requires _id field where we specify grouping; remaining fields specify how to generate composite value and must use one of the group aggregation functions: $addToSet
, $first
, $last
, $max
, $min
, $avg
, $push
, $sum
. The $match
pipeline operator syntax is the same as the read operation query syntax.
The $group
process reads all documents and for each state it creates a separate document, for example:
{ "_id" : "WA", "total_pop" : 4866692 }
The total_pop
field uses the $sum aggregation function to sum the values of all pop fields in the source documents.
Documents created by $group
are piped to the $match
pipeline operator. It returns the documents with the value of total_pop
field greater than or equal to 10 million.
Average City Population by State#
To get the first three states with the greatest average population per city, use the following aggregation:
pipeline = BCON_NEW ("pipeline", "[",
"{", "$group", "{", "_id", "{", "state", "$state", "city", "$city", "}", "pop", "{", "$sum", "$pop", "}", "}", "}",
"{", "$group", "{", "_id", "$_id.state", "avg_city_pop", "{", "$avg", "$pop", "}", "}", "}",
"{", "$sort", "{", "avg_city_pop", BCON_INT32 (-1), "}", "}",
"{", "$limit", BCON_INT32 (3) "}",
"]");
This aggregate pipeline produces:
{ "_id" : "DC", "avg_city_pop" : 303450.0 }
{ "_id" : "FL", "avg_city_pop" : 27942.29805615551 }
{ "_id" : "CA", "avg_city_pop" : 27735.341099720412 }
The above aggregation pipeline is build from three pipeline operators: $group
, $sort
and $limit
.
The first $group
operator creates the following documents:
{ "_id" : { "state" : "WY", "city" : "Smoot" }, "pop" : 414 }
Note, that the $group
operator can’t use nested documents except the _id
field.
The second $group
uses these documents to create the following documents:
{ "_id" : "FL", "avg_city_pop" : 27942.29805615551 }
These documents are sorted by the avg_city_pop
field in descending order. Finally, the $limit
pipeline operator returns the first 3 documents from the sorted set.