Example:
> db.stuff.save({"foo":"bar"});
> db.stuff.find({"foo":"bar"}).count();
1
> db.stuff.find({"foo":"BAR"}).count();
0
You could use a regex.
In your example that would be:
db.stuff.find( { foo: /^bar$/i } );
I must say, though, maybe you could just downcase (or upcase) the value on the way in rather than incurring the extra cost every time you find it. Obviously this wont work for people's names and such, but maybe use-cases like tags.
UPDATE:
The original answer is now obsolete. Mongodb now supports advanced full text searching, with many features.
ORIGINAL ANSWER:
It should be noted that searching with regex's case insensitive /i means that mongodb cannot search by index, so queries against large datasets can take a long time.
Even with small datasets, it's not very efficient. You take a far bigger cpu hit than your query warrants, which could become an issue if you are trying to achieve scale.
As an alternative, you can store an uppercase copy and search against that. For instance, I have a User table that has a username which is mixed case, but the id is an uppercase copy of the username. This ensures case-sensitive duplication is impossible (having both "Foo" and "foo" will not be allowed), and I can search by id = username.toUpperCase() to get a case-insensitive search for username.
If your field is large, such as a message body, duplicating data is probably not a good option. I believe using an extraneous indexer like Apache Lucene is the best option in that case.
Starting with MongoDB 3.4, the recommended way to perform fast case-insensitive searches is to use a Case Insensitive Index.
I personally emailed one of the founders to please get this working, and he made it happen! It was an issue on JIRA since 2009, and many have requested the feature. Here's how it works:
A case-insensitive index is made by specifying a collation with a strength of either 1 or 2. You can create a case-insensitive index like this:
db.cities.createIndex(
{ city: 1 },
{
collation: {
locale: 'en',
strength: 2
}
}
);
You can also specify a default collation per collection when you create them:
db.createCollection('cities', { collation: { locale: 'en', strength: 2 } } );
In either case, in order to use the case-insensitive index, you need to specify the same collation in the find
operation that was used when creating the index or the collection:
db.cities.find(
{ city: 'new york' }
).collation(
{ locale: 'en', strength: 2 }
);
This will return "New York", "new york", "New york" etc.
The answers suggesting to use full-text search are wrong in this case (and potentially dangerous). The question was about making a case-insensitive query, e.g. username: 'bill'
matching BILL
or Bill
, not a full-text search query, which would also match stemmed words of bill
, such as Bills
, billed
etc.
The answers suggesting to use regular expressions are slow, because even with indexes, the documentation states:
"Case insensitive regular expression queries generally cannot use indexes effectively. The $regex implementation is not collation-aware and is unable to utilize case-insensitive indexes."
$regex
answers also run the risk of user input injection.
If you need to create the regexp from a variable, this is a much better way to do it: https://stackoverflow.com/a/10728069/309514
You can then do something like:
var string = "SomeStringToFind";
var regex = new RegExp(["^", string, "$"].join(""), "i");
// Creates a regex of: /^SomeStringToFind$/i
db.stuff.find( { foo: regex } );
This has the benefit be being more programmatic or you can get a performance boost by compiling it ahead of time if you're reusing it a lot.
Keep in mind that the previous example:
db.stuff.find( { foo: /bar/i } );
will cause every entries containing bar to match the query ( bar1, barxyz, openbar ), it could be very dangerous for a username search on a auth function ...
You may need to make it match only the search term by using the appropriate regexp syntax as:
db.stuff.find( { foo: /^bar$/i } );
See http://www.regular-expressions.info/ for syntax help on regular expressions
TL;DR
Do not Use RegExp
Go natural And use mongodb's inbuilt indexing , search
db.articles.insert(
[
{ _id: 1, subject: "coffee", author: "xyz", views: 50 },
{ _id: 2, subject: "Coffee Shopping", author: "efg", views: 5 },
{ _id: 3, subject: "Baking a cake", author: "abc", views: 90 },
{ _id: 4, subject: "baking", author: "xyz", views: 100 },
{ _id: 5, subject: "Café Con Leche", author: "abc", views: 200 },
{ _id: 6, subject: "Сырники", author: "jkl", views: 80 },
{ _id: 7, subject: "coffee and cream", author: "efg", views: 10 },
{ _id: 8, subject: "Cafe con Leche", author: "xyz", views: 10 }
]
)
Need to create index on whichever TEXT field you want to search , without indexing query will be extremely slow
db.articles.createIndex( { subject: "text" } )
db.articles.find( { $text: { $search: "coffee",$caseSensitive :true } } ) //FOR SENSITIVITY
db.articles.find( { $text: { $search: "coffee",$caseSensitive :false } } ) //FOR INSENSITIVITY
One very important thing to keep in mind when using a Regex based query - When you are doing this for a login system, escape every single character you are searching for, and don't forget the ^ and $ operators. Lodash has a nice function for this, should you be using it already:
db.stuff.find({$regex: new RegExp(_.escapeRegExp(bar), $options: 'i'})
Why? Imagine a user entering .*
as his username. That would match all usernames, enabling a login by just guessing any user's password.
Mongo (current version 2.0.0) doesn't allow case-insensitive searches against indexed fields - see their documentation. For non-indexed fields, the regexes listed in the other answers should be fine.
Suppose you want to search "column" in "Table" and you want case insensitive search. The best and efficient way is:
//create empty JSON Object
mycolumn = {};
//check if column has valid value
if(column) {
mycolumn.column = {$regex: new RegExp(column), $options: "i"};
}
Table.find(mycolumn);
It just adds your search value as RegEx and searches in with insensitive criteria set with "i" as option.
The best method is in your language of choice, when creating a model wrapper for your objects, have your save() method iterate through a set of fields that you will be searching on that are also indexed; those set of fields should have lowercase counterparts that are then used for searching.
Every time the object is saved again, the lowercase properties are then checked and updated with any changes to the main properties. This will make it so you can search efficiently, but hide the extra work needed to update the lc fields each time.
The lower case fields could be a key:value object store or just the field name with a prefixed lc_. I use the second one to simplify querying (deep object querying can be confusing at times).
Note: you want to index the lc_ fields, not the main fields they are based off of.
The aggregation framework was introduced in mongodb 2.2 . You can use the string operator "$strcasecmp" to make a case-insensitive comparison between strings. It's more recommended and easier than using regex.
Here's the official document on the aggregation command operator: https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/operator/aggregation/strcasecmp/#exp._S_strcasecmp .
You can use Case Insensitive Indexes:
The following example creates a collection with no default collation, then adds an index on the name field with a case insensitive collation. International Components for Unicode
/* strength: CollationStrength.Secondary
* Secondary level of comparison. Collation performs comparisons up to secondary * differences, such as diacritics. That is, collation performs comparisons of
* base characters (primary differences) and diacritics (secondary differences). * Differences between base characters takes precedence over secondary
* differences.
*/
db.users.createIndex( { name: 1 }, collation: { locale: 'tr', strength: 2 } } )
To use the index, queries must specify the same collation.
db.users.insert( [ { name: "Oğuz" },
{ name: "oğuz" },
{ name: "OĞUZ" } ] )
// does not use index, finds one result
db.users.find( { name: "oğuz" } )
// uses the index, finds three results
db.users.find( { name: "oğuz" } ).collation( { locale: 'tr', strength: 2 } )
// does not use the index, finds three results (different strength)
db.users.find( { name: "oğuz" } ).collation( { locale: 'tr', strength: 1 } )
or you can create a collection with default collation:
db.createCollection("users", { collation: { locale: 'tr', strength: 2 } } )
db.users.createIndex( { name : 1 } ) // inherits the default collation
I'm surprised nobody has warned about the risk of regex injection by using /^bar$/i
if bar is a password or an account id search. (I.e. bar => .*@myhackeddomain.com
e.g., so here comes my bet: use \Q
\E
regex special chars! provided in PERL
db.stuff.find( { foo: /^\Qbar\E$/i } );
You should escape bar variable \
chars with \\
to avoid \E
exploit again when e.g. bar = '\E.*@myhackeddomain.com\Q'
Another option is to use a regex escape char strategy like the one described here Javascript equivalent of Perl's \Q ... \E or quotemeta()
I've created a simple Func for the case insensitive regex, which I use in my filter.
private Func<string, BsonRegularExpression> CaseInsensitiveCompare = (field) =>
BsonRegularExpression.Create(new Regex(field, RegexOptions.IgnoreCase));
Then you simply filter on a field as follows.
db.stuff.find({"foo": CaseInsensitiveCompare("bar")}).count();
Using a filter works for me in C#.
string s = "searchTerm";
var filter = Builders<Model>.Filter.Where(p => p.Title.ToLower().Contains(s.ToLower()));
var listSorted = collection.Find(filter).ToList();
var list = collection.Find(filter).ToList();
It may even use the index because I believe the methods are called after the return happens but I haven't tested this out yet.
This also avoids a problem of
var filter = Builders<Model>.Filter.Eq(p => p.Title.ToLower(), s.ToLower());
that mongodb will think p.Title.ToLower() is a property and won't map properly.
For any one using Golang and wishes to have case sensitive full text search with mongodb and the mgo godoc globalsign library.
collation := &mgo.Collation{
Locale: "en",
Strength: 2,
}
err := collection.Find(query).Collation(collation)
As you can see in mongo docs - since version 3.2 $text
index is case-insensitive by default: https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/core/index-text/#text-index-case-insensitivity
These have been tested for string searches
{'_id': /.*CM.*/} ||find _id where _id contains ->CM
{'_id': /^CM/} ||find _id where _id starts ->CM
{'_id': /CM$/} ||find _id where _id ends ->CM
{'_id': /.*UcM075237.*/i} ||find _id where _id contains ->UcM075237, ignore upper/lower case
{'_id': /^UcM075237/i} ||find _id where _id starts ->UcM075237, ignore upper/lower case
{'_id': /UcM075237$/i} ||find _id where _id ends ->UcM075237, ignore upper/lower case
$caseSensitive: false
. See: docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/operator/query/text/… – martin$caseSensitive
is false already by default, and that doesn't answer the question, because it only works on indexed fields. OP was looking for case-insensitive string comparison. – Dan Dascalescu