Mongoose 5.3.0 was shipped on September 28. This minor release includes 17 new features and improvements, including support for JavaScript's new async iterator feature. Async iterators were introduced in ECMAScript 2018 and are natively supported in Node.js 10.x.

Async iterators add support for a new loop structure, a for/await/of loop, that looks like what you see below.

for await ( const obj of asyncIterator) { console .log(obj); }

If you've read Mastering Async/Await, you know that await must be in a function marked async . Async iterators are no exception. You can only use a for/await/of loop in an async function. If you're not comfortable with async/await, this blog post will bring you up to speed.

Now that the syntax is out of the way, let's take a look at how Mongoose leverages async iterators to make scanning through huge collections easier.

Async Iterators With Mongoose Queries

Suppose you have a collection of stocks and you want to pull the current price for each stock from the IEX API. Below are the schema and model for this example.

const stockSchema = new Schema({ symbol: { type: String , required: true }, currentPrice: Number }); const Stock = mongoose.model( 'Stock' , stockSchema);

Suppose you have only 3 stocks in your collection:

await Stock.create([{ symbol: 'MDB' }, { symbol: 'F' }, { symbol: 'T' }]);

Without async iterators, you could iterate through all stocks like this:

const allStocks = await Stock.find(); for ( const stock of allStocks) { const price = await superagent. get( `https://api.iextrading.com/1.0/stock/ ${stock.symbol} /price` ). then(res => res.body); console .log(stock.symbol, price); stock.price = price; await stock.save(); }

The problem with the above approach is that it loads all stocks before starting the loop. That's fine for 3 stocks, but if you have thousands you should instead use a Mongoose cursor. You can use async/await to iterate through a cursor as shown below.

const cursor = Stock.find().cursor(); for ( let stock = await cursor.next(); stock != null ; stock = await cursor.next()) { const price = await superagent. get( `https://api.iextrading.com/1.0/stock/ ${stock.symbol} /price` ). then(res => res.body); console .log(stock.symbol, price); stock.price = price; await stock.save(); }

This syntax works, but it is verbose and tends to run over 80 character line limits if you use readable variable names. Async iterators make iterating over a cursor much more terse: if you use a Mongoose query as the right hand side of a for/await/of loop, Mongoose will create an async-iterator-friendly cursor for you. The below loop is equivalent to the await cursor.next() loop above, as long as you're using Node.js 10.x.

for await ( const stock of Stock.find()) { const price = await superagent. get( `https://api.iextrading.com/1.0/stock/ ${stock.symbol} /price` ). then(res => res.body); console .log(stock.symbol, price); stock.price = price; await stock.save(); }

Configuring Async Iterator Cursors

The sort() , limit() , skip() , and lean() helpers all work as you would expect with async iterators.

const query = Stock.find().sort({ symbol: 1 }).skip( 5 ).limit( 20 ).lean(); for await ( const stock of query) { const price = await superagent. get( `https://api.iextrading.com/1.0/stock/ ${stock.symbol} /price` ). then(res => res.body); console .log(stock.symbol, price); }

Query populate() also works, but with a small performance caveat. If you use populate() with a cursor, Mongoose will execute a separate query for each document that comes off the cursor. For example, suppose you store stock prices in a separate collection.

const priceSchema = new mongoose.Schema({ symbol: { type: String , required: true }, price: { type: Number , required: true } }, { timestamps: true }); const Price = mongoose.model( 'Price' , priceSchema); const stockSchema = new mongoose.Schema({ symbol: { type: String , required: true } }); stockSchema.virtual( 'latestPrice' , { ref: 'Price' , localField: 'symbol' , foreignField: 'symbol' , justOne: true , options: { sort: { createdAt: -1 } } });

Suppose you turn on Mongoose's debug mode and populate() the latestPrice when iterating over the query cursor using for/await/of :

mongoose.set( 'debug' , true ); for await ( const stock of Stock.find().populate( 'latestPrice' )) { console .log(stock.symbol, stock.latestPrice.price); }

You'll see Mongoose executes one find() to get the cursor, and then a separate find() to populate each stock's latestPrice :

Mongoose: stocks.find({}, { projection: {} }) Mongoose: prices.find({ symbol: { '$in': [ 'MDB' ] } }, { sort: { createdAt: -1 }, projection: {} }) MDB 70 Mongoose: prices.find({ symbol: { '$in': [ 'F' ] } }, { sort: { createdAt: -1 }, projection: {} }) F 9 Mongoose: prices.find({ symbol: { '$in': [ 'T' ] } }, { sort: { createdAt: -1 }, projection: {} }) T 33

Common Pitfalls

A Mongoose cursor does not conform to the async iterable spec. If you use for/await/of with a Mongoose cursor you created yourself, you will get an error.

for await ( const stock of Stock.find().cursor()) { console .log(stock.symbol); }

Moving On

Async iterator support is just one of 17 new features in Mongoose 5.3.0. Mongoose 5.3.0 also introduced the orFail() query helper, a deleteModel() helper to clean up models after tests, and regular expression support for Schema.pre() and Schema.post() . Make sure you upgrade and take advantage of these powerful new features!

Looking to get up to speed with async/await? My new ebook, Mastering Async/Await, is designed to give you an integrated understanding of async/await fundamentals and how async/await fits in the JavaScript ecosystem in a few hours. Get your copy!