This project takes the official .NET MongoDB driver and fixes the warts that make it hard to work with in F#. By default, F# loves immutable types but the MongoDB driver can't handle them out of the box. F# collections like list, map and seq aren't properly
Note also that this requires at least version 1.8.1 of the official MongoDB driver. That version includes some API that makes this whole project possible.
Install NuGet and run this from the Package Manager Console. The F# driver builds on top of the officiel C# driver so first you need to install the C# driver
PM> Install-Package mongocsharpdriver
and then you install the F# driver
PM> Install-Package MongoDB.FSharp
To use the C# driver just type
open MongoDB.Bson
open MongoDB.Driver
Somewhere during startup you have to register MongoDB.FSharp. It's basically a one-liner that looks like:
open MongoDB.FSharp
Serializers.Register()
The Serializers.Register()
call just registers serializers with the MongoDB driver.
Use MongoDB.FSharp like you normally would in C#.
type Person = { Id : BsonObjectId; Name : string; Scores : int list }
let connectionString = "mongodb://localhost"
let client = new MongoClient(connectionString)
let server = client.GetServer();
let db = server.GetDatabase("test")
let collection = db.GetCollection<Person> "people"
let id = BsonObjectId(ObjectId.GenerateNewId())
collection.Insert { Id = id; Name = "George"; Scores = [13; 52; 6] }
let george = collection.Find(fun person -> person.Id = id)
The example above would work naturally in C#, but remember that record
types like Person
are immutable! With MongoDB.FSharp, this just works.
Serializing and Deserializing these items should work great:
- list
- Options
- Discriminated unions
- Records
- Better support for Linq and quotations
- A functional API for simpler access
- Better testing so you can be confident putting this in production