This small plugin makes it easy to use cursor-based pagination in your app, without changing the way you use queries in mongoose.
npm install @mother/mongoose-cursor-pagination --save
Node.js 10.x or higher is required.
In your schema:
import mongoose from 'mongoose'
import paginationPlugin from '@mother/mongoose-cursor-pagination'
const CommentSchema = new mongoose.Schema({
date: { type: Date },
body: { type: String },
author: {
firstName: { type: String },
lastName: { type: String }
}
})
CommentSchema.plugin(paginationPlugin)
In your application code:
const { results, pageInfo } = await Comment
.find({}) // Whatever filter you want
.limit(30) // Use limit and other Query options as you normally would
.sort('author.lastName') // Use sort as you would normally do
.paginate(startCursor) // startCursor optional
.exec() // Required
results
will be the results that you would expect from a normal mongoose find
query
pageInfo
will have two properties: hasNext
and nextCursor
Be sure to index correctly. Note that this plugin always add _id
to the sort key to ensure cursors are unique, so include that in your index as well. For example, say you are using the date
field for pagination, then you would want to setup the index:
commentSchema.index({ date: -1, _id: -1 })
You can optionally pass an options object to this plugin:
CommentSchema.plugin(paginationPlugin, {
// If no limit is specified, and paginate() is being used,
// what should the default limit be.
defaultLimit: 100
})
Numerous tests are included in the tests
directory, and can be run using the command npm test
.
- Test against older versions of mongoose
- Support for search with pagination
- Support for aggregation with pagination
- Support for
hasPrev
andprevCursor
- Support
exec
calls that use callbacks instead of promises
MIT