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MongoDB\Collection::count()

Deprecated since version 1.4.

Definition

MongoDB\Collection::count

Count the number of documents that match the filter criteria.

function count($filter = [], array $options = []): integer

This method has the following parameters:

Parameter Type Description
$filter array|object Optional. The filter criteria that specifies the documents to count.
$options array Optional. An array specifying the desired options.

The $options parameter supports the following options:

Option Type Description
collation array|object

Optional. Collation allows users to specify language-specific rules for string comparison, such as rules for lettercase and accent marks. When specifying collation, the locale field is mandatory; all other collation fields are optional. For descriptions of the fields, see Collation Document.

This option is available in MongoDB 3.4+ and will result in an exception at execution time if specified for an older server version.

If the collation is unspecified but the collection has a default collation, the operation uses the collation specified for the collection. If no collation is specified for the collection or for the operation, MongoDB uses the simple binary comparison used in prior versions for string comparisons.

hint string|array|object

Optional. The index to use. Specify either the index name as a string or the index key pattern as a document. If specified, then the query system will only consider plans using the hinted index.

Changed in version 1.2: If a document is provided, it is passed to the command as-is. Previously, the library would convert the key pattern to an index name.

limit integer Optional. The maximum number of matching documents to return.
maxTimeMS integer Optional. The cumulative time limit in milliseconds for processing operations on the cursor. MongoDB aborts the operation at the earliest following interrupt point.
readConcern MongoDB\Driver\ReadConcern

Optional. Read concern to use for the operation. Defaults to the collection’s read concern.

This is not supported for server versions prior to 3.2 and will result in an exception at execution time if used.

It is not possible to specify a read concern for individual operations as part of a transaction. Instead, set the readConcern option when starting the transaction with startTransaction.

readPreference MongoDB\Driver\ReadPreference Optional. Read preference to use for the operation. Defaults to the collection’s read preference.
session MongoDB\Driver\Session

Optional. Client session to associate with the operation.

Sessions are not supported for server versions prior to 3.6.

New in version 1.3.

skip integer Optional. The number of matching documents to skip before returning results.

Return Values

The number of documents matching the filter criteria.

Errors/Exceptions

MongoDB\Exception\UnexpectedValueException if the command response from the server was malformed.

MongoDB\Exception\UnsupportedException if options are used and not supported by the selected server (e.g. collation, readConcern, writeConcern).

MongoDB\Exception\InvalidArgumentException for errors related to the parsing of parameters or options.

MongoDB\Driver\Exception\RuntimeException for other errors at the driver level (e.g. connection errors).

Behavior

This method is deprecated and cannot be executed within a transaction. It has always been implemented using the count command. The behavior of the count command differs depending on the options passed to it and may or may not provide an accurate count. When no query filter is provided, the count command provides an estimate using collection metadata. Even when provided with a query filter the count command can return inaccurate results with a sharded cluster if orphaned documents exist or if a chunk migration is in progress. The MongoDB\Collection::countDocuments() method avoids these sharded cluster problems entirely when used with MongoDB 3.6+, and when a primary read preference with older sharded clusters.

When evaluating query criteria, MongoDB compares types and values according to its own comparison rules for BSON types, which differs from PHP’s comparison and type juggling rules. When matching a special BSON type the query criteria should use the respective BSON class in the driver (e.g. use MongoDB\BSON\ObjectId to match an ObjectId).