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NAME
    MongoDB::Upgrading::v1 - Deprecations and behavior changes from v0 to v1

VERSION
    version v2.2.2

DESCRIPTION
    The v1 driver represents a substantial step forward in functionality and consistency. There are
    many areas where the old API has been deprecated or changed in a backward breaking way.

    This document is intended to help developers update their code to take into account API changes
    from the v0 driver to the v1 driver.

RATIONALE
    Changes to the driver were deemed necessary to achieve certain goals:

    *   consistency (intra-driver) – many parts of the v0 API were inconsistent, behaving
        differently from method to method; the v1 API minimizes developer surprises by improving
        consistency in return types and exception mechanisms.

    *   consistency (inter-driver) — "next-generation" MongoDB drivers across all languages are
        converging on common APIs and common behaviors; this simplifies developer education and
        support, as cross-language examples will be similar.

    *   encapsulation – too many low-level, internal operations were exposed as part of the API,
        which complicates maintenance work; the v1 API aims to minimize the "public surface"
        available to developers, allowing faster future development keeping up with MongoDB server
        enhancements with less risk of breakage.

    *   abstraction – many v0 methods returned raw server documents for end-user code to inspect,
        which is brittle in the face of changes in server responses over time; the v1 API uses
        result classes to abstract the details behind standardized accessors.

    *   server compatibility – some new features and behavior changes in the MongoDB server no
        longer fit the old driver design; the v1 driver transparently supports both old and new
        servers.

    *   portability – the v0 driver had a large dependency tree and substantial non-portable C code;
        the v1 driver removes some dependencies and uses widely-used, well-tested CPAN modules in
        place of custom C code where possible; it lays the groundwork for a future "pure-Perl
        optional" driver.

    *   round-trippable data – the v0 BSON implementation could easily change data types when
        round-tripping documents; the v1 driver is designed to round-trip data correctly whenever
        possible (within the limits of Perl's dynamic typing).

INSTALLATION AND DEPENDENCY CHANGES
  Moo instead of Moose
    The v1 driver uses Moo instead of Moose. This change results in a slightly faster driver and a
    significantly reduced deep dependency tree.

  SSL and SASL
    The v0 driver required a compiler and OpenSSL and libgsasl for SSL and SASL support,
    respectively. The v1 driver instead relies on CPAN modules "IO::Socket::SSL" and "Authen::SASL"
    for SSL and SASL support, respectively.

    SSL configuration is now possible via the ssl attribute.

    Authentication configuration is described in "AUTHENTICATION" in MongoDB::MongoClient.

BEHAVIOR CHANGES
  MongoClient configuration
   New configuration options
    Several configuration options have been added, with particular emphasis on adding more granular
    control of timings and timeout behaviors.

    *   "auth_mechanism"

    *   "auth_mechanism_properties"

    *   "bson_codec"

    *   "connect_timeout_ms"

    *   "heartbeat_frequency_ms"

    *   "local_threshold_ms"

    *   "max_time_ms"

    *   "replica_set_name"

    *   "read_pref_mode"

    *   "read_pref_tag_sets"

    *   "server_selection_timeout_ms"

    *   "socket_check_interval_ms"

    *   "socket_timeout_ms"

   Replica set configuration
    Connecting to a replica set now requires a replica set name, given either with the
    "replica_set_name" option for MongoDB::MongoClient or with the "replicaSet" option in a
    connection string. For example:

        $client = MongoDB::MongoClient->new(
            host => "mongodb://rs1.example.com,rs2.example.com/",
            replica_set_name => 'the_set',
        );

        $client = MongoDB::MongoClient->new(
            host => "mongodb://rs1.example.com,rs2.example.com/?replicaSet=the_set"
        );

   Configuration options changed to read-only
    Configuration options are changing to be immutable to prevent surprising action-at-a-distance.
    (E.g. changing an attribute value in some part of the code changes it for other parts of the
    code that didn't expect it.) Going forward, options may be set at MongoDB::MongoClient
    construction time only.

    The following options have changed to be read-only:

    *   "db_name"

    *   "j"

    *   "password"

    *   "ssl"

    *   "username"

    *   "w"

    *   "wtimeout"

    Write concern may be overridden at the MongoDB::Database and MongoDB::Collection level during
    construction of those objects. For more details, see the later section on write concern changes.

   Mapping between connection string and configuration options
    Many configuration options may be set via a connection string URI in the "host" option. In the
    v0 driver, the precedence between the connection string and constructor options was completely
    inconsistent. In the v1 driver, options set via a connection string URI will take precedence
    over options passed to the constructor. This is consistent with with other MongoDB drivers (as
    well as how DBI treats Data Source Names).

    The list of servers and ports as well as the optional "username", "password" and "db_name"
    options come directly from URI structure. Other options are parsed as key-value parameters at
    the end of the connection string. The following table shows how connection string keys map to
    configuration options in the MongoDB::MongoClient:

        Connection String Key           MongoClient option
        ---------------------------     -----------------------------
        authMechanism                   auth_mechanism
        authMechanismProperties         auth_mechanism_properties
        connectTimeoutMS                connect_timeout_ms
        heartbeatFrequencyMS            heartbeat_frequency_ms
        journal                         j
        localThresholdMS                local_threshold_ms
        maxTimeMS                       max_time_ms
        readPreference                  read_pref_mode
        readPreferenceTags              read_pref_tag_sets
        replicaSet                      replica_set_name
        serverSelectionTimeoutMS        server_selection_timeout_ms
        socketCheckIntervalMS           socket_check_interval_ms
        socketTimeoutMS                 socket_timeout_ms
        ssl                             ssl
        w                               w
        wTimeoutMS                      wtimeout

    The "readPreferenceTags" and "authMechanismProperties" keys take colon-delimited,
    comma-separated pairs:

        readPreferenceTags=dc:nyeast,rack:1
        authMechanismProperties=SERVICE_NAME:mongodb

    The "readPreferenceTags" option may be repeated to build up a list of tag set documents:

        readPreferenceTags=dc:nyc,rack:1&readPreferenceTags=dc:nyc

   Deprecated configuration options
    Several options have been superseded, replaced or renamed for clarity and are thus deprecated
    and undocumented. They are kept for a limited degree of backwards compatibility. They will be
    generally be used as fallbacks for other options. If any were read-write, they have also been
    changed to read-only.

    *   "dt_type" — see "BSON encoding changes" for details.

    *   "query_timeout" — replaced by "socket_timeout_ms"; if set, this will be used as a fallback
        default for "socket_timeout_ms".

    *   "sasl" — superseded by "auth_mechanism"; if set, this will be used along with
        "sasl_mechanism" as a fallback default for "auth_mechanism".

    *   "sasl_mechanism" — superseded by "auth_mechanism"; if set, this will be used as a fallback
        default for "auth_mechanism".

    *   "timeout" — replaced by "connect_timeout_ms"; if set, this will be used as a fallback
        default for "connect_timeout_ms".

    These will be removed in a future major release.

   Configuration options removed
    Some configuration options have been removed entirely, as they no longer serve any purpose given
    changes to server discovery, server selection and connection handling:

    *   "auto_connect"

    *   "auto_reconnect"

    *   "find_master"

    *   "max_bson_size"

    As described further below in the "BSON encoding changes" section, these BSON encoding
    configuration options have been removed as well:

    *   "inflate_dbrefs"

    *   "inflate_regexps"

    Removed configuration options will be ignored if passed to the MongoDB::MongoClient constructor.

  Lazy connections and reconnections on demand
    The improved approach to server monitoring and selection allows all connections to be lazy. When
    the client is constructed, no connections are made until the first network operation is needed.
    At that time, the client will scan all servers in the seed list and begin regular monitoring.
    Connections that drop will be re-established when needed.

    IMPORTANT: Code that used to rely on a fatal exception from "MongoDB::MongoClient->new" when no
    mongod is available will break. Instead, users are advised to just conduct their operations and
    be prepared to handle errors.

    For testing, users may wish to run a simple command to check that a mongod is ready:

        use Test::More;

        # OLD WAY: BROKEN
        plan skip_all => 'no mongod' unless eval {
            MongoDB::MongoClient->new
        };

        # NEW WAY 1: with MongoDB::MongoClient
        plan skip_all => 'no mongod' unless eval {
            MongoDB::MongoClient->new->db('admin')->run_command(
                [ ismaster => 1 ]
            )
        };

        # NEW WAY 2: with MongoDB and connect
        plan skip_all => 'no mongod' unless eval {
            MongoDB->connect->db('admin')->run_command([ ismaster => 1 ])
        };

    See SERVER SELECTION and SERVER MONITORING AND FAILOVER in MongoDB::MongoClient for details.

  Exceptions are the preferred error handling approach
    In the v0 driver, errors could be indicated in various ways:

    *   boolean return value

    *   string return value is an error; hash ref is success

    *   document that might contain an 'err', 'errmsg' or '$err' field

    *   thrown string exception

    Regardless of the documented error handling, every method that involved a network operation
    would throw an exception on various network errors.

    In the v1 driver, exceptions objects are the standard way of indicating errors. The exception
    hierarchy is described in MongoDB::Error.

  Cursors and query responses
    In v0, MongoDB::Cursor objects were used for ordinary queries as well as the query-like commands
    aggregation and parallel scan. However, only cursor iteration commands worked for aggregation
    and parallel scan "cursors"; the rest of the MongoDB::Cursor API didn't apply and was fatal.

    In v1, all result iteration is done via the new MongoDB::QueryResult class. MongoDB::Cursor is
    now just a thin wrapper that holds query parameters, instantiates a MongoDB::QueryResult on
    demand, and passes iteration methods through to the query result object.

    This significantly simplifies the code base and should have little end-user visibility unless
    users are specifically checking the return type of queries and query-like methods.

    The "explain" cursor method no longer resets the cursor.

    The "slave_okay" cursor method now sets the "read_preference" to 'secondaryPreferred' or clears
    it to 'primary'.

    The "snapshot" cursor method now requires a boolean argument, allowing it to be turned on or off
    before executing the query. Calling it without an argument (as it was in v0) is a fatal
    exception.

    Parallel scan "cursors" are now QueryResult objects, with the same iteration methods as in v0.

    The $MongoDB::Cursor::slave_okay global variable has been removed as part of the revision to
    read preference handling. See the read preferences section below for more details.

    The $MongoDB::Cursor::timeout global variable has also been removed. Timeouts are set during
    MongoDB::MongoClient configuration and are immutable. See the section on configuration changes
    for more.

  Aggregation API
    On MongoDB 2.6 or later, "aggregate" always uses a cursor to execute the query. The "batchSize"
    option has been added (but has no effect prior to 2.6). The "cursor" option is deprecated.

    The return types for the "aggregate" method are now always QueryResult objects, regardless of
    whether the aggregation uses a cursor internally or is an 'explain'.

    NOTE: To help users with a 2.6 mongos and mixed version shards with versions before 2.6, passing
    the deprecated 'cursor' option with a false value will disable the use of a cursor. This
    workaround is provided for convenience and will be removed when 2.4 is no longer supported.

  Read preference objects and the read_preference method
    A new MongoDB::ReadPreference class is used to encapsulate read preference attributes. In the v1
    driver, it is constructed from the "read_pref_mode" and "read_pref_tag_sets" attributes on
    MongoDB::MongoClient:

        MongoDB::MongoClient->new(
            read_pref_mode => 'primaryPreferred',
            read_pref_tag_sets => [ { dc => 'useast' }, {} ],
        );

    The old "read_preference" method to change the read preference has been removed and trying to
    set a read preference after the client has been created is a fatal error. The old mode constants
    PRIMARY, SECONDARY, etc. have been removed.

    The "read_preference" method now returns the MongoDB::ReadPreference object generated from
    "read_pref_mode" and "read_pref_tag_sets".

    It is inherited by MongoDB::Database, MongoDB::Collection, and MongoDB::GridFS objects unless
    provided as an option to the relevant factory methods:

        my $coll = $db->get_collection(
            "foo", { read_preference => 'secondary' }
        );

    Such "read_preference" arguments may be a MongoDB::ReadPreference object, a hash reference of
    arguments to construct one, or a string that represents the read preference mode.

    MongoDB::Database and MongoDB::Collection also have "clone" methods that allow easy alteration
    of a read preference for a limited scope.

        my $coll2 = $coll->clone( read_preference => 'secondaryPreferred' );

    For MongoDB::Cursor, the "read_preference" method sets a hidden read preference attribute that
    is used for the query in place of the MongoDB::MongoClient default "read_preference" attribute.
    This means that calling "read_preference" on a cursor object no longer changes the read
    preference globally on the client – the read preference change is scoped to the cursor object
    only.

  Write concern objects and removing the safe argument
    A new MongoDB::WriteConcern class is used to encapsulate write concern attributes. In the v1
    driver, it is constructed from the "w", "wtimeout" and "j" attributes on MongoDB::MongoClient:

        MongoDB::MongoClient->new( w => 'majority', wtimeout => 1000 );

    The "write_concern" method now returns the MongoDB::WriteConcern object generated from "w",
    "wtimeout" and "j".

    It is inherited by MongoDB::Database, MongoDB::Collection, and MongoDB::GridFS objects unless
    provided as an option to the relevant factory methods:

        $db = $client->get_database(
            "test", { write_concern => { w => 'majority' } }
        );

    Such "write_concern" arguments may be a MongoDB::WriteConcern object, a hash reference of
    arguments to construct one, or a string that represents the "w" mode.

    MongoDB::Database and MongoDB::Collection also have "clone" methods that allow easy alteration
    of a write concern for a limited scope.

        my $coll2 = $coll->clone( write_concern => { w => 1 } );

    The "safe" argument is no longer used in the new CRUD API.

  Authentication based only on configuration options
    Authentication now happens automatically on connection during the "handshake" with any given
    server based on the auth_mechanism attribute.

    The old "authenticate" method in MongoDB::MongoClient has been removed.

  Bulk API
   Bulk method names changed to match CRUD API
    Method names match the new CRUD API, e.g. "insert_one" instead of "insert" and so one. The
    legacy names are deprecated.

   Bulk insertion
    Insertion via the bulk API will NOT insert an "_id" into the original document if one does not
    exist. Previous documentation was not specific whether this was the case or if the "_id" was
    added to the document sent to the server.

   Bulk write results
    The bulk write results class has been renamed to MongoDB::BulkWriteResult. It keeps
    "MongoDB::WriteResult" as an empty superclass for some backwards compatibility so that
    "$result->isa("MongoDB::WriteResult")" will continue to work as expected.

    The attributes have been renamed to be consistent with the new CRUD API. The legacy names are
    deprecated, but are available as aliases.

  GridFS
    The MongoDB::GridFS class now has explicit read preference and write concern attributes
    inherited from MongoDB::MongoClient or MongoDB::Database, just like MongoDB::Collection. This
    means that GridFS operations now default to an acknowledged write concern, just like collection
    operations have been doing since v0.502.0 in 2012.

    The use of "safe" is deprecated.

    Support for ancient, undocumented positional parameters circa 2010 has been removed.

  Low-level functions removed
    Low-level driver functions have been removed from the public API.

  MongoDB::Connection removed
    The "MongoDB::Connection" module was deprecated in v0.502.0 and has been removed.

  BSON encoding changes
    In the v1 driver, BSON encoding and decoding have been encapsulated into a MongoDB::BSON codec
    object. This can be provided at any level, from MongoDB::MongoClient to MongoDB::Collection. If
    not provided, a default will be created that behaves similarly to the v0 encoding/decoding
    functions, except for the following changes.

   $MongoDB::BSON::use_binary removed
    Historically, this defaulted to false, which corrupts binary data when round tripping.
    Retrieving a binary data element and re-inserting it would have resulted in a field with UTF-8
    encoded string of binary data.

    Going forward, binary data will be returned as a MongoDB::BSON::Binary object. A future driver
    may add the ability to control decoding to allow alternative representations.

   $MongoDB::BSON::use_boolean removed
    This global variable never worked. BSON booleans were always deserialized as boolean objects. A
    future driver may add the ability to control boolean representation.

   $MongoDB::BSON::utf8_flag_on removed
    In order to ensure round-tripping of string data, this variable is removed. BSON strings will
    always be decoded to Perl character strings. Anything else risks double-encoding a round-trip.

   $MongoDB::BSON::looks_like_number and $MongoDB::BSON::char
deprecated and re-scoped
    In order to allow a future driver to provide more flexible user-customized encoding and
    decoding, these global variables are deprecated. If set, they will be examined during
    "MongoDB::MongoClient->new()" to set the configuration of a default MongoDB::BSON codec (if one
    is not provided). Changing them later will NOT change the behavior of the codec object.

   "MongoDB::MongoClient" option "inflate_regexps" removed
    Previously, BSON regular expressions decoded to "qr{}" references by default and the
    "MongoDB::MongoClient" "inflate_regexps" option was available to decode instead to
    MongoDB::BSON::Regexps.

    Going forward in the v1.0.0 driver, for safety and consistency with other drivers, BSON regular
    expressions always decode to MongoDB::BSON::Regexp objects.

   "MongoDB::MongoClient" option "inflate_dbrefs" removed
    The "inflate_dbrefs" configuration option has been removed and replaced with a "dbref_callback"
    option in MongoDB::BSON.

    By default, the "MongoDB::MongoClient" will create a MongoDB::BSON codec that will construct
    MongoDB::DBRef objects. This ensures that DBRefs properly round-trip.

   "MongoDB::MongoClient" option "dt_type" deprecated and changed to read-only
    The "dt_type" option is now only takes effect if "MongoDB::MongoClient" constructs a
    MongoDB::BSON codec object. It has been changed to a read-only attribute so that any code that
    relied on changing "dt_type" after constructing a "MongoDB::MongoClient" object will fail
    instead of being silently ignored.

   Int32 vs Int64 encoding changes
    On 64-bit Perls, integers that fit in 32-bits will be encoded as BSON Int32 (whereas previously
    these were always encoded as BSON Int64).

    Math::BigInt objects will always be encoded as BSON Int64, which allows users to force 64-bit
    encoding if desired.

   Added support for Time::Moment
    Time::Moment is a much faster replacement for the venerable DateTime module. The BSON codec will
    serialize Time::Moment objects correctly and can use that module as an argument for the
    "dt_type" codec attribute.

   Added support for encoding common JSON boolean classes
    Most JSON libraries on CPAN implement their own boolean classes. The following libraries boolean
    types will now encode correctly as BSON booleans:

    *   JSON::XS

    *   Cpanel::JSON::XS

    *   JSON::PP

    *   JSON::Tiny

    *   Mojo::JSON

  DBRef objects
    The "fetch" method and related attributes "client", "verify_db", and "verify_coll" have been
    removed from MongoDB::DBRef.

    Providing a "fetch" method was inconsistent with other MongoDB drivers, which either never
    provided it, or have dropped it in the next-generation drivers. It requires a "client"
    attribute, which tightly couples BSON decoding to the client model, causing circular reference
    issues and triggering Perl memory bugs under threads. Therefore, the v1.0.0 driver no longer
    support fetching directly from MongoDB::DBRef; users will need to implement their own methods
    for dereferencing.

    Additionally, the "db" attribute is now optional, consistent with the specification for DBRefs.

    Also, all attributes ("ref", "id" and "db") are now read-only, consistent with the move toward
    immutable objects throughout the driver.

    To support round-tripping DBRefs with additional fields other than $ref, $id and $db, the DBRef
    class now has an attribute called "extra". As not all drivers support this feature, using it for
    new DBRefs is not recommended.

DEPRECATED METHODS
    Deprecated options and methods may be removed in a future release. Their documentation has been
    removed to discourage ongoing use. Unless otherwise stated, they will continue to behave as they
    previously did, allowing a degree of backwards compatibility until code is updated to the new
    MongoDB driver API.

  MongoDB::Database
    *   eval – MongoDB 3.0 deprecated the '$eval' command, so this helper method is deprecated as
        well.

    *   last_error — Errors are now indicated via exceptions at the time database commands are
        executed.

  MongoDB::Collection
    *   insert, batch_insert, remove, update, save, query and find_and_modify — A new common driver
        CRUD API replaces these legacy methods.

    *   get_collection — This method implied that collections could be contained inside collection.
        This doesn't actually happen so it's confusing to have a Collection be a factory for
        collections. Users who want nested namespaces should be explicit and create them off
        Database objects instead.

    *   ensure_index, drop_indexes, drop_index, get_index — A new MongoDB::IndexView class is
        accessible through the "indexes" method, offering greater consistency in behavior across
        drivers.

    *   validate — The return values have changed over different server versions, so this method is
        risky to use; it has more use as a one-off tool, which can be accomplished via
        "run_command".

  MongoDB::CommandResult
    *   result — has been renamed to 'output' for clarity

  MongoDB::Cursor
    *   slave_ok — this modifier method is superseded by the 'read_preference' modifier method

    *   count — this is superseded by the "MongoDB::Collection#count" in MongoDB::Collection count
        method. Previously, this ignored skip/limit unless a true argument was passed, which was a
        bizarre, non-intuitive and inconsistent API.

  MongoDB::BulkWrite and MongoDB::BulkWriteView
    *   insert — renamed to 'insert_one' for consistency with CRUD API

    *   update — renamed to 'update_many' for consistency with CRUD API

    *   remove — renamed to 'delete_many' for consistency with CRUD API

    *   remove_one — renamed to 'delete_one' for consistency with CRUD API

AUTHORS
    *   David Golden <david AT mongodb.com>

    *   Rassi <rassi AT mongodb.com>

    *   Mike Friedman <friedo AT friedo.com>

    *   Kristina Chodorow <k.chodorow AT gmail.com>

    *   Florian Ragwitz <rafl AT debian.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is Copyright (c) 2020 by MongoDB, Inc.

    This is free software, licensed under:

      The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004

MongoDB::Upgrading::v1
NAME VERSION DESCRIPTION RATIONALE INSTALLATION AND DEPENDENCY CHANGES
Moo instead of Moose
BEHAVIOR CHANGES
MongoClient configuration Lazy connections and reconnections on demand Exceptions are the preferred error handling approach Cursors and query responses Aggregation API Read preference objects and the read_preference method Write concern objects and removing the safe argument Authentication based only on configuration options Bulk API GridFS Low-level functions removed
DEPRECATED METHODS AUTHORS COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

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