DeprecationWarning: collection.findAndModify is deprecated. Use findOneAndUpdate, findOneAndReplace or findOneAndDelete instead?

I am using mongoose findOneAndUpdate but still getting the error,

DeprecationWarning: collection.findAndModify is deprecated. Use findOneAndUpdate, findOneAndReplace or findOneAndDelete instead.

But I am not even using findAndModify, why is it converting my query to findAndModify?

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8 Answers

You need to set the option in the query useFindAndModify to false, as mentioned in the docs.

(search keyword Currently supported options are)

'useFindAndModify': true by default. Set to false to make findOneAndUpdate() and findOneAndRemove() use native findOneAndUpdate() rather than findAndModify().

and if you see the definition file of mongoose, where mentioned that it calls findAndModify update command.

 /** * Issues a mongodb findAndModify update command. * Finds a matching document, updates it according to the update arg, passing any options, * and returns the found document (if any) to the callback. The query executes immediately * if callback is passed else a Query object is returned. */ findOneAndUpdate(): DocumentQuery<T | null, T>; 

Recently updated in the mongoose docs (Click here) for these deprecation where mentioned:

Mongoose's findOneAndUpdate() long pre-dates the MongoDB driver's findOneAndUpdate() function, so it uses the MongoDB driver's findAndModify() function instead.

There are three ways or more by which you can avoid the use of FindAndModify:

  1. At Global level: Set the option to false.
// Make Mongoose use `findOneAndUpdate()`. Note that this option is `true` // by default, you need to set it to false. mongoose.set('useFindAndModify', false); 
  1. At connection level: we can configure using the connection options:
 mongoose.connect(uri, { useFindAndModify: false }); 
  1. At Query level:
 await ModelName.findOneAndUpdate({matchQuery}, {$set: updateData}, {useFindAndModify: false}); 

Change the mongoose configuration globally like this:

mongoose.set('useFindAndModify', false); 

Or pass the options in your query string like this:

Person.findOneAndUpdate({_id: id}, {$set: body}, {new: true, useFindAndModify: false}).then(.. 

You can also manage the other mongoose deprecation warnings as mention docs

mongoose.set('useNewUrlParser', true); mongoose.set('useCreateIndex', true); 

That's it.

2

you also can pass the options at the connection with the requirement option useNewUrlParser. Look at the following ->

mongoose.connect(config.MONGODB_URI, { useNewUrlParser: true, useFindAndModify: false}); 
0

You have to change your connect method options to get rid of the error:

mongoose.connect("mongodb://localhost/DB_Name", { keepAlive: true, useNewUrlParser: true, useCreateIndex: true, useFindAndModify: false }); 

You can use it like this.

Mongoose version updates so much that,

for using Model.findByIdAndUpdate() it takes an option parameter also see below

List.findByIdAndUpdate(id, update, options, callback) // executes 

for solving this

Pass this useFindAndModify: false in the mongoose.connect in the starting

mongoose.connect("mongodb://localhost:27017/yourDatabase", { useNewUrlParser: true, useUnifiedTopology: true ,useFindAndModify: false }); 

or

mongoose.set('useFindAndModify', false); 

clickhere to check related deprecations

 mongoose.set('useNewUrlParser', true); mongoose.set('useFindAndModify', false); mongoose.set('useCreateIndex', true); mongoose.set('useUnifiedTopology', true); 

These solutions work for me!

Mongoose.connect(Config.database,{useUnifiedTopology: true,useNewUrlParser: true,useFindAndModify:false}); 

to skip all errors :-) add this on your index.js or whatever you named it. I mean main js file. ;-)

To fix all deprecation warnings, follow the below steps:

mongoose.set('useNewUrlParser', true); mongoose.set('useFindAndModify', false); mongoose.set('useCreateIndex', true); mongoose.set('useUnifiedTopology', true); 

Replace update() with updateOne(), updateMany(), or replaceOne() Replace remove() with deleteOne() or deleteMany(). Replace count() with countDocuments(), unless you want to count how many documents are in the whole collection (no filter). In the latter case, use estimatedDocumentCount().

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