MongoDB\Collection::insertOne()
Definition
Parameters
$document: array|object- The document to insert into the collection.
$options: arrayAn array specifying the desired options.
NameTypeDescriptionbypassDocumentValidationbooleanIftrue, allows the write operation to circumvent document level validation. Defaults tofalse.codecMongoDB\Codec\DocumentCodecThe codec to use for encoding or decoding documents. This option is mutually exclusive with the
typeMapoption.Defaults to the collection's codec. Inheritance for a default
codecoption takes precedence over that of thetypeMapoption.New in version 1.17.
commentmixedEnables users to specify an arbitrary comment to help trace the operation through the database profiler, currentOp output, and logs.
This option is available since MongoDB 4.4 and will result in an exception at execution time if specified for an older server version.
New in version 1.13.
sessionClient session to associate with the operation.
New in version 1.3.
writeConcernWrite concern to use for the operation. Defaults to the collection's write concern.
It is not possible to specify a write concern for individual operations as part of a transaction. Instead, set the
writeConcernoption when starting the transaction.
Return Values
A MongoDB\InsertOneResult object, which encapsulates a
MongoDB\Driver\WriteResult object.
Errors/Exceptions
MongoDB\Exception\InvalidArgumentException for errors related to
the parsing of parameters or options.
MongoDB\Driver\Exception\BulkWriteException for errors related to the write operation. Users should inspect the value returned by getWriteResult() to determine the nature of the error.
MongoDB\Driver\Exception\RuntimeException for other errors at the extension level (e.g. connection errors).
Behavior
If a MongoDB\Driver\Exception\BulkWriteException is thrown, users should call getWriteResult() and inspect the returned MongoDB\Driver\WriteResult object to determine the nature of the error.
For example, a write operation may have been successfully applied to the primary server but failed to satisfy the write concern (e.g. replication took too long). Alternatively, a write operation may have failed outright (e.g. unique key violation).
Example
The following operation inserts a document into the users collection in the
test database:
$collection = (new MongoDB\Client)->test->users; $insertOneResult = $collection->insertOne([ 'username' => 'admin', 'email' => 'admin@example.com', 'name' => 'Admin User', ]); printf("Inserted %d document(s)\n", $insertOneResult->getInsertedCount()); var_dump($insertOneResult->getInsertedId());
The output would then resemble:
Inserted 1 document(s) object(MongoDB\BSON\ObjectId)#11 (1) { ["oid"]=> string(24) "579a25921f417dd1e5518141" }
See Also
insert command reference in the MongoDB manual