- Reference >
- Operators >
- Query Modifiers >
- $min
$min¶
On this page
Definition¶
-
$min
¶ Note
- Deprecated in the
mongo
Shell since v3.2 - Starting in v3.2, the
$min
operator is deprecated in themongo
shell. In themongo
shell, usecursor.min()
instead.
Specify a
$min
value to specify the inclusive lower bound for a specific index in order to constrain the results offind()
. The$min
specifies the lower bound for all keys of a specific index in order.The
mongo
shell provides themin()
wrapper method:db.collection.find( { <query> } ).min( { field1: <min value>, ... fieldN: <min valueN>} )
You can also specify the option with either of the two forms:
db.collection.find( { <query> } )._addSpecial( "$min", { field1: <min value1>, ... fieldN: <min valueN> } ) db.collection.find( { $query: { <query> }, $min: { field1: <min value1>, ... fieldN: <min valueN> } } )
- Deprecated in the
Behavior¶
Interaction with Index Selection¶
Because min()
requires an index on a field, and
forces the query to use this index, you may prefer the
$gte
operator for the query if possible. Consider the
following example:
db.collection.find( { _id: 7 } ).min( { age: 25 } )
The query will use the index on the age
field, even if the
index on _id
may be better.
Index Bounds¶
If you use $max
with $min
to specify a range,
the index bounds specified in $min
and $max
must both refer to the keys of the same index.
$min
without $max
¶
The min
and max
operators indicate that the system
should avoid normal query planning. Instead they construct an index scan where
the index bounds are explicitly specified by the values given in
min
and max
.
Warning
If one of the two boundaries is not specified, the query plan will be an index scan that is unbounded on one side. This may degrade performance compared to a query containing neither operator, or one that uses both operators to more tightly constrain the index scan.
Examples¶
The following examples use the mongo
shell wrappers.
Specify Inclusive Lower Bound¶
Consider the following operations on a collection named
collection
that has an index { age: 1 }
:
db.collection.find().min( { age: 20 } )
This operation limits the query to those documents where the
field age
is at least 20
and forces a query plan which scans the
{ age: 1 }
index from 20 to MaxKey
.
Index Selection¶
You can explicitly specify the corresponding index with
hint()
. Otherwise, MongoDB selects the index using
the fields in the $max
and $min
bounds; however, if
multiple indexes exist on same fields with different sort orders, the selection
of the index may be ambiguous.
Consider a collection named collection
that has the following
two indexes:
{ age: 1, type: -1 }
{ age: 1, type: 1 }
Without explicitly using hint()
, it is unclear
which index the following operation will select:
db.collection.find().min( { age: 20, type: 'C' } )