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Mauricio David edited this page Jan 31, 2020 · 18 revisions

This documentation is valid only for v4.x version.


LiteDB stores data as documents, which are JSON-like field and value pairs. Documents are a schema-less data structure. Each document has your data and structure together.

{
    _id: 1,
    name: { first: "John", last: "Doe" },
    age: 37,
    salary: 3456.0,
    createdDate: { $date: "2014-10-30T00:00:00.00Z" },
    phones: ["8000-0000", "9000-0000"]
}
  • _id contains document primary key - a unique value in collection
  • name contains an embedded document with first and last fields
  • age contains a Int32 value
  • salary contains a Double value
  • createDate contains a DateTime value
  • phones contains an array of String

LiteDB stores documents in collections. A collection is a group of related documents that have a set of shared indices. Collections are analogous to a table in relational databases.

BSON

LiteDB stores documents in the BSON (Binary JSON) data format. BSON is a binary representation of JSON with additional type information. In the documents, the value of a field can be any of the BSON data types, including other documents, arrays, and arrays of documents. BSON is a fast and simple way to serialize documents in binary format.

LiteDB uses only a subset of BSON data types. See all supported LiteDB BSON data types and .NET equivalents.

BSON Type .NET type
MinValue -
Null Any .NET object with null value
Int32 System.Int32
Int64 System.Int64
Double System.Double
Decimal System.Decimal
String System.String
Document System.Collection.Generic.Dictionary<string, BsonValue>
Array System.Collection.Generic.List<BsonValue>
Binary System.Byte[]
ObjectId LiteDB.ObjectId
Guid System.Guid
Boolean System.Boolean
DateTime System.DateTime
MaxValue -

DateTime Attention

Because of BSON spec DateTime store with ms precision without DateTimeKind.
All DateTime values converts to UTC before store and converts back to local on retrieve.

JSON Extended

To serialize a document to JSON, LiteDB uses an extended version of JSON so as not to lose any BSON type information that does not exist in JSON. Extended data type is represented as an embedded document, using an initial $ key and value as string.

BSON data type JSON representation Description
ObjectId { "$oid": "507f1f55bcf96cd799438110" } 12 bytes in hex format
Date { "$date": "2015-01-01T00:00:00Z" } UTC and ISO-8601 format
Guid { "$guid": "ebe8f677-9f27-4303-8699-5081651beb11" }
Binary { "$binary": "VHlwZSgaFc3sdcGFzUpcmUuLi4=" } Byte array in base64 string format
Int64 { "$numberLong": "12200000" }
Decimal { "$numberDecimal": "122.9991" }
MinValue { "$minValue": "1" }
MaxValue { "$maxValue": "1" }

LiteDB implements JSON in its JsonSerializer static class. Serialize and deserialize only accepts BsonValues as input/output. If you want to convert your object type to a BsonValue, you need use a BsonMapper.

var customer = new Customer { Id = 1, Name = "John Doe" };

var doc = BsonMapper.Global.ToDocument(customer);

var jsonString = JsonSerialize.Serialize(doc, pretty, includeBinaryData);

JsonSerialize also supports TextReader and TextWriter to read/write directly from a file or Stream.

ObjectId

ObjectId is a 12 bytes BSON type:

  • Timestamp: Value representing the seconds since the Unix epoch (4 bytes)
  • Machine: Machine identifier (3 bytes)
  • Pid: Process id (2 bytes)
  • Increment: A counter, starting with a random value (3 bytes)

In LiteDB, documents are stored in a collection that requires a unique _id field that acts as a primary key. Because ObjectIds are small, most likely unique, and fast to generate, LiteDB uses ObjectIds as the default value for the _id field if the _id field is not specified.

Unlike the Guid data type, ObjectIds are sequential, so it's a better solution for indexing. ObjectIds use hexadecimal numbers represented as strings.

var id = ObjectId.NewObjectId();

// You can get creation datetime from an ObjectId
var date = id.CreationTime;

// ObjectId is represented in hex value
Debug.WriteLine(id);
"507h096e210a18719ea877a2"

// Create an instance based on hex representation
var nid = new ObjectId("507h096e210a18719ea877a2");