You can do it but you need to change your calling conventions to do this as only the "callback" form will actually return a collection object from which the .initializeUnorderedBulkOp()
method can be called. There are also some usage differences to how you think this works:
var dbURI = urigoeshere;
var db = mongo.db(dbURI, {safe:true});
db.collection('collection',function(err,collection) {
var bulk = collection.initializeUnorderedBulkOp();
count = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < 200000; i++) {
bulk.insert({number: i});
count++;
if ( count % 1000 == 0 )
bulk.execute(function(err,result) {
// maybe do something with results
bulk = collection.initializeUnorderedBulkOp(); // reset after execute
});
});
// If your loop was not a round divisor of 1000
if ( count % 1000 != 0 )
bulk.execute(function(err,result) {
// maybe do something here
});
});
So the actual "Bulk" methods themselves don't require callbacks and work exactly as shown in the documentation. The exeception is .execute()
which actually sends the statements to the server.
While the driver will sort this out for you somewhat, it probably is not a great idea to queue up too many operations before calling execute. This basically builds up in memory, and though the driver will only send in batches of 1000 at a time ( this is a server limit as well as the complete batch being under 16MB ), you probably want a little more control here, at least to limit memory usage.
That is the point of the modulo tests as shown, but if memory for building the operations and a possibly really large response object are not a problem for you then you can just keep queuing up operations and call .execute()
once.
The "response" is in the same format as given in the documentation for BulkWriteResult.
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