EDIT: As of the 2.0.1 version of the driver the FindFluent
object returned from IMongoCollection.Find
has an appropriate ToString
that includes the filter, but also a projection, sort and so forth (if relevant).
So, for this:
var findFluent = collection.
Find(x => hashValues.Contains(x.UrlHash) && x.ProductTopic == topicId,
new FindOptions {MaxTime = TimeSpan.FromSeconds(1)}).
Project(x => x.UrlHash).
Sort(Builders<ProductMapping>.Sort.Descending(x => x.ProductTopic)).
Skip(6).
Limit(7);
Console.WriteLine(findFluent);
The output would be:
find({ "UrlHash" : { "$in" : [4, 5, 6, 7, 8] }, "ProductTopic" : 200 }, { "UrlHash" : 1, "_id" : 0 }).
sort({ "ProductTopic" : -1 }).
skip(6).
limit(7).
maxTime(1000)
Well, you already know you are doing a find so I assume you want to know what the query looks like.
You can easily do that directly from your code using IFindFluent.Filter
:
BsonDocument filterDocument = findFluent.Filter.Render(
collection.DocumentSerializer,
collection.Settings.SerializerRegistry);
Console.WriteLine(filterDocument);
The output in your case (depends on hashValues
and topicId
of course):
{ "UrlHash" : { "$in" : [4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9] }, "ProductTopic" : 200 }
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