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This document uses PHP Chinese website manual Release
(PECL mongo >=0.9.0)
Mongo::__construct — The __construct purpose
$server
[, array $options
]] )This method overwrites the MongoClient constructor and turns off acknowledged writes.
Please see MongoClient::__construct() for description of the parameters.
Instanciating this class will emit E_DEPRECATED
warning, and turn off acknowledged writes.
Please use the MongoClient instead.
[#1] guosheng1987 at 126 dot com [2012-07-31 03:05:47]
This is my coding sample
new Mongo();
new Mongo('mongodb://localhost:27017');
when I tried the two above,My page throw an exception with ' operation now in progress '
then I changed the localhost to ip address
new Mongo('mongodb://127.0.0.1:27017');
It works well!
[#2] rob at limeworks dot com dot au [2011-09-02 02:14:46]
Note that even if you authenticate with a database specific user during instantiation of the Mongo class, it's still necessary to select the database before you try and use it.
Might sound common sense, but hopefully it will help someone anyway :D
[#3] arie grapa [2011-04-12 16:49:45]
you can set mongo.auto_reconnect=1 in php.ini to cause it to automatically reconnect. This might be the default in future versions
[#4] Arkadiy Kukarkin [2010-05-06 14:17:01]
The behavior of persistent connections is somewhat mysterious, but it appears that they remain for the duration of the process with some internal timeout value, and not until the end of script execution as you might expect based on the wording here and in close().
That is, the connection will remain open even once every object that used it is out of scope and can be accessed again with the persist key. This is consistent with the way e.g. DBI does things, but still somewhat confusing when not made explicit. A related issue is that under certain conditions php seems to open multiple connections even using the same key, but that's more of a bug report.