MERGE

Introduction

MERGE either matches existing nodes and binds them, or it creates new data and binds that. It’s like a combination of MATCH and CREATE that additionally allows you to specify what happens if the data was matched or created.

For example, you can specify that the graph must contain a node for a user with a certain name. If there isn’t a node with the correct name, a new node will be created and its name property set.

When using MERGE on full patterns, the behavior is that either the whole pattern matches, or the whole pattern is created. MERGE will not partially use existing patterns — it’s all or nothing. If partial matches are needed, this can be accomplished by splitting a pattern up into multiple MERGE clauses.

As with MATCH, MERGE can match multiple occurrences of a pattern. If there are multiple matches, they will all be passed on to later stages of the query.

The last part of MERGE is the ON CREATE and ON MATCH. These allow a query to express additional changes to the properties of a node or relationship, depending on if the element was MATCH -ed in the database or if it was CREATE -ed.

The following graph is used for the examples below:

Graph
  N0 [
    label = "{Person|chauffeurName = \'John Brown\'\lname = \'Charlie Sheen\'\lbornIn = \'New York\'\l}"
  ]
  N0 -> N1 [
    color = "#2e3436"
    fontcolor = "#2e3436"
    label = "FATHER\n"
  ]
  N0 -> N5 [
    color = "#4e9a06"
    fontcolor = "#4e9a06"
    label = "ACTED_IN\n"
  ]
  N1 [
    label = "{Person|chauffeurName = \'Bob Brown\'\lname = \'Martin Sheen\'\lbornIn = \'Ohio\'\l}"
  ]
  N1 -> N6 [
    color = "#4e9a06"
    fontcolor = "#4e9a06"
    label = "ACTED_IN\n"
  ]
  N1 -> N5 [
    color = "#4e9a06"
    fontcolor = "#4e9a06"
    label = "ACTED_IN\n"
  ]
  N2 [
    label = "{Person|bornIn = \'New Jersey\'\lchauffeurName = \'John Brown\'\lname = \'Michael Douglas\'\l}"
  ]
  N2 -> N6 [
    color = "#4e9a06"
    fontcolor = "#4e9a06"
    label = "ACTED_IN\n"
  ]
  N2 -> N5 [
    color = "#4e9a06"
    fontcolor = "#4e9a06"
    label = "ACTED_IN\n"
  ]
  N3 [
    label = "{Person|chauffeurName = \'Bill White\'\lname = \'Oliver Stone\'\lbornIn = \'New York\'\l}"
  ]
  N3 -> N5 [
    color = "#4e9a06"
    fontcolor = "#4e9a06"
    label = "ACTED_IN\n"
  ]
  N4 [
    label = "{Person|chauffeurName = \'Ted Green\'\lname = \'Rob Reiner\'\lbornIn = \'New York\'\l}"
  ]
  N4 -> N6 [
    color = "#4e9a06"
    fontcolor = "#4e9a06"
    label = "ACTED_IN\n"
  ]
  N5 [
    label = "{Movie|title = \'Wall Street\'\l}"
  ]
  N6 [
    label = "{Movie|title = \'The American President\'\l}"
  ]

Merge nodes

Merge single node with a label

Merging a single node with the given label.

Query
MERGE (robert:Critic)
RETURN robert, labels(robert)

A new node is created because there are no nodes labeled Critic in the database.

Table 1. Result
robert labels(robert)

Node[20]{}

["Critic"]

1 row
Nodes created: 1
Labels added: 1

Merge single node with properties

Merging a single node with properties where not all properties match any existing node.

Query
MERGE (charlie { name: 'Charlie Sheen', age: 10 })
RETURN charlie

A new node with the name 'Charlie Sheen' will be created since not all properties matched the existing 'Charlie Sheen' node.

Table 2. Result
charlie

Node[20]{name:"Charlie Sheen",age:10}

1 row
Nodes created: 1
Properties set: 2

Merge single node specifying both label and property

Merging a single node with both label and property matching an existing node.

Query
MERGE (michael:Person { name: 'Michael Douglas' })
RETURN michael.name, michael.bornIn

'Michael Douglas' will be matched and the name and bornIn properties returned.

Table 3. Result
michael.name michael.bornIn

"Michael Douglas"

"New Jersey"

1 row

Merge single node derived from an existing node property

For some property 'p' in each bound node in a set of nodes, a single new node is created for each unique value for 'p'.

Query
MATCH (person:Person)
MERGE (city:City { name: person.bornIn })
RETURN person.name, person.bornIn, city

Three nodes labeled City are created, each of which contains a name property with the value of 'New York', 'Ohio', and 'New Jersey', respectively. Note that even though the MATCH clause results in three bound nodes having the value 'New York' for the bornIn property, only a single 'New York' node (i.e. a City node with a name of 'New York') is created. As the 'New York' node is not matched for the first bound node, it is created. However, the newly-created 'New York' node is matched and bound for the second and third bound nodes.

Table 4. Result
person.name person.bornIn city

"Charlie Sheen"

"New York"

Node[20]{name:"New York"}

"Martin Sheen"

"Ohio"

Node[21]{name:"Ohio"}

"Michael Douglas"

"New Jersey"

Node[22]{name:"New Jersey"}

"Oliver Stone"

"New York"

Node[20]{name:"New York"}

"Rob Reiner"

"New York"

Node[20]{name:"New York"}

5 rows
Nodes created: 3
Properties set: 3
Labels added: 3

Use ON CREATE and ON MATCH

Merge with ON CREATE

Merge a node and set properties if the node needs to be created.

Query
MERGE (keanu:Person { name: 'Keanu Reeves' })
ON CREATE SET keanu.created = timestamp()
RETURN keanu.name, keanu.created

The query creates the 'keanu' node and sets a timestamp on creation time.

Table 5. Result
keanu.name keanu.created

"Keanu Reeves"

1632753636429

1 row
Nodes created: 1
Properties set: 2
Labels added: 1

Merge with ON MATCH

Merging nodes and setting properties on found nodes.

Query
MERGE (person:Person)
ON MATCH SET person.found = TRUE RETURN person.name, person.found

The query finds all the Person nodes, sets a property on them, and returns them.

Table 6. Result
person.name person.found

"Charlie Sheen"

true

"Martin Sheen"

true

"Michael Douglas"

true

"Oliver Stone"

true

"Rob Reiner"

true

5 rows
Properties set: 5

Merge with ON CREATE and ON MATCH

Query
MERGE (keanu:Person { name: 'Keanu Reeves' })
ON CREATE SET keanu.created = timestamp()
ON MATCH SET keanu.lastSeen = timestamp()
RETURN keanu.name, keanu.created, keanu.lastSeen

The query creates the 'keanu' node, and sets a timestamp on creation time. If 'keanu' had already existed, a different property would have been set.

Table 7. Result
keanu.name keanu.created keanu.lastSeen

"Keanu Reeves"

1632753636791

<null>

1 row
Nodes created: 1
Properties set: 2
Labels added: 1

Merge with ON MATCH setting multiple properties

If multiple properties should be set, simply separate them with commas.

Query
MERGE (person:Person)
ON MATCH SET person.found = TRUE , person.lastAccessed = timestamp()
RETURN person.name, person.found, person.lastAccessed
Table 8. Result
person.name person.found person.lastAccessed

"Charlie Sheen"

true

1632753636987

"Martin Sheen"

true

1632753636987

"Michael Douglas"

true

1632753636987

"Oliver Stone"

true

1632753636987

"Rob Reiner"

true

1632753636987

5 rows
Properties set: 10

Merge relationships

Merge on a relationship

MERGE can be used to match or create a relationship.

Query
MATCH (charlie:Person { name: 'Charlie Sheen' }),(wallStreet:Movie { title: 'Wall Street' })
MERGE (charlie)-[r:ACTED_IN]->(wallStreet)
RETURN charlie.name, type(r), wallStreet.title

'Charlie Sheen' had already been marked as acting in 'Wall Street', so the existing relationship is found and returned. Note that in order to match or create a relationship when using MERGE, at least one bound node must be specified, which is done via the MATCH clause in the above example.

Table 9. Result
charlie.name type(r) wallStreet.title

"Charlie Sheen"

"ACTED_IN"

"Wall Street"

1 row

Merge on multiple relationships

Query
MATCH (oliver:Person { name: 'Oliver Stone' }),(reiner:Person { name: 'Rob Reiner' })
MERGE (oliver)-[:DIRECTED]->(movie:Movie)<-[:ACTED_IN]-(reiner)
RETURN movie

In our example graph, 'Oliver Stone' and 'Rob Reiner' have never worked together. When we try to MERGE a "movie between them, Neo4j will not use any of the existing movies already connected to either person. Instead, a new 'movie' node is created.

Table 10. Result
movie

Node[20]{}

1 row
Nodes created: 1
Relationships created: 2
Labels added: 1

Merge on an undirected relationship

MERGE can also be used with an undirected relationship. When it needs to create a new one, it will pick a direction.

Query
MATCH (charlie:Person { name: 'Charlie Sheen' }),(oliver:Person { name: 'Oliver Stone' })
MERGE (charlie)-[r:KNOWS]-(oliver)
RETURN r

As 'Charlie Sheen' and 'Oliver Stone' do not know each other this MERGE query will create a KNOWS relationship between them. The direction of the created relationship is arbitrary.

Table 11. Result
r

:KNOWS[20]{}

1 row
Relationships created: 1

Merge on a relationship between two existing nodes

MERGE can be used in conjunction with preceding MATCH and MERGE clauses to create a relationship between two bound nodes 'm' and 'n', where 'm' is returned by MATCH and 'n' is created or matched by the earlier MERGE.

Query
MATCH (person:Person)
MERGE (city:City { name: person.bornIn })
MERGE (person)-[r:BORN_IN]->(city)
RETURN person.name, person.bornIn, city

This builds on the example from Merge single node derived from an existing node property. The second MERGE creates a BORN_IN relationship between each person and a city corresponding to the value of the person’s bornIn property. 'Charlie Sheen', 'Rob Reiner' and 'Oliver Stone' all have a BORN_IN relationship to the 'same' City node ('New York').

Table 12. Result
person.name person.bornIn city

"Charlie Sheen"

"New York"

Node[20]{name:"New York"}

"Martin Sheen"

"Ohio"

Node[21]{name:"Ohio"}

"Michael Douglas"

"New Jersey"

Node[22]{name:"New Jersey"}

"Oliver Stone"

"New York"

Node[20]{name:"New York"}

"Rob Reiner"

"New York"

Node[20]{name:"New York"}

5 rows
Nodes created: 3
Relationships created: 5
Properties set: 3
Labels added: 3

Merge on a relationship between an existing node and a merged node derived from a node property

MERGE can be used to simultaneously create both a new node 'n' and a relationship between a bound node 'm' and 'n'.

Query
MATCH (person:Person)
MERGE (person)-[r:HAS_CHAUFFEUR]->(chauffeur:Chauffeur { name: person.chauffeurName })
RETURN person.name, person.chauffeurName, chauffeur

As MERGE found no matches — in our example graph, there are no nodes labeled with Chauffeur and no HAS_CHAUFFEUR relationships — MERGE creates five nodes labeled with Chauffeur, each of which contains a name property whose value corresponds to each matched Person node’s chauffeurName property value. MERGE also creates a HAS_CHAUFFEUR relationship between each Person node and the newly-created corresponding Chauffeur node. As 'Charlie Sheen' and 'Michael Douglas' both have a chauffeur with the same name — 'John Brown' — a new node is created in each case, resulting in 'two' Chauffeur nodes having a name of 'John Brown', correctly denoting the fact that even though the name property may be identical, these are two separate people. This is in contrast to the example shown above in Merge on a relationship between two existing nodes, where we used the first MERGE to bind the City nodes to prevent them from being recreated (and thus duplicated) in the second MERGE.

Table 13. Result
person.name person.chauffeurName chauffeur

"Charlie Sheen"

"John Brown"

Node[20]{name:"John Brown"}

"Martin Sheen"

"Bob Brown"

Node[21]{name:"Bob Brown"}

"Michael Douglas"

"John Brown"

Node[22]{name:"John Brown"}

"Oliver Stone"

"Bill White"

Node[23]{name:"Bill White"}

"Rob Reiner"

"Ted Green"

Node[24]{name:"Ted Green"}

5 rows
Nodes created: 5
Relationships created: 5
Properties set: 5
Labels added: 5

Using unique constraints with MERGE

Cypher® prevents getting conflicting results from MERGE when using patterns that involve unique constraints. In this case, there must be at most one node that matches that pattern.

For example, given two unique constraints on :Person(id) and :Person(ssn), a query such as MERGE (n:Person {id: 12, ssn: 437}) will fail, if there are two different nodes (one with id 12 and one with ssn 437) or if there is only one node with only one of the properties. In other words, there must be exactly one node that matches the pattern, or no matching nodes.

Note that the following examples assume the existence of unique constraints that have been created using:

CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:Person) ASSERT n.name IS UNIQUE;
CREATE CONSTRAINT ON (n:Person) ASSERT n.role IS UNIQUE;

Merge using unique constraints creates a new node if no node is found

Merge using unique constraints creates a new node if no node is found.

Query
MERGE (laurence:Person { name: 'Laurence Fishburne' })
RETURN laurence.name

The query creates the 'laurence' node. If 'laurence' had already existed, MERGE would just match the existing node.

Table 14. Result
laurence.name

"Laurence Fishburne"

1 row
Nodes created: 1
Properties set: 1
Labels added: 1

Merge using unique constraints matches an existing node

Merge using unique constraints matches an existing node.

Query
MERGE (oliver:Person { name: 'Oliver Stone' })
RETURN oliver.name, oliver.bornIn

The 'oliver' node already exists, so MERGE just matches it.

Table 15. Result
oliver.name oliver.bornIn

"Oliver Stone"

"New York"

1 row

Merge with unique constraints and partial matches

Merge using unique constraints fails when finding partial matches.

Query
MERGE (michael:Person { name: 'Michael Douglas', role: 'Gordon Gekko' })
RETURN michael

While there is a matching unique 'michael' node with the name 'Michael Douglas', there is no unique node with the role of 'Gordon Gekko' and MERGE fails to match.

Error message
Merge did not find a matching node michael and can not create a new node due to
conflicts with existing unique nodes

If we want to give Michael Douglas the role of Gordon Gekko, we can use the SET clause instead:

Query
MERGE (michael:Person { name: 'Michael Douglas' })
SET michael.role = 'Gordon Gekko'

Merge with unique constraints and conflicting matches

Merge using unique constraints fails when finding conflicting matches.

Query
MERGE (oliver:Person { name: 'Oliver Stone', role: 'Gordon Gekko' })
RETURN oliver

While there is a matching unique 'oliver' node with the name 'Oliver Stone', there is also another unique node with the role of 'Gordon Gekko' and MERGE fails to match.

Error message
Merge did not find a matching node oliver and can not create a new node due to
conflicts with existing unique nodes

Using map parameters with MERGE

MERGE does not support map parameters the same way CREATE does. To use map parameters with MERGE, it is necessary to explicitly use the expected properties, such as in the following example. For more information on parameters, see Parameters.

Parameters
{
  "param" : {
    "name" : "Keanu Reeves",
    "role" : "Neo"
  }
}
Query
MERGE (person:Person { name: $param.name, role: $param.role })
RETURN person.name, person.role
Table 16. Result
person.name person.role

"Keanu Reeves"

"Neo"

1 row
Nodes created: 1
Properties set: 2
Labels added: 1