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Seedr

GoDoc

WORK IN PROGRESS

Seedr, being heavily inspired by Factory Girl, allows to easily declare factories, insert records into database (optional) and initialize objects (structs) from those newly created records.

Available DB drivers

  • MySQL

Basic Usage

Let's assume we have MySQL database testdb with users table:

create table users (
    id         int(10) unsigned not null auto_increment,
    name       varchar(250) not null,
    sex        varchar(10),
    age        int(5) unsigned,
    created_at datetime not null default NOW(),
    primary key (id)
) engine=InnoDB default charset=utf8;

Basic seedr usage:

package whatever

import (
  "database/sql"
  "time"

  _ "github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql"

  . "github.com/josephbuchma/seedr" // dot import for convenience.
  "github.com/josephbuchma/seedr/driver/sql/mysql"
)

// Define 'users' factory

var users = Factory{
  FactoryConfig{
    // Entity is a MySQL table name in this case
    Entity:     "users",
    PrimaryKey: "id",
  },
  // to see relations in action check out tests and docs (links below)
  Relations{},
  // Traits are different variations of user.
  // Each field of trait must be same as name of field in `users` table.
  Traits{
    "base": {
      // Auto means that this field will be initialized by driver (DB)
      "id":         Auto(),
      "name":       SequenceString("John-%d"), // produces John-1, John-2, John-3...
      "age":        nil,                       // nil -> NULL
      "sex":        nil,
      "created_at": Func(func()interface{}{ return time.Now() }),
    },
    "old": {
      "age": 80,
    },
    "young": {
      "age": 15,
    },
    "male": {
      "sex": "male",
    },
    "female": {
      "sex": "female",
    },

    "User": {
      Include: "base",
    },
    "OldWoman": {
      Include: "base old female", // traits can be combined using include
      "name":  "Ann",             // you can override any field
    },
    "YoungMan": {
      Include: "base young male",
    },
    "User9999": {
      Include: "base",
      "id":    9999,
    },
  },
}

// Create new Seedr (usually you'll do it in separate file,
// so New() will be seedr.New()

var testdb = New("test_seedr",
  SetCreateDriver(mysql.New(openTestDB())), // configure MySQL driver (openTestDB is at the end)
  // field mapper is used for mapping trait fields to struct fields.
  // In this case seedr will look for `sql:"column_name"` tag, and if it's not
  // provided it'll fall back to SnakeFieldMapper, which converts struct field
  // name to snake case.
  SetFieldMapper(
    TagFieldMapper("sql", seedr.SnakeFieldMapper()),
  ),
).Add("users", users) // add users factory

// Create some records
func test() {
  var u User
  var users []User

  // Lines below are doing exactly what you're thinking (creating records in DB and initializing objects)
  // And yes, you can only create traits that starts with
  // capital letter (other traits are "private" to the factory,
  // and can only be included by other traits in this factory)
  testdb.Create("User").Scan(&u)
  testdb.Create("User9999").Scan(&u)
  testdb.CreateBatch("OldWoman", 10).Scan(&users)
  testdb.CreateCustom("User", Trait{
    "name": "Mike",
    "age":  22,
  }).Scan(&u)
  testdb.CreateCustomBatch("User", 4, Trait{
    "name": "Mike",
    "age":  22,
  }).Scan(&users)

  // You can also only "build" the object, without inserting to DB
  testdb.Build("User").Scan(&u) // u.ID == 0
}

// User model
type User struct {
  ID        int       `sql:"id"`
  Name      string    `sql:"name"`
  Age       *int      `sql:"age"`
  Sex       *string   `sql:"sex"`
  CreatedAt time.Time `sql:"created_at"`
}

func openTestDB() *sql.DB {
  db, err := sql.Open("mysql", "root:@/testdb?parseTime=true")
  if err != nil {
    panic(err)
  }
  return db
}

To see how to work with relations and other features, check out tests and docs