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Build Status

Sequelize fixtures

This is a simple lib to load data to database using sequelize.
It is intended for easily setting up test data.
Yaml and json formats are supported. Includes a grunt task.
Duplicate records are not insertd. API returns bluebird promises, but callbacks can also be used as the last argument.

Tested with latest Sequelize (3.0.0), should work on 2.x.

Install

npm install sequelize-fixtures

Test

npm test

Usage

    var sequelize_fixtures = require('sequelize-fixtures'),
        models = {
            Foo: require('./models/Foo')
        };

    //from file
    sequelize_fixtures.loadFile('fixtures/test_data.json', models).then(function(){
        doStuffAfterLoad();
    });

    //can use glob syntax to select multiple files
    sequelize_fixtures.loadFile('fixtures/*.json', models).then(function(){
        doStuffAfterLoad();
    });

    //array of files
    sequelize_fixtures.loadFiles(['fixtures/users.json', 'fixtures/data*.json'], models).then(function(){
        doStuffAfterLoad();
    });

    //specify file encoding (default utf8)
    sequelize_fixtures.loadFile('fixtures/*.json', models, { encoding: 'windows-1257'}).then(function(){
        doStuffAfterLoad();
    });

    //load fixtures inside a transaction
    sequelize.transaction(function(tx) {
        sequelize_fixtures.loadFile('fixtures/*.json', models, { transaction: tx}).then(doStuffAfterLoad);
    });
    
    //apply transform for each model being loaded
    sequelize_fixtures.loadFile('fixtures/*.json', models, {
        transformFixtureDataFn: function (data) {
          if(data.createdAt 
           && data.createdAt < 0) { 
            data.createdAt = new Date((new Date()).getTime() + parseFloat(data.createdAt) * 1000 * 60);
          }
          return data;
        }
    }).then(function() {
        doStuffAfterLoad();
    });

    //from array
    var fixtures = [
        {
            model: 'Foo',
            data: {
                propA: 'bar',
                propB: 1
            }
        },
        {
            model: 'Foo',
            data: {
                propA: 'baz',
                propB: 3
            }
        }
    ];
    sequelize_fixtures.loadFixtures(fixtures, models).then(function(){
        doStuffAfterLoad();
    });

File formats

json

    [
        {
            "model": "Foo",
            "data": {
                "propA": "bar",
                "propB": 1
            }
        },
        {
            "model": "Foo",
            "data": {
                "propA": "baz",
                "propB": 3
            }
        }
    ]

yaml

    fixtures:
        - model: Foo
          data:
            propA: bar
            propB: 1
        - model: Foo
          data:
            propA: baz
            propB: 3

javascript

    module.exports = [
        {
            "model": "Foo",
            "data": {
                "propA": "bar",
                "propB": 1
            }
        },
        {
            "model": "Foo",
            "data": {
                "propA": "baz",
                "propB": 3
            }
        }
    ];

Associations

You can specify associations by providing related object id or a where clause to select associated object with. Make sure associated objects are described before associations!

One to many

Assuming

Car.belongsTo(Owner);
Owner.hasMany(Car);

Associated entity can be mapped by providing either an id:

[
    {
        "model": "Owner",
        "data": {
            "id": 11,
            "name": "John Doe",
            "city": "Vilnius"
        }
    },
    {
        "model": "Car",
        "data": {
            "id": 203,
            "make": "Ford",
            "owner": 11
        }
    }
]

Or a property-value map (like a 'where' object) to find the entity with:

[
    {
        "model": "Owner",
        "data": {
            "name": "John Doe",
            "city": "Vilnius"
        }
    },
    {
        "model": "Car",
        "data": {
            "make": "Ford",
            "owner": {
                "name": "John Doe" 
            }
        }
    }
]

Many to many

Assuming

Project.belongsToMany(Person, {through: 'peopleprojects'});
Person.belongsToMany(Project, {through: 'peopleprojects'});

Associated entities can be mapped using the association 'as' name ('people' for Project and 'projects' for People) or 'through' table name, and providing an array of ids:

[
    {
        "model":"Person",
        "data":{
            "id":122,
            "name": "Jack",
            "role": "Developer"
        }
    },
    {
        "model":"Person",
        "data":{
            "id": 123,
            "name": "John",
            "role": "Analyst"
        }
    },
    {
        "model":"Project",
        "data": {
            "id": 20,
            "name": "The Great Project",
            "people": [122, 123]
        }
    }

]

Or an array of property-value mappings to find the entities with:

[
    {
        "model":"Person",
        "data":{
            "name": "Jack",
            "role": "Developer"
        }
    },
    {
        "model":"Person",
        "data":{
            "name": "John",
            "role": "Analyst"
        }
    },
    {
        "model":"Project",
        "data": {
            "name": "The Great Project",
            "people": [
                {                        
                    "name": "Jack"
                },
                {
                    "name": "John"
                }
            ]
        }
    }

]

Build options, save optons

For each model you can provide build options that are passed to Model.build() and save options that are passed to instance.save(), example:

{
    "model": "Article",
    "buildOptions": { 
        "raw": true, 
        "isNewRecord": true
    },
    "saveOptions": { 
        "fields": ["title", "body"] 
    },
    "data": {
        "title": "Any title",
        "slug": "My Invalid Slug"
    }
}

Detect duplicates based on select fields

In case you want to detect duplicates based on specific field or fields rather than all fields (for example, don't include entities with the same id, even if other fields don't match), you can speficy these fields with a 'keys' property.

{
    "model": "Person",
    "keys": ["email"],
    "data": {
        "name": "John",
        "email": "example@example.com"
    }
},
{
    "model": "Person",
    "keys": ["email"],
    "data": {
        "name": "Patrick",
        "email": "example@example.com"
    }
}

In this example only John will be loaded

grunt task

Gruntfile.js:

    grunt.initConfig({
        fixtures: {
            import_test_data: {
                src: ['fixtures/data1.json', 'fixtures/models*.json'],
                models: function () {  //returns mapping model name: model
                    return require('../models') 
                },
                options: { //specify encoding, optiona. default utf-8
                    encoding: 'windows-1257'
                }
            }
        }

    });

    grunt.loadNpmTasks('sequelize-fixtures');