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django-fixtureless

Fixtureless Testing Utility for Django. (ver. 1.4.2.1)

The purpose behind fixtureless is to provide a fast and easy way to create test objects in Django. Fixtures are often used to provide a set of mock data for testing purposes. It is tedious to update all the fixtures upon a model update or to create a new set of fixtures if you want to test specific model parameters. When the project contains a large amount of fixtures tests also begin to run slowly due to the load time.

Fixtureless is meant to bypass all this. You can create a fixtureless object given the model, the number of objects you want created and an initial dictionary containing any specific data you want to test.

Requirements

  1. Django >= 1.4
  2. Python (2.7+ or 3.3+)

Supports

  1. PostgreSQL
  2. SQLite
  3. MySQL (Only Python 2.7+)
  4. django-timezone-field (As of ver. 1.2.0)

Install

django-fixtureless is registered with Pypi and can be installed using pip.

pip install django-fixtureless

Releases and Branches

The master branch is meant for release. Upon an update to the master branch the version will increment according to the format: (major).(minor).(micro)

The dev branch holds all approved updates to the django-fixtureless project until a release milestone is met, at which time dev will be merged into master.

Development is done on branches from dev and merge via pull requests into dev. Everyone is encouraged to fork this repo and create pull requests with additions they would like to see in the project.

API Definition

Fixtureless has two methods for use in the API.

  1. The build() method will generate a Django model object and return the object (or list of objects).
  2. The create() method is similar to build() but the object gets saved to the database.

Both methods expect the same arguments.

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import MyModel

factory = Factory()
factory.build(MyModel[, count] | [, initial])

Usage

There are several available options to use with the fixtureless factory. Below are examples of each.

First let's define a few Django models to use in the examples.:

from django.db import models
from my_app import constants

class Customer(models.Model):
    uuid = models.CharField(max_length=50, db_index=True, unique=True)
    account_balance = models.IntegerField(max_length=12, default=0)
    email = models.EmailField()
    se_id = models.IntegerField(db_index=True, unique=True)

    def __str__(self):
        return 'se_id: {}'.format(self.se_id)

class Charge(TimestampMixin, BaseModel):
    amount = models.PositiveIntegerField(max_length=12, default=50)
    capture = models.BooleanField(default=True)
    currency = models.CharField(
        max_length=5, choices=constants.CURRENCY_CHOICES,
        default=constants.CURRENCY_USD)
    customer = models.ForeignKey(Customer, to_field='uuid')
    description = models.CharField(max_length=255)

    def __str__(self):
        return 'created_at: {}, amount: ${:0.2f}'.format(
            self.created_at, self.amount/100)

Example 1: Trivial Case - A single object:

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge

factory = Factory()
charge = factory.create(Charge)

Example 2: Model w/ single count:

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge

factory = Factory()
count = 1
charge = factory.create(Charge, count)

Note:

Example 1 and Example 2 will both yield a single generated charge object
with random data.

Example 3: Model w/ multiple count::

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge

factory = Factory()
count = 5
charges = factory.create(Charge, count)

Note:

Example 3 will return a list with 5 *charge* objects.  All will be unique and
contain random data.

Example 4: Model w/ single count and initial::

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge

factory = Factory()
initial = {
    'amount': '50',
    'description': 'test description',
}
charge = factory.create(Charge, initial)

Note:

Example 4 will create a single charge object with the *amount* and
*description* fields containing the data provided in the *initial*
dictionary.  It should be emphasized that you must provide either *count*
or *initial* data.

Example 5: Model w/ multi count and single initial::

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge

factory = Factory()
count = 2
initial = {
    'amount': '50',
    'description': 'test description',
}
initial_list = list()
for _ in itertools.repeat(None, count):
    initial_list.append(initial)
charges = factory.create(Charge, initial_list)

Note:

Example 5 will create two unique charge objects passed back in the
*charges* list.  Both objects will contain the same *initial* data.  All
other fields will be randomly generated.

Example 6: Model /w multi count and multi intial::

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge

factory = Factory()
initial1 = {
    'amount': '50',
    'description': 'test description 1',
}
initial2 = {
    'amount': '150',
    'description': 'test description 2',
}
initial_list = [initial1, initial2]
charges = factory.create(Charge, initial_list)

Note:

Example 6 will create two unique *Charge* objects passed back in the
*charges* list.  The first item will contain *initial1* data and the second
will contain *initial2* data.

Example 7: Multi Model Trivial::

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge, Customer

factory = Factory()
objs = factory.create((Charge, ), (Customer, ))

Note:

Example 7 will create a *Charge* object and a *Customer* object passed back
in the *objs* list.  It should be empahsized that each object should be
passed in as it's own *tuple* object.

Example 8: Multi Model w/ counts::

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge, Customer

factory = Factory()
count1 = 1
count2 = 2
args = ((Charge, count1), (Customer, count2))
objs = factory.create(*args)

Note:

Example 8 will create a *Charge* object followed by two *Customer* objects
passed back in the *objs* list.

Example 9: Multi Model w/ counts and initial::

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge

factory = Factory()
count1 = 2
count2 = 3
initial1 = {
    'amount': '50',
    'description': 'test description 1',
}
initial_list1 = list()
for _ in itertools.repeat(None, count1):
    initial_list.append(initial1)
initial2 = {
    'account_balance': '10',
    'email': '[email protected]',
}
initial_list2 = list()
for _ in itertools.repeat(None, count2):
    initial_list2.append(initial)
args = ((Charge, initial_list1), (Customer, initial_list2))
objs = factory.create(*args)

Note:

Example 9 will create two *Charge* objects with *initial1* data followed by
three *Customer* objects with *initial2* data passed back in the *objs*
list.

Example 10: Multi Model w/ counts and multi initial::

from fixtureless import Factory

from my_app.models import Charge

factory = Factory()
count1 = 2
count2 = 3
initial1_1 = {
    'amount': '50',
    'description': 'test description 1',
}
initial1_2 = {
    'amount': '150',
    'description': 'test description 2',
}
initial2_1 = {
    'account_balance': '10',
    'email': '[email protected]',
}
initial2_2 = {
    'account_balance': '150',
    'email': '[email protected]',
}
initial2_3 = {
    'account_balance': '250',
    'email': '[email protected]',
}
initial1_list = [initial1_1, initial1_2]
initial2_list = [initial2_1, initial2_2, initial2_3]
args = ((Charge, initial1_list), (Customer, initial2_list))
objs = factory.create(*args)

Note:

Example 10 will create two *Charge* objects, one for each *initia1_x*,
followed by three *Customer* objects, one for each *initial2_x*.

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Fixtureless Testing Utility for Django

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