Blacksmith
==========
Data generation framework for Elixir.
In testing, sometimes it's useful to create records in the form of maps. Blacksmith makes it easy.
First, install Blacksmith:
In your mix.exs file, add the blacksmith dependency:
~~~elixir
def deps do
[{:blacksmith, "~> 0.1"}]
end
~~~
You will also have to add `:blacksmith` to your application list:
~~~elixir
def application do
[applications: applications(Mix.env)]
end
defp applications(:test), do: applications(:all) ++ [:blacksmith]
defp applications(_all), do: [:logger]
~~~
Next, tell Blacksmith how to save one record, or many records:
~~~elixir
defmodule Blacksmith.Config do
def save(repo, model) do
repo |> save( model )
end
def save_all(repo, list_of_models) do
repo |> save_all( list_of_models )
end
end
~~~
Next, perhaps in test_helper for convenience or somewhere in lib for speed, register each of your new models with Forge. Use [Faker](https://github.com/igas/faker) for fake values, and sequences to maintain unique values:
~~~elixir
defmodule Forge do
use Blacksmith
register :user,
name: Faker.Name.first_name,
email: Sequence.next(:email, &"test#{&1}@example.com"),
description: Faker.Lorem.sentence,
roles: [],
always_the_same: "string"
# this will create a user with roles set to [:admin]
register :admin,
[prototype: user],
roles: ["admin"]
end
~~~
Now you can create a user, generating all of the default values:
~~~elixir
user = Forge.user
~~~
or a saved user, with the name attribute overridden, and a new attribute of favorite_language:
~~~elixir
user = Forge.saved_user Models.User, name: "Will Override", favorite_language: "Elixir"
~~~
or a list of 5 users
~~~elixir
user = Forge.user_list 5
~~~
or a saved list of 5 admins
~~~elixir
admin = Forge.saved_admin_list repo, 5
~~~
Create a list using a few common data elements:
~~~elixir
Forge.having survey_id: some_survey.id, author: Forge.user do
question = Forge.question # will share the same survey id and user from above
end
~~~
Next release: allow nesting of having blocks.
## Using with Ecto
Blacksmith can be used easily with a database persistance library such as Ecto.
~~~elixir
defmodule User do
use Ecto.Model
schema "users" do
field :name, :string
field :email, :string
end
end
~~~
The `@save_one_function` and `@save_all_function` attributes are used to delegate to your persistence layer. We delegate to `Blacksmith.Config` defined below. You'll also notice that we added the `__struct__` field to `register :user`, that's because Ecto works with models built on structs instead of plain maps.
~~~elixir
defmodule Forge do
use Blacksmith
@save_one_function &Blacksmith.Config.save/2
@save_all_function &Blacksmith.Config.save_all/2
register :user,
__struct__: User,
name: "John Henry",
email: Sequence.next(:email, &"jh#{&1}@example.com")
end
~~~
`Blacksmith.Config` defines the callback functions that delegate to the Ecto repository for persistence.
~~~elixir
defmodule Blacksmith.Config do
def save(repo, map) do
repo.insert(map)
end
def save_all(repo, list) do
Enum.map(list, &repo.insert/1)
end
end
~~~
`Forge.saved_user(MyRepo)` will generate a `User` model that have been inserted in the database backed by `MyRepo`.