Fixtures are a way of organizing data that you want to test against; in short, sample data.
They are stored in YAML files, one file per model, which are placed in the directory appointed by ActiveSupport::TestCase.fixture_path=(path)
(this is automatically configured for Rails, so you can just put your files in <your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/
). The fixture file ends with the .yml
file extension, for example: <your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/web_sites.yml
).
The format of a fixture file looks like this:
rubyonrails: id: 1 name: Ruby on Rails url: http://www.rubyonrails.org google: id: 2 name: Google url: http://www.google.com
This fixture file includes two fixtures. Each YAML fixture (i.e. record) is given a name and is followed by an indented list of key/value pairs in the “key: value” format. Records are separated by a blank line for your viewing pleasure.
Note: Fixtures are unordered. If you want ordered fixtures, use the omap YAML type. See yaml.org/type/omap.html for the specification. You will need ordered fixtures when you have foreign key constraints on keys in the same table. This is commonly needed for tree structures. Example:
--- !omap - parent: id: 1 parent_id: NULL title: Parent - child: id: 2 parent_id: 1 title: Child
Since fixtures are a testing construct, we use them in our unit and functional tests. There are two ways to use the fixtures, but first let's take a look at a sample unit test:
require "test_helper" class WebSiteTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase test "web_site_count" do assert_equal 2, WebSite.count end end
By default, test_helper.rb
will load all of your fixtures into your test database, so this test will succeed.
The testing environment will automatically load all the fixtures into the database before each test. To ensure consistent data, the environment deletes the fixtures before running the load.
In addition to being available in the database, the fixture's data may also be accessed by using a special dynamic method, which has the same name as the model.
Passing in a fixture name to this dynamic method returns the fixture matching this name:
test "find one" do assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", web_sites(:rubyonrails).name end
Passing in multiple fixture names returns all fixtures matching these names:
test "find all by name" do assert_equal 2, web_sites(:rubyonrails, :google).length end
Passing in no arguments returns all fixtures:
test "find all" do assert_equal 2, web_sites.length end
Passing in any fixture name that does not exist will raise StandardError
:
test "find by name that does not exist" do assert_raise(StandardError) { web_sites(:reddit) } end
Alternatively, you may enable auto-instantiation of the fixture data. For instance, take the following tests:
test "find_alt_method_1" do assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", @web_sites['rubyonrails']['name'] end test "find_alt_method_2" do assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", @rubyonrails.name end
In order to use these methods to access fixtured data within your test cases, you must specify one of the following in your ActiveSupport::TestCase-derived class:
to fully enable instantiated fixtures (enable alternate methods #1 and #2 above)
self.use_instantiated_fixtures = true
create only the hash for the fixtures, do not 'find' each instance (enable alternate method #1 only)
self.use_instantiated_fixtures = :no_instances
Using either of these alternate methods incurs a performance hit, as the fixtured data must be fully traversed in the database to create the fixture hash and/or instance variables. This is expensive for large sets of fixtured data.
Sometimes you don't care about the content of the fixtures as much as you care about the volume. In these cases, you can mix ERB
in with your YAML fixtures to create a bunch of fixtures for load testing, like:
<% 1.upto(1000) do |i| %> fix_<%= i %>: id: <%= i %> name: guy_<%= i %> <% end %>
This will create 1000 very simple fixtures.
Using ERB
, you can also inject dynamic values into your fixtures with inserts like <%= Date.today.strftime("%Y-%m-%d") %>
. This is however a feature to be used with some caution. The point of fixtures are that they're stable units of predictable sample data. If you feel that you need to inject dynamic values, then perhaps you should reexamine whether your application is properly testable. Hence, dynamic values in fixtures are to be considered a code smell.
Helper methods defined in a fixture will not be available in other fixtures, to prevent against unwanted inter-test dependencies. Methods used by multiple fixtures should be defined in a module that is included in ActiveRecord::FixtureSet.context_class
.
define a helper method in test_helper.rb
module FixtureFileHelpers def file_sha(path) OpenSSL::Digest::SHA256.hexdigest(File.read(Rails.root.join('test/fixtures', path))) end end ActiveRecord::FixtureSet.context_class.include FixtureFileHelpers
use the helper method in a fixture
photo: name: kitten.png sha: <%= file_sha 'files/kitten.png' %>
Test cases can use begin+rollback to isolate their changes to the database instead of having to delete+insert for every test case.
class FooTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase self.use_transactional_tests = true test "godzilla" do assert_not_empty Foo.all Foo.destroy_all assert_empty Foo.all end test "godzilla aftermath" do assert_not_empty Foo.all end end
If you preload your test database with all fixture data (probably by running bin/rails db:fixtures:load
) and use transactional tests, then you may omit all fixtures declarations in your test cases since all the data's already there and every case rolls back its changes.
In order to use instantiated fixtures with preloaded data, set self.pre_loaded_fixtures
to true. This will provide access to fixture data for every table that has been loaded through fixtures (depending on the value of use_instantiated_fixtures
).
When not to use transactional tests:
You're testing whether a transaction works correctly. Nested transactions don't commit until all parent transactions commit, particularly, the fixtures transaction which is begun in setup and rolled back in teardown. Thus, you won't be able to verify the results of your transaction until Active Record supports nested transactions or savepoints (in progress).
Your database does not support transactions. Every Active Record database supports transactions except MySQL MyISAM. Use InnoDB, MaxDB, or NDB instead.
Fixtures that don't specify an ID get some extra features:
Stable, autogenerated IDs
Label references for associations (belongs_to, has_one, has_many)
HABTM associations as inline lists
There are some more advanced features available even if the id is specified:
Autofilled timestamp columns
Fixture label interpolation
Support for YAML defaults
Here, have a monkey fixture:
george: id: 1 name: George the Monkey reginald: id: 2 name: Reginald the Pirate
Each of these fixtures has two unique identifiers: one for the database and one for the humans. Why don't we generate the primary key instead? Hashing each fixture's label yields a consistent ID:
george: # generated id: 503576764 name: George the Monkey reginald: # generated id: 324201669 name: Reginald the Pirate
Active Record looks at the fixture's model class, discovers the correct primary key, and generates it right before inserting the fixture into the database.
The generated ID for a given label is constant, so we can discover any fixture's ID without loading anything, as long as we know the label.
Specifying foreign keys in fixtures can be very fragile, not to mention difficult to read. Since Active Record can figure out the ID of any fixture from its label, you can specify FK's by label instead of ID.
Let's break out some more monkeys and pirates.
### in pirates.yml reginald: id: 1 name: Reginald the Pirate monkey_id: 1 ### in monkeys.yml george: id: 1 name: George the Monkey pirate_id: 1
Add a few more monkeys and pirates and break this into multiple files, and it gets pretty hard to keep track of what's going on. Let's use labels instead of IDs:
### in pirates.yml reginald: name: Reginald the Pirate monkey: george ### in monkeys.yml george: name: George the Monkey pirate: reginald
Pow! All is made clear. Active Record reflects on the fixture's model class, finds all the belongs_to
associations, and allows you to specify a target label for the association (monkey: george) rather than a target id for the FK (monkey_id: 1
).
Supporting polymorphic relationships is a little bit more complicated, since Active Record needs to know what type your association is pointing at. Something like this should look familiar:
### in fruit.rb belongs_to :eater, polymorphic: true ### in fruits.yml apple: id: 1 name: apple eater_id: 1 eater_type: Monkey
Can we do better? You bet!
apple: eater: george (Monkey)
Just provide the polymorphic target type and Active Record will take care of the rest.
Time
to give our monkey some fruit.
### in monkeys.yml george: id: 1 name: George the Monkey ### in fruits.yml apple: id: 1 name: apple orange: id: 2 name: orange grape: id: 3 name: grape ### in fruits_monkeys.yml apple_george: fruit_id: 1 monkey_id: 1 orange_george: fruit_id: 2 monkey_id: 1 grape_george: fruit_id: 3 monkey_id: 1
Let's make the HABTM fixture go away.
### in monkeys.yml george: id: 1 name: George the Monkey fruits: apple, orange, grape ### in fruits.yml apple: name: apple orange: name: orange grape: name: grape
Zap! No more fruits_monkeys.yml file. We've specified the list of fruits on George's fixture, but we could've just as easily specified a list of monkeys on each fruit. As with belongs_to
, Active Record reflects on the fixture's model class and discovers the has_and_belongs_to_many
associations.
Timestamp
ColumnsIf your table/model specifies any of Active Record's standard timestamp columns (created_at
, created_on
, updated_at
, updated_on
), they will automatically be set to Time.now
.
If you've set specific values, they'll be left alone.
The label of the current fixture is always available as a column value:
geeksomnia: name: Geeksomnia's Account subdomain: $LABEL email: [email protected]
Also, sometimes (like when porting older join table fixtures) you'll need to be able to get a hold of the identifier for a given label. ERB
to the rescue:
george_reginald: monkey_id: <%= ActiveRecord::FixtureSet.identify(:reginald) %> pirate_id: <%= ActiveRecord::FixtureSet.identify(:george) %>
You can set and reuse defaults in your fixtures YAML file. This is the same technique used in the database.yml
file to specify defaults:
DEFAULTS: &DEFAULTS created_on: <%= 3.weeks.ago.to_formatted_s(:db) %> first: name: Smurf <<: *DEFAULTS second: name: Fraggle <<: *DEFAULTS
Any fixture labeled “DEFAULTS” is safely ignored.
Besides using “DEFAULTS”, you can also specify what fixtures will be ignored by setting “ignore” in “_fixture” section.
# users.yml _fixture: ignore: - base # or use "ignore: base" when there is only one fixture that needs to be ignored. base: &base admin: false introduction: "This is a default description" admin: <<: *base admin: true visitor: <<: *base
In the above example, 'base' will be ignored when creating fixtures. This can be used for common attributes inheriting.
It's possible to set the fixture's model class directly in the YAML file. This is helpful when fixtures are loaded outside tests and set_fixture_class
is not available (e.g. when running bin/rails db:fixtures:load
).
_fixture: model_class: User david: name: David
Any fixtures labeled “_fixture” are safely ignored.
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 536 def cache_fixtures(connection, fixtures_map) cache_for_connection(connection).update(fixtures_map) end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 520 def cache_for_connection(connection) @@all_cached_fixtures[connection] end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 528 def cached_fixtures(connection, keys_to_fetch = nil) if keys_to_fetch cache_for_connection(connection).values_at(*keys_to_fetch) else cache_for_connection(connection).values end end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 589 def context_class @context_class ||= Class.new end
Superclass for the evaluation contexts used by ERB
fixtures.
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 555 def create_fixtures(fixtures_directory, fixture_set_names, class_names = {}, config = ActiveRecord::Base, &block) fixture_set_names = Array(fixture_set_names).map(&:to_s) class_names = ClassCache.new class_names, config # FIXME: Apparently JK uses this. connection = block_given? ? block : lambda { ActiveRecord::Base.connection } fixture_files_to_read = fixture_set_names.reject do |fs_name| fixture_is_cached?(connection.call, fs_name) end if fixture_files_to_read.any? fixtures_map = read_and_insert( fixtures_directory, fixture_files_to_read, class_names, connection, ) cache_fixtures(connection.call, fixtures_map) end cached_fixtures(connection.call, fixture_set_names) end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 524 def fixture_is_cached?(connection, table_name) cache_for_connection(connection)[table_name] end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 580 def identify(label, column_type = :integer) if column_type == :uuid Digest::UUID.uuid_v5(Digest::UUID::OID_NAMESPACE, label.to_s) else Zlib.crc32(label.to_s) % MAX_ID end end
Returns a consistent, platform-independent identifier for label
. Integer
identifiers are values less than 2^30. UUIDs are RFC 4122 version 5 SHA-1 hashes.
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 549 def instantiate_all_loaded_fixtures(object, load_instances = true) all_loaded_fixtures.each_value do |fixture_set| instantiate_fixtures(object, fixture_set, load_instances) end end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 540 def instantiate_fixtures(object, fixture_set, load_instances = true) return unless load_instances fixture_set.each do |fixture_name, fixture| object.instance_variable_set "@#{fixture_name}", fixture.find rescue FixtureClassNotFound nil end end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 650 def initialize(_, name, class_name, path, config = ActiveRecord::Base) @name = name @path = path @config = config self.model_class = class_name @fixtures = read_fixture_files(path) @table_name = model_class&.table_name || self.class.default_fixture_table_name(name, config) end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 516 def reset_cache @@all_cached_fixtures.clear end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 662 def [](x) fixtures[x] end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 666 def []=(k, v) fixtures[k] = v end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 670 def each(&block) fixtures.each(&block) end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 674 def size fixtures.size end
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 680 def table_rows # allow specifying fixtures to be ignored by setting `ignore` in `_fixture` section fixtures.except!(*ignored_fixtures) TableRows.new( table_name, model_class: model_class, fixtures: fixtures, ).to_hash end
Returns a hash of rows to be inserted. The key is the table, the value is a list of rows to insert to that table.
© 2004–2021 David Heinemeier Hansson
Licensed under the MIT License.