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I'm developing a Django application which stores user information like their address, phone number, name, etc.

I've worked with PHP's Faker library and the seeder included with Laravel. I had been able to populate the database with fake data but now I'm working with Django.

I'd like to populate my users table with around 200 entries. But, I don't want the entries to be random strings. I want it to be fake data like I can get with Laravel. I don't know how to do it.

What do I need to do to persist fake data?

This is for showing the end user the application with some entries so he can see statistics and other things. The data will need to stay in the database. I tried using unit tests but that deletes the database after the unit test ends.

Thanks!

Dwayne Crooks
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user3186459
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    a simple search yielded: https://github.com/joke2k/django-faker/. – Ali Oct 08 '15 at 19:37
  • Thanks, I have already tried with this package but have no succes but I find the problem, there is a problem when you install it with "pip install django-faker" you have to install it with "pip install git+git://github.com/joke2k/django-faker.git" – user3186459 Oct 12 '15 at 14:38

2 Answers2

35

To get it done in a nice way you'll need a combination of Factory Boy, Faker and custom management commands.

Factory Boy allows you to create templates for producing valid objects and Faker generates fake data.

When you install Factory Boy, pip install factory_boy, you also get Faker.

Given,

from django.db import models


class User(models.Model):
    name = models.CharField(max_length=64)
    address = models.CharField(max_length=128)
    phone_number = models.CharField(max_length=32)

You can define a Factory as follows:

import factory  
import factory.django

class UserFactory(factory.django.DjangoModelFactory):  
    class Meta:
        model = User

    name = factory.Faker('name')
    address = factory.Faker('address')
    phone_number = factory.Faker('phone_number')

Then, you can create fake users by calling UserFactory.create().

One way to get your 200 fake users would be to jump into the shell, python manage.py shell, and do:

 >>> # import UserFactory here
 >>> for _ in range(200):
 ...     UserFactory.create()

Another way, which can give you a lot more flexibility, is to create a custom management command.

For example, create seed.py (this will be the management command name) in the directory <yourapp>/management/commands (to have it discovered by Django) with the following:

# <yourapp>/management/commands/seed.py
from django.core.management.base import BaseCommand

# import UserFactory here


class Command(BaseCommand):
    help = 'Seeds the database.'

    def add_arguments(self, parser):
        parser.add_argument('--users',
            default=200,
            type=int,
            help='The number of fake users to create.')

    def handle(self, *args, **options):
        for _ in range(options['users']):
            UserFactory.create()

And, you'd run it via the command-line with python manage.py seed or python manage.py seed --users 50 for example.

Richard de Wit
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Dwayne Crooks
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3

Try the django-autofixture app:
https://github.com/gregmuellegger/django-autofixture

This app aims to provide a simple way of loading masses of randomly generated test data into your development database. You can use a management command to load test data through command line.

It is named autofixture because it is based on django's fixtures. Without autofixture you add test data through the admin to see how the non-static pages on your site look. You export data by using dumpdata to send it to your colleagues or to preserve it before you make a manage.py reset app and so on. As your site grows in complexity the process of adding and re-adding data becomes more and more annoying.

See this django packages too, maybe can help with fake tests and others problems. https://www.djangopackages.com/grids/g/fixtures/

divibisan
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Paulo Pessoa
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