Model Bakery: Smart fixtures for better tests¶
Model Bakery offers you a smart way to create fixtures for testing in Django.
With a simple and powerful API you can create many objects with a single line of code.
Model Bakery is a rename of the legacy model_mommy’s project.
Contributing to Model Bakery¶
As an open source project, Model Bakery welcomes contributions of many forms. Examples of contributions include:
- Code Patches
- Documentation improvements
- Bug reports
Compatibility¶
model_bakery supports Django >= 1.11 and Python >= 3.5
Contributing¶
- Prepare a virtual environment.
$ pip install virtualenvwrapper
$ mkvirtualenv model_bakery
- Install the requirements.
$ pip install -r dev_requirements.txt
- Run the tests.
$ make test
Doubts? Loved it? Hated it? Suggestions?¶
Feel free to open an issue for support, development or ideas!
Contents:
Basic Usage¶
Let’s say you have an app shop with a model like this:
File: models.py
class Customer(models.Model):
"""
Model class Customer of shop app
"""
happy = models.BooleanField()
name = models.CharField(max_length=30)
age = models.IntegerField()
bio = models.TextField()
wanted_games_qtd = models.BigIntegerField()
birthday = models.DateField()
last_shopping = models.DateTimeField()
To create a persisted instance, just call Model Bakery:
File: test_models.py
#Core Django imports
from django.test import TestCase
#Third-party app imports
from model_bakery import baker
from shop.models import Customer
class CustomerTestModel(TestCase):
"""
Class to test the model Customer
"""
def setUp(self):
self.customer = baker.make(Customer)
Importing every model over and over again is boring. So let Model Bakery import them for you:
from model_bakery import baker
# 1st form: app_label.model_name
customer = baker.make('shop.Customer')
# 2nd form: model_name
product = baker.make('Product')
Note
You can only use the 2nd form on unique model names. If you have an app shop with a Product, and an app stock with a Product, you must use the app_label.model_name form.
Note
model_name is case insensitive.
Model Relationships¶
Model Bakery also handles relationships. Let’s say the customer has a purchase history:
File: models.py
class Customer(models.Model):
"""
Model class Customer of shop app
"""
happy = models.BooleanField()
name = models.CharField(max_length=30)
age = models.IntegerField()
bio = models.TextField()
wanted_games_qtd = models.BigIntegerField()
birthday = models.DateField()
appointment = models.DateTimeField()
class PurchaseHistory(models.Model):
"""
Model class PurchaseHistory of shop app
"""
customer = models.ForeignKey('Customer')
products = models.ManyToManyField('Product')
year = models.IntegerField()
You can use Model Bakery as:
from django.test import TestCase
from model_bakery import baker
class PurchaseHistoryTestModel(TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.history = baker.make('shop.PurchaseHistory')
print(self.history.customer)
It will also create the Customer, automagically.
NOTE: ForeignKeys and OneToOneFields - Since Django 1.8, ForeignKey and OneToOne fields don’t accept unpersisted model instances anymore. This means that if you run:
baker.prepare('shop.PurchaseHistory')
You’ll end up with a persisted “Customer” instance.
M2M Relationships¶
By default Model Bakery doesn’t create related instances for many-to-many relationships. If you want them to be created, you have to turn it on as following:
from django.test import TestCase
from model_bakery import baker
class PurchaseHistoryTestModel(TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.history = baker.make('shop.PurchaseHistory', make_m2m=True)
print(self.history.products.count())
Explicit M2M Relationships¶
If you want to, you can prepare your own set of related object and pass it to Model Bakery. Here’s an example:
products_set = baker.prepare(Product, _quantity=5)
history = baker.make(PurchaseHistory, products=products_set)
Explicit values for fields¶
By default, Model Bakery uses random values to populate the model’s fields. But it’s possible to explicitly set values for them as well.
from django.test import TestCase
from model_bakery import baker
class CustomerTestModel(TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.customer = baker.make(
'shop.Customer',
age=21
)
self.older_customer = baker.make(
'shop.Customer',
age=42
)
Related objects fields are also reachable by their name or related names in a very similar way as Django does with field lookups:
from django.test import TestCase
from model_bakery import baker
class PurchaseHistoryTestModel(TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.bob_history = baker.make(
'shop.PurchaseHistory',
customer__name='Bob'
)
Creating Files¶
Model Bakery does not create files for FileField types. If you need to have the files created, you can pass the flag _create_files=True
(defaults to False
) to either baker.make
or baker.make_recipe
.
Important: the lib does not do any kind of file clean up, so it’s up to you to delete the files created by it.
Non persistent objects¶
If you don’t need a persisted object, Model Bakery can handle this for you as well with the prepare method:
from model_bakery import baker
customer = baker.prepare('shop.Customer')
It works like make
method, but it doesn’t persist the instance neither the related instances.
If you want to persist only the related instances but not your model, you can use the _save_related
parameter for it:
from model_bakery import baker
history = baker.prepare('shop.PurchaseHistory', _save_related=True)
assert history.id is None
assert bool(history.customer.id) is True
More than one instance¶
If you need to create more than one instance of the model, you can use the _quantity
parameter for it:
from model_bakery import baker
customers = baker.make('shop.Customer', _quantity=3)
assert len(customers) == 3
It also works with prepare
:
from model_bakery import baker
customers = baker.prepare('shop.Customer', _quantity=3)
assert len(customers) == 3
Recipes¶
If you’re not comfortable with random data or even if you just want to improve the semantics of the generated data, there’s hope for you.
You can define a Recipe, which is a set of rules to generate data for your models.
It’s also possible to store the Recipes in a module called baker_recipes.py
at your app’s root directory. This recipes can later be used with the
make_recipe
function:
shop/
migrations/
__init__.py
admin.py
apps.py
baker_recipes.py <--- where you should place your Recipes
models.py
tests.py
views.py
File: baker_recipes.py
from model_bakery.recipe import Recipe
from shop.models import Customer
customer_joe = Recipe(
Customer,
name='John Doe',
nickname='joe',
age=18,
birthday=date.today(),
last_shopping=datetime.now()
)
Note
You don’t have to declare all the fields if you don’t want to. Omitted fields will be generated automatically.
File: test_model.py
from django.test import TestCase
from model_bakery import baker
from shop.models import Customer, Contact
class CustomerTestModel(TestCase):
def setUp(self):
# Load the recipe 'customer_joe' from 'shop/baker_recipes.py'
self.customer_one = baker.make_recipe(
'shop.customer_joe'
)
Or if you don’t want a persisted instance:
from model_bakery import baker
baker.prepare_recipe('shop.customer_joe')
Another examples
Note
You can use the _quantity parameter as well if you want to create more than one object from a single recipe.
You can define recipes locally to your module or test case as well. This can be useful for cases where a particular set of values may be unique to a particular test case, but used repeatedly there. For example:
File: baker_recipes.py
company_recipe = Recipe(Company, name='WidgetCo')
File: test_model.py
class EmployeeTest(TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.employee_recipe = Recipe(
Employee,
name=seq('Employee '),
company=baker.make_recipe('app.company_recipe')
)
def test_employee_list(self):
self.employee_recipe.make(_quantity=3)
# test stuff....
def test_employee_tasks(self):
employee1 = self.employee_recipe.make()
task_recipe = Recipe(Task, employee=employee1)
task_recipe.make(status='done')
task_recipe.make(due_date=datetime(2014, 1, 1))
# test stuff....
Recipes with foreign keys¶
You can define foreign_key
relations:
from model_bakery.recipe import Recipe, foreign_key
from shop.models import Customer, PurchaseHistory
customer = Recipe(Customer,
name='John Doe',
nickname='joe',
age=18,
birthday=date.today(),
appointment=datetime.now()
)
history = Recipe(PurchaseHistory,
customer=foreign_key(customer)
)
Notice that customer
is a recipe.
You may be thinking: “I can put the Customer model instance directly in the owner field”. That’s not recommended.
Using the foreign_key
is important for 2 reasons:
- Semantics. You’ll know that attribute is a foreign key when you’re reading;
- The associated instance will be created only when you call
make_recipe
and not during recipe definition;
You can also use related
, when you want two or more models to share the same parent:
from model_bakery.recipe import related, Recipe
from shop.models import Customer, PurchaseHistory
history = Recipe(PurchaseHistory)
customer_with_2_histories = Recipe(Customer,
name='Albert',
purchasehistory_set=related('history', 'history'),
)
Note this will only work when calling make_recipe
because the related manager requires the objects in the related_set to be persisted. That said, calling prepare_recipe
the related_set will be empty.
If you want to set m2m relationship you can use related
as well:
from model_bakery.recipe import related, Recipe
pencil = Recipe(Product, name='Pencil')
pen = Recipe(Product, name='Pen')
history = Recipe(PurchaseHistory)
history_with_prods = history.extend(
products=related(pencil, pen)
)
Recipes with callables¶
It’s possible to use callables
as recipe’s attribute value.
from datetime import date
from model_bakery.recipe import Recipe
from shop.models import Customer
customer = Recipe(
Customer,
birthday=date.today,
)
When you call make_recipe
, Model Bakery will set the attribute to the value returned by the callable.
Recipes with iterators¶
You can also use iterators (including generators) to provide multiple values to a recipe.
from itertools import cycle
names = ['Ada Lovelace', 'Grace Hopper', 'Ida Rhodes', 'Barbara Liskov']
customer = Recipe(Customer,
name=cycle(names)
)
Model Bakery will use the next value in the iterator every time you create a model from the recipe.
Sequences in recipes¶
Sometimes, you have a field with an unique value and using make
can cause random errors. Also, passing an attribute value just to avoid uniqueness validation problems can be tedious. To solve this you can define a sequence with seq
from model_bakery.recipe import Recipe, seq
from shop.models import Customer
customer = Recipe(Customer,
name=seq('Joe'),
age=seq(15)
)
customer = baker.make_recipe('shop.customer')
customer.name
>>> 'Joe1'
customer.age
>>> 16
new_customer = baker.make_recipe('shop.customer')
new_customer.name
>>> 'Joe2'
new_customer.age
>>> 17
This will append a counter to strings to avoid uniqueness problems and it will sum the counter with numerical values.
Sequences and iterables can be used not only for recipes, but with baker.make
as well:
# it can be imported directly from model_bakery
from model_bakery import seq
from model_bakery import baker
customer = baker.make('Customer', name=seq('Joe'))
customer.name
>>> 'Joe1'
customers = baker.make('Customer', name=seq('Chad'), _quantity=3)
for customer in customers:
print(customer.name)
>>> 'Chad1'
>>> 'Chad2'
>>> 'Chad3'
You can also provide an optional increment_by
argument which will modify incrementing behaviour. This can be an integer, float, Decimal or timedelta.
from datetime import date, timedelta
from model_bakery.recipe import Recipe, seq
from shop.models import Customer
customer = Recipe(Customer,
age=seq(15, increment_by=3)
height_ft=seq(5.5, increment_by=.25)
# assume today's date is 21/07/2014
appointment=seq(date(2014, 7, 21), timedelta(days=1))
)
customer = baker.make_recipe('shop.customer')
customer.age
>>> 18
customer.height_ft
>>> 5.75
customer.appointment
>>> datetime.date(2014, 7, 22)
new_customer = baker.make_recipe('shop.customer')
new_customer.age
>>> 21
new_customer.height_ft
>>> 6.0
new_customer.appointment
>>> datetime.date(2014, 7, 23)
Overriding recipe definitions¶
Passing values when calling make_recipe
or prepare_recipe
will override the recipe rule.
from model_bakery import baker
baker.make_recipe('shop.customer', name='Ada Lovelace')
This is useful when you have to create multiple objects and you have some unique field, for instance.
Recipe inheritance¶
If you need to reuse and override existent recipe call extend method:
customer = Recipe(
Customer,
bio='Some customer bio',
age=30,
happy=True,
)
sad_customer = customer.extend(
happy=False,
)
How Model Bakery behaves?¶
By default, Model Bakery skips fields with null=True
or blank=True
. Also if a field has a default
value, it will be used.
You can override this behavior by:
- Explicitly defining values
# from "Basic Usage" page, assume all fields either null=True or blank=True
from model_bakery import baker
customer = baker.make('shop.Customer', happy=True, bio='Happy customer')
- Passing
_fill_optional
with a list of fields to fill with random data
customer = baker.make('shop.Customer', _fill_optional=['happy', 'bio'])
- Passing
_fill_optional=True
to fill all fields with random data
customer = baker.make('shop.Customer', _fill_optional=True)
When shouldn’t you let Baker generate things for you?¶
If you have fields with special validation, you should set their values by yourself.
Model Bakery should handle fields that:
- don’t matter for the test you’re writing;
- don’t require special validation (like unique, etc);
- are required to create the object.
Currently supported fields¶
BooleanField
,NullBooleanField
,IntegerField
,BigIntegerField
,SmallIntegerField
,PositiveIntegerField
,PositiveSmallIntegerField
,FloatField
,DecimalField
CharField
,TextField
,BinaryField
,SlugField
,URLField
,EmailField
,IPAddressField
,GenericIPAddressField
,ContentType
ForeignKey
,OneToOneField
,ManyToManyField
(even with through model)DateField
,DateTimeField
,TimeField
,DurationField
FileField
,ImageField
JSONField
,ArrayField
,HStoreField
CICharField
,CIEmailField
,CITextField
Require django.contrib.gis
in INSTALLED_APPS
:
GeometryField
,PointField
,LineStringField
,PolygonField
,MultiPointField
,MultiLineStringField
,MultiPolygonField
,GeometryCollectionField
Custom fields¶
Model Bakery allows you to define generators methods for your custom fields or overrides its default generators.
This can be achieved by specifing the field and generator function for the generators.add
function.
Both can be the real python objects imported in settings or just specified as import path string.
Examples:
from model_bakery import baker
def gen_func():
return 'value'
baker.generators.add('test.generic.fields.CustomField', gen_func)
# in the module code.path:
def gen_func():
return 'value'
# in your tests.py file:
from model_bakery import baker
baker.generators.add('test.generic.fields.CustomField', 'code.path.gen_func')
Customizing Baker¶
In some rare cases, you might need to customize the way Baker base class behaves.
This can be achieved by creating a new class and specifying it in your settings files. It is likely that you will want to extend Baker, however the minimum requirement is that the custom class have make
and prepare
functions.
In order for the custom class to be used, make sure to use the model_bakery.baker.make
and model_bakery.baker.prepare
functions, and not model_bakery.baker.Baker
directly.
Examples:
# in the module code.path:
class CustomBaker(baker.Baker)
def get_fields(self):
return [
field
for field in super(CustomBaker, self).get_fields()
if not field isinstance CustomField
]
# in your settings.py file:
BAKER_CUSTOM_CLASS = 'code.path.CustomBaker'
Additionaly, if you want to your created instance to be returned respecting one of your custom ModelManagers, you can use the _from_manager
parameter as the example bellow:
movie = baker.make(Movie, title='Old Boys', _from_manager='availables') # This will use the Movie.availables model manager
Save method custom parameters¶
If you have overwritten the save
method for a model, you can pass custom parameters to it using Model Bakery. Example:
class ProjectWithCustomSave(models.Model)
# some model fields
created_by = models.ForeignKey(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL)
def save(self, user, *args, **kwargs):
self.created_by = user
return super(ProjectWithCustomSave, self).save(*args, **kwargs)
#with model baker:
user = baker.make(settings.AUTH_USER_MODEL)
project = baker.make(ProjectWithCustomSave, _save_kwargs={'user': user})
assert user == project.user
Migrating from Model Mommy¶
Model Bakery has a Python script to help you to migrate your project’s test code from Model Mommy to Model Bakery. This script will rename recipe files and replace legacy imports by the new ones.
From your project’s root dir, execute the following commands:
$ pip uninstall model_mommy
$ pip install model_bakery
$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/model-bakers/model_bakery/master/utils/from_mommy_to_bakery.py
$ python from_mommy_to_bakery.py --dry-run # will list the files that'll be changed
$ python from_mommy_to_bakery.py # migrate from model_mommy to model_bakery
$ python manage.py test
This command will only migrate *.py
files. Any other file type such as tox.ini
, requirements.txt
etc, have to be updated manually.
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