Golang is a great language and getting better as community and frameworks, but there are still a lot of pieces missing for developing fast, accurate way and avoiding repetitions.
I was searching for a go seeder similar to the one that Laravel/Lumen provides and could not find one.
Knowing that this is such an important key element of any big project for testing and seeding projects with dummy data I decided to create one myself and share.
For now the library supports only MySql as a database driver for its utility functions like FromJson
provided by Seeder
struct, but it is db agnostic for your custom seeders you can use any database that is supported by sql.DB
goseeder
- Allows specifying seeds for different environments such as test,common (all envs) and more (flexible you can define them)
- Provides out of the box functions like
(s Seeder) FromJson
to seed the table from json data and more data formats and drivers coming soon
go get github.com/kristijorgji/goseeder
Please check examples/simpleshop for a full working separate go project that uses the seeder
Below I will explain once more all the steps needed to have goseeder up and running for your project.
In order to give your executable seeding abilities and support for its command line arguments, the first thing we have to do is to wrap our main function
with the provided goseeder.WithSeeder
func WithSeeder(conProvider func() *sql.DB, clientMain func())
The function requires as argument
- one function that returns a db connection necessary to seed
- your original main function, which will get executed if no seed is requested
One such main file can look like below:
// main.go
package main
import (
"database/sql"
"fmt"
_ "github.com/go-sql-driver/mysql"
"github.com/joho/godotenv"
"github.com/kristijorgji/goseeder"
"log"
"net/url"
"os"
_ "simpleshop/db/seeds"
)
func main() {
err := godotenv.Load()
if err != nil {
log.Panic("Error loading .env file")
}
goseeder.WithSeeder(connectToDbOrDie, func() {
myMain()
})
}
func myMain() {
fmt.Println("Here you will execute whatever you were doing before using github.com/kristijorgji/goseeder like start your webserver etc")
}
func connectToDbOrDie() *sql.DB {
dbDriver := os.Getenv("DB_DRIVER")
dbHost := os.Getenv("DB_HOST")
dbPort := os.Getenv("DB_PORT")
dbName := os.Getenv("DB_DATABASE")
dbUser := os.Getenv("DB_USERNAME")
dbPassword := os.Getenv("DB_PASSWORD")
dbSource := fmt.Sprintf(
"%s:%s@tcp(%s:%s)/%s?parseTime=true",
dbUser,
url.QueryEscape(dbPassword),
dbHost,
dbPort,
dbName,
)
con, err := sql.Open(dbDriver, dbSource)
if err != nil {
log.Fatalf("Error opening DB: %v", err)
}
return con
}
Great! After step 1 our executable is able to run in seed mode or default mode.
Now we want to know how to register our custom seeds.
If you look at the imports in main file from step one, we might notice that we import
_ "simpleshop/db/seeds"
even though we do not use them directly.
This is mandatory because our seeds will get registered during package initialisation as we will see later.
The recommended project folder structure to work properly with goseeder
is to have the following path for the seeders db/seeds
and the package name to be seeds
Inside the folder you can add your seeders, for example lets seed some data into the categories
table from one json file located at db/seeds/data/categories.json
.
To do that we create our categories.go
file at db/seeds
folder:
// db/seeds/categories.go
package seeds
import (
"github.com/kristijorgji/goseeder"
)
func categoriesSeeder(s goseeder.Seeder) {
s.FromJson("categories")
}
To use this seed, the last step is to register it.
Seeds can be registered as:
common
seeds that run for all environments- for a specific environment like
test
,yourcustomenv
(more in step 3)
We are going to create below a seed that runs for all environments, so we will not specify any env while registering it.
To do that we create in the db/seeds
folder the file common.go
that will register seeds that get always executed regardless of the environment:
// db/seeds/common.go
package seeds
import "github.com/kristijorgji/goseeder"
func init() {
goseeder.Register(categoriesSeeder)
}
We used goseeder.Register
to register our seed function to run for all environments.
That is all for the basic usage of goseeder!!!
Our function in categories.go file is now registered and ready to be used.
Now you can run
go run main.go --gseed
and it will run all your seeds against the provided db connection.
The framework will look for categories.json
file in the path db/seeds/data
, and insert all the entries there in a table named categories
(inferred from the file name)
If you have a seed registered for another environment, for example a test seed, the framework instead will look for the json file at db/seeds/data/test
So the rule is it will always lookup in this pattern db/seeds/data/[environment]/[specifiedFileName].[type]
Many times we want to have seeds only for test
environment, test purpose and want to avoid having thousand of randomly generated rows inserted into production database by mistake!
Or we just want to have granular control, to have separate data to populate our app/web in different way for staging
prod
yourcustomenv
and so on.
goseeder is designed to take care of this by using one of the following methods:
goseeder.RegisterForTest(seeder func(s Seeder)
- registers the specified seed for the env namedtest
goseeder.RegisterForEnv(env string, seeder func(s Seeder))
- will register your seeder to be executed only for the custom specified env
Let's add to our previous categories.go seeder one seed function specific only for test env! The file now will look like:
package seeds
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/kristijorgji/goseeder"
"simpleshop/util"
)
func categoriesSeeder(s goseeder.Seeder) {
s.FromJson("categories")
}
func testCategoriesSeeder(s goseeder.Seeder) {
for i := 0; i < 100; i++ {
stmt, _ := s.DB.Prepare(`INSERT INTO categories(id, name) VALUES (?,?)`)
_, err := stmt.Exec(util.RandomInt(1, int64(^uint16(0))), []byte(fmt.Sprintf(`{"en": "%s"}`, util.RandomString(7))))
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}
}
Finally, lets create our registrator file for all test seeds same way as we did with common.go
, we will create test.go
now with content as below:
// db/seeds/test.go
package seeds
import "github.com/kristijorgji/goseeder"
func init() {
goseeder.RegisterForTest(testCategoriesSeeder)
}
That is all!
Now if you run your app without specifying test env, only the common env seeders will run and you cannot mess by mistake production or other environments!
To run the test seeder above you have to run:
go run main.go --gseed --gsenv=test
This will run only the tests registered for the env test
, all other seeds will get ignored (also those without environment known as common
seeds))
When we register a seed like shown in step 2, the seed name is the same as the function name, so our seed is called categoriesSeeder
because that is the name of the function we register below
func init() {
goseeder.Register(categoriesSeeder)
}
This is important because we are totally flexible and can do cool things like execute only the specific seed functions that we want!
Let's assume that we have 100 seed functions, and want to execute only one of them which is named categoriesSeeder (that we registered above) and ignore all the other seeds.
Easy as this, just run:
go run main.go --gseeder --gsnames=categoriesSeeder
If you want to execute multiple seeds by specifying their names, just use comma separated value like --gsnames=categoriesSeeder,someOtherSeeder
You can always run
run go run main.go --help
to see all the available arguments and their descriptions.
For the current version the result is:
INR00009:simpleshop kristi.jorgji$ go run main.go --help
Usage of /var/folders/rd/2bkszcpx6xgcddpn7f3bhczn1m9fb7/T/go-build810543742/b001/exe/main:
-gseed
goseeder - if set will seed
-gsenv string
goseeder - env for which seeds to execute
-gsnames string
goseeder - comma separated seeder names to run specific ones
INR00009:simpleshop kristi.jorgji$
goseeder is released under the MIT Licence. See the bundled LICENSE file for details.