We all love Rails fixtures because they're fast, but we hate to deal with YAML/CSV/SQL files. Here enters factory_bot (FB).
Now, you can easily create records by using predefined factories. The problem is that hitting the database everytime to create records is pretty slow. And believe me, you'll feel the pain when you have lots of tests/specs.
So here enters Factory Bot Preload (FBP). You can define which factories will be preloaded, so you don't have to recreate it every time (that will work for 99.37% of the time, according to statistics I just made up).
Installation
gem install factory_bot-preload
Intructions
Setup
Add both FB and FBP to your Gemfile:
source "https://rubygems.org" gem "rails" gem "pg" group :test, :development do gem "factory_bot" gem "factory_bot-preload", require: false end
Notice that adding require: false is important; otherwise you won't be able to
run commands such as rails db:test:prepare.
RSpec Setup
On your spec/spec_helper.rb file, make sure that transactional fixtures are
enabled. Here's is my file without all those RSpec comments:
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= "test" require File.expand_path("../../config/environment", __FILE__) require "rspec/rails" # First, load factory_bot/preload. require "factory_bot/preload" # Then load your factories Dir[Rails.root.join("spec/support/factories/**/*.rb")].each do |file| require file end RSpec.configure do |config| config.use_transactional_fixtures = true config.mock_with :rspec end
You may want to configure the generated helper names. For instance, imagine you
have a namespace like MyApp::Models::User. That'd generate a helper method
like myapp_models_user. If you don't have conflicting names, you can strip
myapp_models_ like this:
FactoryBot::Preload.helper_name = lambda do |class_name, helper_name| helper_name.gsub(/^myapp_models_/, "") end
Minitest Setup
On your test/test_helper.rb file, make sure that transaction fixtures are
enabled. Here's what your file may look like:
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= "test" require_relative "../config/environment" require "rails/test_help" module ActiveSupport class TestCase self.use_instantiated_fixtures = true end end # First, load factory_bot/preload. require "factory_bot/preload" # Then load your factories. Dir["./test/support/factories/**/*.rb"].each do |file| require file end # Finally, setup minitest. # Your factories won't behave correctly unless you # call `FactoryBot::Preload.minitest` after loading them. FactoryBot::Preload.minitest
Usage
Create your factories and load it from your setup file (either
test/test_helper.rb or spec/spec_helper.rb) You may have something like
this:
FactoryBot.define do factory :user do name "John Doe" sequence(:email) {|n| "john#{n}@example.org" } sequence(:username) {|n| "john#{n}" } password "test" password_confirmation "test" end factory :projects do name "My Project" association :user end end
To define your preloadable factories, just use the preload method:
FactoryBot.define do factory :user do name "John Doe" sequence(:email) {|n| "john#{n}@example.org" } sequence(:username) {|n| "john#{n}" } password "test" password_confirmation "test" end factory :projects do name "My Project" association :user end preload do factory(:john) { create(:user) } factory(:myapp) { create(:project, user: users(:john)) } end end
You can also use preloaded factories on factory definitions.
FactoryBot.define do factory :user do # ... end factory :projects do name "My Project" user { users(:john) } end preload do factory(:john) { create(:user) } factory(:myapp) { create(:project, user: users(:john)) } end end
Like Rails fixtures, FBP will define methods for each model. You can use it on your examples and alike.
require "test_helper" class UserTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase test "returns john's record" do assert_instance_of User, users(:john) end test "returns myapp's record" do assert_equal users(:john), projects(:myapp).user end end
Or if you're using RSpec:
require "spec_helper" describe User do let(:user) { users(:john) } it "returns john's record" do users(:john).should be_an(User) end it "returns myapp's record" do projects(:myapp).user.should == users(:john) end end
That's it!
Maintainer
Contributors
Contributing
For more details about how to contribute, please read https://github.com/fnando/factory_bot-preload/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License. A copy of the license can be found at https://github.com/fnando/factory_bot-preload/blob/main/LICENSE.md.
Code of Conduct
Everyone interacting in the factory_bot-preload project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.