seeding.rst 4.67 KB

Database Seeding

In version 0.5.0 Phinx introduced support for seeding your database with test data. Seed classes are a great way to easily fill your database with data after its created. By default they are stored in the seeds directory, however this path can be changed in your configuration file.

Note

Database seeding is entirely optional and Phinx does not create a seeds directory by default.

Creating a New Seed Class

Phinx includes a command to easily generate a new seed class:

$ php bin/phinx seed:create UserSeeder

The new class will be created in your seeds directory using CamelCase format. It is based on a skeleton template:

<?php

use Phinx\Seed\AbstractSeed;

class MyNewSeeder extends AbstractSeed
{
    /**
     * Run Method.
     *
     * Write your database seeder using this method.
     *
     * More information on writing seeders is available here:
     * http://docs.phinx.org/en/latest/seeding.html
     */
    public function run()
    {

    }
}

The AbstractSeed Class

All Phinx seeds extend from the AbstractSeed class. This class provides the necessary support to create your seed classes. Seed classes are primarily used to insert test data.

The Run Method

The run method is automatically invoked by Phinx when you execute the seed:run command. You should use this method to insert your test data.

Note

Unlike migrations Phinx does not keep track of which seed classes have been run. This means database seeders can be run repeatedly. Keep this in mind when developing them.

Inserting Data

Using The Table Object

Seed classes can also use the familiar Table object to insert data. You can retrieve an instance of the Table object by calling the table() method from within your seed class and then use the insert() method to insert data:

<?php

use Phinx\Seed\AbstractSeed;

class PostsSeeder extends AbstractSeed
{
    public function run()
    {
        $data = array(
          array(
              'body'    => 'foo',
              'created' => date('Y-m-d H:i:s'),
          ),
          array(
              'body'    => 'bar',
              'created' => date('Y-m-d H:i:s'),
          )
        );

        $posts = $this->table('posts');
        $posts->insert($data)
              ->save();
    }
}

Note

You must call the save() method to commit your data to the table. Phinx will buffer data until you do so.

Integrating with the Faker library

It's trivial to use the awesome Faker library in your seed classes. Simply install it using Composer:

$ composer require fzaninotto/faker

Then use it in your seed classes:

<?php

use Phinx\Seed\AbstractSeed;

class UserSeeder extends AbstractSeed
{
    public function run()
    {
      $faker = Faker\Factory::create();
      $data = [];
      for ($i = 0; $i < 100; $i++) {
          $data[] = [
              'username'      => $faker->userName,
              'password'      => sha1($faker->password),
              'password_salt' => sha1('foo'),
              'email'         => $faker->email,
              'first_name'    => $faker->firstName,
              'last_name'     => $faker->lastName,
              'created'       => date('Y-m-d H:i:s'),
          ];
      }

      $this->insert('users', $data);
    }
}

Executing Seed Classes

This is the easy part. To seed your database simply use the seed:run command:

$ php bin/phinx seed:run

By default Phinx will execute all available seed classes. If you would like to run a specific class simply pass in the name of it using the -s parameter:

$ php bin/phinx seed:run -s UserSeeder

You can also use the -v parameter for more output verbosity:

$ php bin/phinx seed:run -v

The Phinx seed functionality provides a simple mechanism to easily and repeatably insert test data into your database.