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In Ruby, I have a test that's a subclass of ActiveSupport::TestCase and access a table through an ActiveRecord subclass in a Postgres (actually Greenplum) database. For a particular test I need to populate the table with on the order of a million rows, but I don't really care what's in there. I could do something like

for i in 1...1000000 do
  MyTable.create(:column1 => 'value', :column2 => 'value')
end

but this will take a long time to run. I could make it a little faster by wrapping it in a transaction so that create won't create a new one every time, but that will only save so much time.

Is there some nice way to do this so that I don't have to execute a lot of inserts of bogus values into the table?

(Note: stubbing things out to try to pretend that the table contains a million records won't work because I later on need to interact with the actual rows; for this particular test I just don't care what they are)

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  • If you can drop into raw SQL you could use this: postgresql.org/docs/9.0/static/… Sep 6, 2012 at 21:24
  • Using for is an anti-pattern. It simply calls each, so it makes more sense (and follows OO patterns) to do (1...1000000).each do ... end. Or even better simply 1000000.times do ... end. Sep 6, 2012 at 22:11

1 Answer 1

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Run all that in a simple query like:

INSERT INTO mytable (col1, col2) 
SELECT 'value1', 'value2' 
FROM generate_series(1,1000000);

This should populate database pretty fast. It takes 2 seconds my laptop.

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