1

I tried to use Fabrication gem in order to populate db in development in rails project.

The problem is I do feel that Fabrication is very powerful instrument, however except for the simple association I cannot do anything else.

For example, I have the following models

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :order, :dependent => :destroy
  has_many :src_reviews, :class_name => 'Review', :foreign_key => '...'
  has_many :dst_reviews, :class_name => 'Review', :foreign_key => '...'

class Review < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :src_user, :class_name => 'User', :foreign_key => '...' 
  belongs_to :dst_user,  :class_name => 'User', :foreign_key => '...'
end

class Order < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :user

Not let consider different scenarious.

I do know how to implement simple association from order to user

Fabricator(:order) do   
  ...
  user { Fabricate(:user) }
end

Fabricator(:user) do
  ...
end

Q:However I have no idea whether I can do in opposite side.

Fabricator(:order) do   
  ...
end

Fabricator(:user) do
  orders {#somehow create 5 orders for each user}
end

And the most difficult magic is how to fabricate Review with src_user and dst_user such that somehow to mix them up, preferable to have user that give a lot of reviews and the same user receive a lot of reviews.

Thank you for helping.

1 Answer 1

4

The Fabrication gem documentation for defining fabricators seems to indicate that this will work for both directions in a belongs_to/has_many relationship, and you can pass count: n to get n objects:

Fabricator(:person) do
  open_source_projects(count: 5)
  children(count: 3) { |attrs, i| Fabricate(:person, name: "Kid #{i}") }
end

The documentation is pretty good; I would recommend checking it out and then experimenting :)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.