Fixtures are a way of organizing data that you want to test against; in short, sample data. They come in 3 flavors:

  1.  YAML fixtures
  2.  CSV fixtures
  3.  Single-file fixtures

YAML fixtures

This type of fixture is in YAML format and the preferred default. YAML is a file format which describes data structures in a non-verbose, human-readable format. It ships with Ruby 1.8.1+.

Unlike single-file fixtures, YAML fixtures are stored in a single file per model, which are placed in the directory appointed by ActiveSupport::TestCase.fixture_path=(path) (this is automatically configured for Rails, so you can just put your files in <your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/). The fixture file ends with the .yml file extension (Rails example: "<your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/web_sites.yml"). The format of a YAML fixture file looks like this:

  rubyonrails:
    id: 1
    name: Ruby on Rails
    url: http://www.rubyonrails.org

  google:
    id: 2
    name: Google
    url: http://www.google.com

This YAML fixture file includes two fixtures. Each YAML fixture (ie. record) is given a name and is followed by an indented list of key/value pairs in the "key: value" format. Records are separated by a blank line for your viewing pleasure.

Note that YAML fixtures are unordered. If you want ordered fixtures, use the omap YAML type. See yaml.org/type/omap.html for the specification. You will need ordered fixtures when you have foreign key constraints on keys in the same table. This is commonly needed for tree structures. Example:

   --- !omap
   - parent:
       id:         1
       parent_id:  NULL
       title:      Parent
   - child:
       id:         2
       parent_id:  1
       title:      Child

CSV fixtures

Fixtures can also be kept in the Comma Separated Value format. Akin to YAML fixtures, CSV fixtures are stored in a single file, but instead end with the .csv file extension (Rails example: "<your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/web_sites.csv")

The format of this type of fixture file is much more compact than the others, but also a little harder to read by us humans. The first line of the CSV file is a comma-separated list of field names. The rest of the file is then comprised of the actual data (1 per line). Here‘s an example:

  id, name, url
  1, Ruby On Rails, http://www.rubyonrails.org
  2, Google, http://www.google.com

Should you have a piece of data with a comma character in it, you can place double quotes around that value. If you need to use a double quote character, you must escape it with another double quote.

Another unique attribute of the CSV fixture is that it has no fixture name like the other two formats. Instead, the fixture names are automatically generated by deriving the class name of the fixture file and adding an incrementing number to the end. In our example, the 1st fixture would be called "web_site_1" and the 2nd one would be called "web_site_2".

Most databases and spreadsheets support exporting to CSV format, so this is a great format for you to choose if you have existing data somewhere already.

Single-file fixtures

This type of fixture was the original format for Active Record that has since been deprecated in favor of the YAML and CSV formats. Fixtures for this format are created by placing text files in a sub-directory (with the name of the model) to the directory appointed by ActiveSupport::TestCase.fixture_path=(path) (this is automatically configured for Rails, so you can just put your files in <your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/<your-model-name>/ — like <your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/web_sites/ for the WebSite model).

Each text file placed in this directory represents a "record". Usually these types of fixtures are named without extensions, but if you are on a Windows machine, you might consider adding .txt as the extension. Here‘s what the above example might look like:

  web_sites/google
  web_sites/yahoo.txt
  web_sites/ruby-on-rails

The file format of a standard fixture is simple. Each line is a property (or column in db speak) and has the syntax of "name => value". Here‘s an example of the ruby-on-rails fixture above:

  id => 1
  name => Ruby on Rails
  url => http://www.rubyonrails.org

Using Fixtures

Since fixtures are a testing construct, we use them in our unit and functional tests. There are two ways to use the fixtures, but first let‘s take a look at a sample unit test:

  require 'web_site'

  class WebSiteTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
    def test_web_site_count
      assert_equal 2, WebSite.count
    end
  end

As it stands, unless we pre-load the web_site table in our database with two records, this test will fail. Here‘s the easiest way to add fixtures to the database:

  ...
  class WebSiteTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
    fixtures :web_sites # add more by separating the symbols with commas
  ...

By adding a "fixtures" method to the test case and passing it a list of symbols (only one is shown here though), we trigger the testing environment to automatically load the appropriate fixtures into the database before each test. To ensure consistent data, the environment deletes the fixtures before running the load.

In addition to being available in the database, the fixtures are also loaded into a hash stored in an instance variable of the test case. It is named after the symbol… so, in our example, there would be a hash available called @web_sites. This is where the "fixture name" comes into play.

On top of that, each record is automatically "found" (using Model.find(id)) and placed in the instance variable of its name. So for the YAML fixtures, we‘d get @rubyonrails and @google, which could be interrogated using regular Active Record semantics:

  # test if the object created from the fixture data has the same attributes as the data itself
  def test_find
    assert_equal @web_sites["rubyonrails"]["name"], @rubyonrails.name
  end

As seen above, the data hash created from the YAML fixtures would have @web_sites["rubyonrails"]["url"] return "www.rubyonrails.org" and @web_sites["google"]["name"] would return "Google". The same fixtures, but loaded from a CSV fixture file, would be accessible via @web_sites["web_site_1"]["name"] == "Ruby on Rails" and have the individual fixtures available as instance variables @web_site_1 and @web_site_2.

If you do not wish to use instantiated fixtures (usually for performance reasons) there are two options.

  - to completely disable instantiated fixtures:
      self.use_instantiated_fixtures = false

  - to keep the fixture instance (@web_sites) available, but do not automatically 'find' each instance:
      self.use_instantiated_fixtures = :no_instances

Even if auto-instantiated fixtures are disabled, you can still access them by name via special dynamic methods. Each method has the same name as the model, and accepts the name of the fixture to instantiate:

  fixtures :web_sites

  def test_find
    assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", web_sites(:rubyonrails).name
  end

Dynamic fixtures with ERb

Some times you don‘t care about the content of the fixtures as much as you care about the volume. In these cases, you can mix ERb in with your YAML or CSV fixtures to create a bunch of fixtures for load testing, like:

  <% for i in 1..1000 %>
  fix_<%= i %>:
    id: <%= i %>
    name: guy_<%= 1 %>
  <% end %>

This will create 1000 very simple YAML fixtures.

Using ERb, you can also inject dynamic values into your fixtures with inserts like <%= Date.today.strftime("%Y-%m-%d") %>. This is however a feature to be used with some caution. The point of fixtures are that they‘re stable units of predictable sample data. If you feel that you need to inject dynamic values, then perhaps you should reexamine whether your application is properly testable. Hence, dynamic values in fixtures are to be considered a code smell.

Transactional fixtures

TestCases can use begin+rollback to isolate their changes to the database instead of having to delete+insert for every test case. They can also turn off auto-instantiation of fixture data since the feature is costly and often unused.

  class FooTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
    self.use_transactional_fixtures = true
    self.use_instantiated_fixtures = false

    fixtures :foos

    def test_godzilla
      assert !Foo.find(:all).empty?
      Foo.destroy_all
      assert Foo.find(:all).empty?
    end

    def test_godzilla_aftermath
      assert !Foo.find(:all).empty?
    end
  end

If you preload your test database with all fixture data (probably in the Rakefile task) and use transactional fixtures, then you may omit all fixtures declarations in your test cases since all the data‘s already there and every case rolls back its changes.

In order to use instantiated fixtures with preloaded data, set +self.pre_loaded_fixtures+ to true. This will provide access to fixture data for every table that has been loaded through fixtures (depending on the value of use_instantiated_fixtures)

When not to use transactional fixtures:

  1. You're testing whether a transaction works correctly. Nested transactions don't commit until all parent transactions commit,
     particularly, the fixtures transaction which is begun in setup and rolled back in teardown. Thus, you won't be able to verify
     the results of your transaction until Active Record supports nested transactions or savepoints (in progress).
  2. Your database does not support transactions. Every Active Record database supports transactions except MySQL MyISAM.
     Use InnoDB, MaxDB, or NDB instead.

Advanced YAML Fixtures

YAML fixtures that don‘t specify an ID get some extra features:

  • Stable, autogenerated ID‘s
  • Label references for associations (belongs_to, has_one, has_many)
  • HABTM associations as inline lists
  • Autofilled timestamp columns
  • Fixture label interpolation
  • Support for YAML defaults

Stable, autogenerated ID‘s

Here, have a monkey fixture:

  george:
    id: 1
    name: George the Monkey

  reginald:
    id: 2
    name: Reginald the Pirate

Each of these fixtures has two unique identifiers: one for the database and one for the humans. Why don‘t we generate the primary key instead? Hashing each fixture‘s label yields a consistent ID:

  george: # generated id: 503576764
    name: George the Monkey

  reginald: # generated id: 324201669
    name: Reginald the Pirate

ActiveRecord looks at the fixture‘s model class, discovers the correct primary key, and generates it right before inserting the fixture into the database.

The generated ID for a given label is constant, so we can discover any fixture‘s ID without loading anything, as long as we know the label.

Label references for associations (belongs_to, has_one, has_many)

Specifying foreign keys in fixtures can be very fragile, not to mention difficult to read. Since ActiveRecord can figure out the ID of any fixture from its label, you can specify FK‘s by label instead of ID.

belongs_to

Let‘s break out some more monkeys and pirates.

  ### in pirates.yml

  reginald:
    id: 1
    name: Reginald the Pirate
    monkey_id: 1

  ### in monkeys.yml

  george:
    id: 1
    name: George the Monkey
    pirate_id: 1

Add a few more monkeys and pirates and break this into multiple files, and it gets pretty hard to keep track of what‘s going on. Let‘s use labels instead of ID‘s:

  ### in pirates.yml

  reginald:
    name: Reginald the Pirate
    monkey: george

  ### in monkeys.yml

  george:
    name: George the Monkey
    pirate: reginald

Pow! All is made clear. ActiveRecord reflects on the fixture‘s model class, finds all the belongs_to associations, and allows you to specify a target label for the association (monkey: george) rather than a target id for the FK (monkey_id: 1).

Polymorphic belongs_to

Supporting polymorphic relationships is a little bit more complicated, since ActiveRecord needs to know what type your association is pointing at. Something like this should look familiar:

  ### in fruit.rb

  belongs_to :eater, :polymorphic => true

  ### in fruits.yml

  apple:
    id: 1
    name: apple
    eater_id: 1
    eater_type: Monkey

Can we do better? You bet!

  apple:
    eater: george (Monkey)

Just provide the polymorphic target type and ActiveRecord will take care of the rest.

has_and_belongs_to_many

Time to give our monkey some fruit.

  ### in monkeys.yml

  george:
    id: 1
    name: George the Monkey
    pirate_id: 1

  ### in fruits.yml

  apple:
    id: 1
    name: apple

  orange:
    id: 2
    name: orange

  grape:
    id: 3
    name: grape

  ### in fruits_monkeys.yml

  apple_george:
    fruit_id: 1
    monkey_id: 1

  orange_george:
    fruit_id: 2
    monkey_id: 1

  grape_george:
    fruit_id: 3
    monkey_id: 1

Let‘s make the HABTM fixture go away.

  ### in monkeys.yml

  george:
    name: George the Monkey
    pirate: reginald
    fruits: apple, orange, grape

  ### in fruits.yml

  apple:
    name: apple

  orange:
    name: orange

  grape:
    name: grape

Zap! No more fruits_monkeys.yml file. We‘ve specified the list of fruits on George‘s fixture, but we could‘ve just as easily specified a list of monkeys on each fruit. As with belongs_to, ActiveRecord reflects on the fixture‘s model class and discovers the has_and_belongs_to_many associations.

Autofilled timestamp columns

If your table/model specifies any of ActiveRecord‘s standard timestamp columns (created_at, created_on, updated_at, updated_on), they will automatically be set to Time.now.

If you‘ve set specific values, they‘ll be left alone.

Fixture label interpolation

The label of the current fixture is always available as a column value:

  geeksomnia:
    name: Geeksomnia's Account
    subdomain: $LABEL

Also, sometimes (like when porting older join table fixtures) you‘ll need to be able to get ahold of the identifier for a given label. ERB to the rescue:

  george_reginald:
    monkey_id: <%= Fixtures.identify(:reginald) %>
    pirate_id: <%= Fixtures.identify(:george) %>

Support for YAML defaults

You probably already know how to use YAML to set and reuse defaults in your +database.yml+ file,. You can use the same technique in your fixtures:

  DEFAULTS: &DEFAULTS
    created_on: <%= 3.weeks.ago.to_s(:db) %>

  first:
    name: Smurf
    <<: *DEFAULTS

  second:
    name: Fraggle
    <<: *DEFAULTS

Any fixture labeled "DEFAULTS" is safely ignored.

Methods
Constants
DEFAULT_FILTER_RE = /\.ya?ml$/
Attributes
[R] table_name
Public Class methods
cache_fixtures(connection, fixtures)
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 472
472:   def self.cache_fixtures(connection, fixtures)
473:     cache_for_connection(connection).update(fixtures.index_by { |f| f.table_name })
474:   end
cache_for_connection(connection)
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 454
454:   def self.cache_for_connection(connection)
455:     @@all_cached_fixtures[connection.object_id] ||= {}
456:     @@all_cached_fixtures[connection.object_id]
457:   end
cached_fixtures(connection, keys_to_fetch = nil)
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 463
463:   def self.cached_fixtures(connection, keys_to_fetch = nil)
464:     if keys_to_fetch
465:       fixtures = cache_for_connection(connection).values_at(*keys_to_fetch)
466:     else
467:       fixtures = cache_for_connection(connection).values
468:     end
469:     fixtures.size > 1 ? fixtures : fixtures.first
470:   end
create_fixtures(fixtures_directory, table_names, class_names = {}) {|: ActiveRecord::Base.connection| ...}
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 500
500:   def self.create_fixtures(fixtures_directory, table_names, class_names = {})
501:     table_names = [table_names].flatten.map { |n| n.to_s }
502:     connection  = block_given? ? yield : ActiveRecord::Base.connection
503: 
504:     table_names_to_fetch = table_names.reject { |table_name| fixture_is_cached?(connection, table_name) }
505: 
506:     unless table_names_to_fetch.empty?
507:       ActiveRecord::Base.silence do
508:         connection.disable_referential_integrity do
509:           fixtures_map = {}
510: 
511:           fixtures = table_names_to_fetch.map do |table_name|
512:             fixtures_map[table_name] = Fixtures.new(connection, File.split(table_name.to_s).last, class_names[table_name.to_sym], File.join(fixtures_directory, table_name.to_s))
513:           end
514: 
515:           all_loaded_fixtures.update(fixtures_map)
516: 
517:           connection.transaction(Thread.current['open_transactions'].to_i == 0) do
518:             fixtures.reverse.each { |fixture| fixture.delete_existing_fixtures }
519:             fixtures.each { |fixture| fixture.insert_fixtures }
520: 
521:             # Cap primary key sequences to max(pk).
522:             if connection.respond_to?(:reset_pk_sequence!)
523:               table_names.each do |table_name|
524:                 connection.reset_pk_sequence!(table_name)
525:               end
526:             end
527:           end
528: 
529:           cache_fixtures(connection, fixtures)
530:         end
531:       end
532:     end
533:     cached_fixtures(connection, table_names)
534:   end
fixture_is_cached?(connection, table_name)
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 459
459:   def self.fixture_is_cached?(connection, table_name)
460:     cache_for_connection(connection)[table_name]
461:   end
identify(label)

Returns a consistent identifier for label. This will always be a positive integer, and will always be the same for a given label, assuming the same OS, platform, and version of Ruby.

     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 539
539:   def self.identify(label)
540:     label.to_s.hash.abs
541:   end
instantiate_all_loaded_fixtures(object, load_instances = true)
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 491
491:   def self.instantiate_all_loaded_fixtures(object, load_instances = true)
492:     all_loaded_fixtures.each do |table_name, fixtures|
493:       Fixtures.instantiate_fixtures(object, table_name, fixtures, load_instances)
494:     end
495:   end
instantiate_fixtures(object, table_name, fixtures, load_instances = true)
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 476
476:   def self.instantiate_fixtures(object, table_name, fixtures, load_instances = true)
477:     object.instance_variable_set "@#{table_name.to_s.gsub('.','_')}", fixtures
478:     if load_instances
479:       ActiveRecord::Base.silence do
480:         fixtures.each do |name, fixture|
481:           begin
482:             object.instance_variable_set "@#{name}", fixture.find
483:           rescue FixtureClassNotFound
484:             nil
485:           end
486:         end
487:       end
488:     end
489:   end
new(connection, table_name, class_name, fixture_path, file_filter = DEFAULT_FILTER_RE)
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 545
545:   def initialize(connection, table_name, class_name, fixture_path, file_filter = DEFAULT_FILTER_RE)
546:     @connection, @table_name, @fixture_path, @file_filter = connection, table_name, fixture_path, file_filter
547:     @class_name = class_name ||
548:                   (ActiveRecord::Base.pluralize_table_names ? @table_name.singularize.camelize : @table_name.camelize)
549:     @table_name = ActiveRecord::Base.table_name_prefix + @table_name + ActiveRecord::Base.table_name_suffix
550:     @table_name = class_name.table_name if class_name.respond_to?(:table_name)
551:     @connection = class_name.connection if class_name.respond_to?(:connection)
552:     read_fixture_files
553:   end
reset_cache(connection = nil)
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 449
449:   def self.reset_cache(connection = nil)
450:     connection ||= ActiveRecord::Base.connection
451:     @@all_cached_fixtures[connection.object_id] = {}
452:   end
Public Instance methods
delete_existing_fixtures()
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 555
555:   def delete_existing_fixtures
556:     @connection.delete "DELETE FROM #{@connection.quote_table_name(table_name)}", 'Fixture Delete'
557:   end
insert_fixtures()
     # File vendor/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb, line 559
559:   def insert_fixtures
560:     now = ActiveRecord::Base.default_timezone == :utc ? Time.now.utc : Time.now
561:     now = now.to_s(:db)
562: 
563:     # allow a standard key to be used for doing defaults in YAML
564:     if is_a?(Hash)
565:       delete('DEFAULTS')
566:     else
567:       delete(assoc('DEFAULTS'))
568:     end
569: 
570:     # track any join tables we need to insert later
571:     habtm_fixtures = Hash.new do |h, habtm|
572:       h[habtm] = HabtmFixtures.new(@connection, habtm.options[:join_table], nil, nil)
573:     end
574: 
575:     each do |label, fixture|
576:       row = fixture.to_hash
577: 
578:       if model_class && model_class < ActiveRecord::Base
579:         # fill in timestamp columns if they aren't specified and the model is set to record_timestamps
580:         if model_class.record_timestamps
581:           timestamp_column_names.each do |name|
582:             row[name] = now unless row.key?(name)
583:           end
584:         end
585: 
586:         # interpolate the fixture label
587:         row.each do |key, value|
588:           row[key] = label if value == "$LABEL"
589:         end
590: 
591:         # generate a primary key if necessary
592:         if has_primary_key_column? && !row.include?(primary_key_name)
593:           row[primary_key_name] = Fixtures.identify(label)
594:         end
595: 
596:         # If STI is used, find the correct subclass for association reflection
597:         reflection_class =
598:           if row.include?(inheritance_column_name)
599:             row[inheritance_column_name].constantize rescue model_class
600:           else
601:             model_class
602:           end
603: 
604:         reflection_class.reflect_on_all_associations.each do |association|
605:           case association.macro
606:           when :belongs_to
607:             # Do not replace association name with association foreign key if they are named the same
608:             fk_name = (association.options[:foreign_key] || "#{association.name}_id").to_s
609: 
610:             if association.name.to_s != fk_name && value = row.delete(association.name.to_s)
611:               if association.options[:polymorphic]
612:                 if value.sub!(/\s*\(([^\)]*)\)\s*$/, "")
613:                   target_type = $1
614:                   target_type_name = (association.options[:foreign_type] || "#{association.name}_type").to_s
615: 
616:                   # support polymorphic belongs_to as "label (Type)"
617:                   row[target_type_name] = target_type
618:                 end
619:               end
620: 
621:               row[fk_name] = Fixtures.identify(value)
622:             end
623:           when :has_and_belongs_to_many
624:             if (targets = row.delete(association.name.to_s))
625:               targets = targets.is_a?(Array) ? targets : targets.split(/\s*,\s*/)
626:               join_fixtures = habtm_fixtures[association]
627: 
628:               targets.each do |target|
629:                 join_fixtures["#{label}_#{target}"] = Fixture.new(
630:                   { association.primary_key_name => row[primary_key_name],
631:                     association.association_foreign_key => Fixtures.identify(target) }, nil)
632:               end
633:             end
634:           end
635:         end
636:       end
637: 
638:       @connection.insert_fixture(fixture, @table_name)
639:     end
640: 
641:     # insert any HABTM join tables we discovered
642:     habtm_fixtures.values.each do |fixture|
643:       fixture.delete_existing_fixtures
644:       fixture.insert_fixtures
645:     end
646:   end