The Problem: Making meaningful development data for your application.
The Solution: A fake data generator that does more than just lorem ipsum and random text (well, it does those too, but also does much more).
Forgery generates fake data from dictionaries, formats, and recipes. The plugin includes a generator providing directories to make your own forgeries.
gem install forgery
# Add this to your config/environment.rb
config.gem 'forgery'
# Add this to your Gemfile
gem 'forgery'
ruby script/generate forgery
rails generate forgery
In a rails project this generator creates:
- Rails.root/lib/forgery
- Rails.root/lib/forgery/dictionaries
- Rails.root/lib/forgery/extensions
- Rails.root/lib/forgery/forgeries
- Rails.root/lib/forgery/formats
You can then use these directories to write your own dictionaries, class extensions, forgeries, and formats.
Forgery will first look here for dictionaries and formats, so you can override the ones used in the plugin.
See the forgeries in the plugin for examples of how to write your own.
See which dictionaries each forgery uses to override them with your own.
The Rails 3 plugin also registers a rake task which can generate new dictionaries from html or xml on the web.
Writes to '${RAILS_ROOT}/lib/forgery/dictionaries' by default (this can be overriden by setting Forgery::FileWriter#write_to!)
Parameters: :dictionary_name -- the name of your new dictionary file :source_url -- web page containing the data for your dictionary file :css_or_xpath -- css or xpath selector(s) to element(s) containing the desired data
Usage: rake create_dictionary[name_of_file,'http://www.html_or_xml_page.com','li']
Here I'll supply a few examples of how it works, in general. See each forgery for individual examples.
# Traditional syntax
Forgery::Basic.password # => "wYMYvq"
Forgery::Basic.password :allow_special => true # => ";Qo^N[T"
Forgery::Basic.hex_color # => "#f4d841"
Forgery::Monetary.money # => "8.21"
Forgery::Monetary.formatted_money # => "$3.25"
Forgery::Monetary.money :min => 100, :max => 1000 # => "848.97"
# Alternate syntax
Forgery(:basic).password # => "b6qZTQEH"
Forgery(:basic).password :allow_special => true # => "XlrhV%An"
Forgery(:basic).hex_color # => "#46b73f"
Forgery(:monetary).money # => "1.58"
Forgery(:monetary).formatted_money # => "$3.48"
Forgery(:monetary).money :min => 100, :max => 1000 # => "923.36"
You can utilize the directories generated in /lib to customize the behavior of forgery.
Examples of each of these components are available in the source.
Dictionaries are files with no extensions. Entries are separated by new lines.
Forgeries are classes that inherit from the Forgery class. A basic forgery definition is as follows
class NewForgery < Forgery
end
Extensions are additional methods/functionality that are added to classes (Ruby core or otherwise) that are loaded by Forgery. Follow standard Ruby practices.
Formatting for numerical fields. Each numerical entry corresponds to a # mark.
Documentation can be found at http://sevenwire.github.com/forgery/
- Add instanced forgeries for more relative information generation.
- Add markov chains.
- Add a way to use probability in forgeries.
Thanks to the authors and contributors:
- Nate Sutton (nate aka fowlduck)
- Brandon Arbini (brandonarbini)
- Josh Nichols (technicalpickles)
- Jeremy Stephens (viking aka crookshanks)
- Darcy Laycock (Sutto)
- Lukas Westermann (lwe)
- Mike Dungan
- Andrew Selder (aselder)
- Thomas Sinclair (anathematic)
- Stafford Brunk (wingrunr21)
This is a work in progress. If you find bugs or have forgeries to contribute, we'll gladly take them and give credit.
Enjoy.
Nate Sutton ([email protected])