Automatically seed your database with production-like dummy data based on your schema for local development and testing.
Seed automatically determines the values in your database so you don’t have to define each and every value unless you want to be specific, in which case you just use Typescript to define those values. Our default data automatically adds necessary built-ins, like country lists, currency codes etc.Seed automatically creates relational entities so you don’t have to keep track of IDs in one table when you’re defining values in another.
await seed.posts([{
title: "Why you need Seed",
author: {
email: "snappy@snaplet.dev",
},
comments: (x) => x(3),
}]);
Seed creates a TypeScript client based off your database structure. Values are safe, and soft documented. You have the full power of the typescript language and the rich node.js infrastructure when seeding production-like data and defining data values.
Seed uses Copycat for its data generation functions, and all data generation is fully deterministic. That means if you use the same inputs, you'll always get the same data outputs. That makes seed great for consistent tests and development.
npx @snaplet/seed init
Learn more by reading our documentation.
Use a Large Language Model (LLM) to generate examples for text-based entries. To use this feature, set up one of the following environment variables in your .env
file:
OPENAI_API_KEY=<your_openai_api_key>
GROQ_API_KEY=<your_groq_api_key>
Optionally, specify the AI model name with the
AI_MODEL_NAME
environment variable. Example:AI_MODEL_NAME=gpt-4-mini
The predicted data is saved in the file .snaplet/dataExamples.json
and can be modified by the user.
Here is an example of a dataExamples.json
file:
[
{
"input": "post title",
"examples": [
"Tips for Effective Time Management",
...
],
"description": "This column is about storing the titles of the user-generated posts in the project."
},
...
]
In the above example, one could modify the description and remove the examples. Running npx @snaplet/seed sync
will then regenerate examples based on the updated description for that column.
You can find the hosted documentation here.
The docs are also in this repo in the docs
folder.
To host it locally follow below instructions:
Install brew
, git
, pnpm
and Node.js
:
cd docs
pnpm install
pnpm dev
# Go to http://localhost:3000
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf -L https://install.determinate.systems/nix | sh -s -- install \
--extra-conf "substituters = https://cache.nixos.org https://devenv.cachix.org" \
--extra-conf "trusted-public-keys = cache.nixos.org-1:6NCHdD59X431o0gWypbMrAURkbJ16ZPMQFGspcDShjY= devenv.cachix.org-1:w1cLUi8dv3hnoSPGAuibQv+f9TZLr6cv/Hm9XgU50cw="
We now need to install direnv
(or its nix-optimized variant nix-direnv
) in order to automatically load our system dependencies when navigating to our project's folder.
Home Manager allows you to configure your user's shell environment with Nix.
nix run home-manager/master -- init
Edit ~/.config/home-manager/home.nix
with your preferences. Here is mine:
{ pkgs, ... }:
{
home.username = "jgoux";
home.homeDirectory = "/Users/jgoux";
home.stateVersion = "23.05";
home.packages = [
pkgs.cachix
pkgs.corepack_20
pkgs.nodejs_20
pkgs.nil
pkgs.nixpkgs-fmt
];
home.sessionVariables = {
EDITOR = "code-insiders";
DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT = "";
};
programs = {
home-manager.enable = true;
# direnv is installed here!
direnv = {
enable = true;
enableZshIntegration = true;
nix-direnv.enable = true;
};
zsh = {
enable = true;
autosuggestion.enable = true;
syntaxHighlighting.enable = true;
oh-my-zsh = {
enable = true;
plugins = [ "git" ];
theme = "robbyrussell";
};
initExtra = ''
export PATH="$PATH:/usr/local/bin:/opt/homebrew/bin"
'';
};
};
}
Apply your home.nix
configuration:
nix run home-manager/master -- init --switch
From now on when you will need to re-apply your configuration after editing home.nix
you will just have to run:
home-manager switch
If you don't want to manage your home dependencies with home-manager
and you just want to install direnv
you can do:
nix profile install nixpkgs#nix-direnv
Then add nix-direnv to $HOME/.config/direnv/direnvrc
:
source $HOME/.nix-profile/share/nix-direnv/direnvrc
Now that you have direnv
installed, it should automatically load the necessary system dependencies when you launch a new terminal in the snaplet/seed
project.
You can then start your local PostgreSQL server (running on port 2345) by doing: devenv up
.
MIT License