143 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
143 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Manage
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group: Foundations
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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description: AwesomeCo test data harness created by the Test Data Working Group https://about.gitlab.com/company/team/structure/working-groups/demo-test-data/
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comments: false
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---
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# AwesomeCo
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AwesomeCo is a test data seeding harness, that can seed test data into a user or group namespace.
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AwesomeCo uses FactoryBot in the backend which makes maintenance extremely easy. When a Model is changed,
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FactoryBot will already be reflected to account for the change.
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## Docker Setup
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See [AwesomeCo Docker Demo](https://gitlab.com/-/snippets/2390362)
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## GDK Setup
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```shell
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$ gdk start db
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ok: run: services/postgresql: (pid n) 0s, normally down
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ok: run: services/redis: (pid n) 74s, normally down
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$ bundle install
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Bundle complete!
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$ bundle exec rake db:migrate
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main: migrated
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ci: migrated
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```
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### Run
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The `ee:gitlab:seed:awesome_co` Rake task takes two arguments. `:name` and `:namespace_id`.
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```shell
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$ bundle exec rake "ee:gitlab:seed:awesome_co[awesome_co,1]"
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Seeding AwesomeCo for Administrator
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```
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#### `:name`
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Where `:name` is the name of the AwesomeCo. (This will reflect .rb files located in db/seeds/awesome_co/*.rb)
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#### `:namespace_id`
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Where `:namespace_id` is the ID of the User or Group Namespace
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## List of Awesome Companies
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Each company (i.e. test data template) is represented as a Ruby file (.rb) in `db/seeds/awesome_co`.
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### AwesomeCo (db/seeds/awesome_co/awesome_co.rb)
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```shell
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$ bundle exec rake "ee:gitlab:seed:awesome_co[awesome_co,:namespace_id]"
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Seeding AwesomeCo for :namespace_id
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```
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AwesomeCo is an automated seeding of [this demo repository](https://gitlab.com/tech-marketing/demos/gitlab-agile-demo/awesome-co).
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## Develop
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AwesomeCo seeding uses FactoryBot definitions from `spec/factories` which ...
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1. Saves time on development
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1. Are easy-to-read
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1. Are easy to maintain
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1. Do not rely on an API that may change in the future
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1. Are always up-to-date
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1. Execute on the lowest-level (`ActiveRecord`) possible to create data as quickly as possible
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> From the [FactoryBot README](https://github.com/thoughtbot/factory_bot#readme_) : `factory_bot` is a fixtures replacement with a straightforward definition syntax, support for multiple build
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> strategies (saved instances, unsaved instances, attribute hashes, and stubbed objects), and support for multiple factories for the same class, including factory
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> inheritance
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Factories reside in `spec/factories/*` and are fixtures for Rails models found in `app/models/*`. For example, For a model named `app/models/issue.rb`, the factory will
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be named `spec/factories/issues.rb`. For a model named `app/models/project.rb`, the factory will be named `app/models/projects.rb`.
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### Taxonomy of a Factory
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Factories consist of three main parts - the **Name** of the factory, the **Traits** and the **Attributes**.
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Given: `create(:iteration, :with_title, :current, title: 'My Iteration')`
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|:-|:-|
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| **:iteration** | This is the **Name** of the factory. The file name will be the plural form of this **Name** and reside under either `spec/factories/iterations.rb` or `ee/spec/factories/iterations.rb`. |
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| **:with_title** | This is a **Trait** of the factory. [See how it's defined](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/9c2a1f98483921dd006d70fdaed316e21fc5652f/ee/spec/factories/iterations.rb#L21-23). |
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| **:current** | This is a **Trait** of the factory. [See how it's defined](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/9c2a1f98483921dd006d70fdaed316e21fc5652f/ee/spec/factories/iterations.rb#L29-31). |
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| **title: 'My Iteration'** | This is an **Attribute** of the factory that will be passed to the Model for creation. |
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### Examples
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In these examples, you will see an instance variable `@owner`. This is the `root` user (`User.first`).
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#### Create a Group
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```ruby
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my_group = create(:group, name: 'My Group', path: 'my-group-path')
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```
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#### Create a Project
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```ruby
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# create a Project belonging to a Group
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my_project = create(:project, :public, name: 'My Project', namespace: my_group, creator: @owner)
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```
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#### Create an Issue
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```ruby
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# create an Issue belonging to a Project
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my_issue = create(:issue, title: 'My Issue', project: my_project, weight: 2)
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```
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#### Create an Iteration
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```ruby
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# create an Iteration under a Group
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my_iteration = create(:iteration, :with_title, :current, title: 'My Iteration', group: my_group)
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```
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### Frequently encountered issues
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#### ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid: Validation failed: Email has already been taken, Username has already been taken
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This is because, by default, our factories are written to backfill any data that is missing. For instance, when a project
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is created, the project must have somebody that created it. If the owner is not specified, the factory attempts to create it.
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**How to fix**
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Check the respective Factory to find out what key is required. Usually `:author` or `:owner`.
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```ruby
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# This throws ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid
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create(:project, name: 'Throws Error', namespace: create(:group, name: 'Some Group'))
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# Specify the user where @owner is a [User] record
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create(:project, name: 'No longer throws error', owner: @owner, namespace: create(:group, name: 'Some Group'))
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create(:epic, group: create(:group), author: @owner)
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```
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