NAME
Test::DBIx::Class::FixtureCommand::Populate - Install fixtures using Populate
SYNOPSIS
my $command = Test::DBIx::Class::FixtureComand::Populate->new(schema=>$schema);
$command->install_fixtures($fixtures);
DESCRIPTION
This uses the "populate" in DBIx::Class::Schema method to install fixture data. Expects an hash of "Source => [\@fields, \@rows]". Please see the 'populate' method for more information. Examples:
->install_fixtures(
Person => [
['name', 'age'],
['john', 40],
['vincent', 15],
],
Job => [
[title => 'description'],
[programmer => 'Who wrote the code'],
[marketer => 'Who sold the code'],
],
);
You may include as many Sources as you like, and even the same one more than once.
For additional flexibility with various configuration formats, we accept three variations of the incoming arguments:
## Array of HashRefs
->install_fixtures(
{Person => [
['name', 'age'],
['john', 40],
['vincent', 15],
]},
{Job => [
[title => 'description'],
[programmer => 'Who wrote the code'],
[marketer => 'Who sold the code'],
]},
);
## ArrayRef
->install_fixtures([
Person => [
['name', 'age'],
['john', 40],
['vincent', 15],
],
Job => [
[title => 'description'],
[programmer => 'Who wrote the code'],
[marketer => 'Who sold the code'],
],
]);
## ArrayRef of HashRefs
->install_fixtures([
{Person => [
['name', 'age'],
['john', 40],
['vincent', 15],
]},
{Job => [
[title => 'description'],
[programmer => 'Who wrote the code'],
[marketer => 'Who sold the code'],
]},
]);
This should allow you to model your fixtures in your configuration format of choice without a lot of trouble.
METHODS
This class defines the following methods
install_fixtures
Takes an Array or ArrayRef of arguments and installs them into your target database. Returns an array of hashrefs, where each hashref is a {$source => @rows} pair.
AUTHOR
John Napiorkowski <jjnapiork@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2009, John Napiorkowski <jjnapiork@cpan.org>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.