It’s sometimes useful to pre-populate your database with hard-coded data when you’re first setting up an app. You can provide initial data with fixtures or migrations.
A fixture is a collection of data that Django knows how to import into a
database. The most straightforward way of creating a fixture if you’ve already
got some data is to use the manage.py dumpdata
command.
Or, you can write fixtures by hand; fixtures can be written as JSON, XML or YAML
(with PyYAML installed) documents. The serialization documentation has more details about each of these supported
serialization formats.
As an example, though, here’s what a fixture for a simple Person
model might
look like in JSON:
[
{
"model": "myapp.person",
"pk": 1,
"fields": {
"first_name": "John",
"last_name": "Lennon"
}
},
{
"model": "myapp.person",
"pk": 2,
"fields": {
"first_name": "Paul",
"last_name": "McCartney"
}
}
]
And here’s that same fixture as YAML:
- model: myapp.person
pk: 1
fields:
first_name: John
last_name: Lennon
- model: myapp.person
pk: 2
fields:
first_name: Paul
last_name: McCartney
You’ll store this data in a fixtures
directory inside your app.
Loading data is easy: just call manage.py loaddata
<fixturename>
, where <fixturename>
is the name of the fixture file
you’ve created. Each time you run loaddata
, the data will be read
from the fixture and re-loaded into the database. Note this means that if you
change one of the rows created by a fixture and then run loaddata
again, you’ll wipe out any changes you’ve made.
By default, Django looks in the fixtures
directory inside each app for
fixtures. You can set the FIXTURE_DIRS
setting to a list of
additional directories where Django should look.
When running manage.py loaddata
, you can also
specify a path to a fixture file, which overrides searching the usual
directories.
See also
Fixtures are also used by the testing framework to help set up a consistent test environment.
Jun 22, 2017