A library for populating a CiviCRM site with fake data.
CiviCRM with console access and cv
git clone https://github.com/michaelmcandrew/pop ~/src/pop
cd pop
composer install
export PATH=$PWD/bin
cd /var/www/example.org
pop basic-10k.yml
Note the usage of a YAML file (basic-10k.yml
). This can be a built-in example (basic-250.yml
, basic-1k.yml
, basic-10k.yml
, basic-100k.yml
)
or a file that you define for yourself.
Pop files are a series of instructions written in yaml. Each instruction creates one or more entities. Some examples will help explain the syntax.
You can use Pop to create 500 Individuals:
- Individual: 500
Many instructions can be combined into a single file and will be carried out one after the other:
- Organization: 500
- Individual: 5000
- Event: 80
- MembershipType: 5
- Membership: 500
Pop uses realistic default fields when creating entities and creates realistic 'child entities' when appropriate.
The defaults for each entity are defined in the EntityDefault directory. The defaults for an Individual is as follows:
fields:
first_name: f.firstName # a realistic first name
last_name: f.lastName # a realistic first name
children:
- Address: 0-2 # creates up to 2 postal addresses
- Email: 0-3 # creates up to 3 email addresses
- Phone: 0-2 # creates up to 2 phone numbers
Instead of using the defaults, you can specify the fields you want to create as follows:
- Individual: 500
fields:
job_title: Fundraiser
You can also define child entities. The following example creates 500 donors and creates between 10 and 100 donations.
- Individual: 500
children:
- Contribution: 10-100
Note that the count of entities can be specified as a range with lower and upper limits as in the Contribution example above.
Sometimes it is useful to supply a list of values for a field and have Pop choose one for you each time an entity is created:
- Individual: 500
fields:
job_title:
CEO: 1 # ~ 25 CEOs
Membership manager: 3 # ~ 75 membership managers
Event co-ordinator: 6 # ~ 150 event co-ordinators
Fundraiser: 10 # ~ 250 fundraisers
Higher value fields are more likely to be picked.
You can also ask Pop to use the Faker library to generate field values. For example, you can use the Faker jobTitle method as follows:
- Individual: 500
fields:
job_title: f.jobTitle
The syntax for invoking a faker method is 'f.' followed by the method name, followed by any parameters, seperated by commas. Note that a capital F will cause the first letter of the field to be capitalised. Below are some more examples of faker methods:
first_name: f.firstName # a random first name
total_amount: f.randomFloat,2,1000,2000 # an amount between 1000 and 2000
receive_date: f.dateTimeBetween,-5 years,now # a date in the last 5 years
event_title: F.words,3,1 # three words
description: f.paragraph,1 # a paragraph
See https://github.com/fzaninotto/Faker for a full list of methods.
Sometimes it is useful to pick a random entity as the field value of another entity. This happens automatically for required fields (for example a Event and a Contact are randomly selected each time a Participant is created). Sometimes it is useful to request a random Entity tag, which you can do as follows:
- EntityTag: 1
fields:
entity_table: civicrm_activity
tag_id: r.Activity
Required options are populated automatically. Sometimes, you may want to request that pop chooses a random option from those that are available. To do this, specify choose (only valid for fields that can be passed to [Entity].getoptions API).
- Event: 1
fields:
participant_listing_id: choose
The most common CiviCRM entities are tested to ensure they work with Pop. Other entities may or may not work. The entityProvider function in the Pop test suite) tests has the most up to date list of tested entities.
civipop -e Individual -c 300