# Easy Reference Data Used for creating a predefined set of model instances, similar to db:seed, but will update records if entries already exist. ## Installation Add this line to your application's Gemfile: gem 'easy_reference_data' And then execute: $ bundle Or install it yourself as: $ gem install easy_reference_data ## Usage Place references in 'db/reference/' References will be loaded in ascending order, so if an order is desired, prepend 000, 001, 002... etc to the filename. Run with: rake easy:reference_data:refresh ## Deployment Add this line to your application's deploy.rb file: require 'easy/reference_data/capistrano' ## Example The below example ensures that there are 3 users existing in the database after running the 'rake reference_data:load' ### db/reference/000_users.rb Easy::ReferenceData.update_or_create User, {system_code: 'nigel', name: 'Nigel Ramsay', email: 'nigel.ramsay@mailinator.com'}, keys: [:system_code] Easy::ReferenceData.update_or_create User, {system_code: 'fred', name: 'Fred Schmitt', email: 'fred.schmitt@mailinator.com'}, keys: [:system_code] Easy::ReferenceData.update_or_create User, {system_code: 'bert', name: 'Bert Symthe', email: 'bert.smythe@mailinator.com'}, keys: [:system_code] Multiple keys can be used to identify records that would otherwise not have a unique attribute ### db/reference/000_prices.rb Easy::ReferenceData.update_or_create Price, {product_id: 1, type: "Price::RetailPrice", price: 5}, keys: [:product_id, :type] Easy::ReferenceData.update_or_create Price, {product_id: 1, type: "Price::CostPrice", price: 4}, keys: [:product_id, :type] Easy::ReferenceData.update_or_create Price, {product_id: 2, type: "Price::RetailPrice", price: 5}, keys: [:product_id, :type] ## Contributing 1. Fork it 2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Added some feature'`) 4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 5. Create new Pull Request