Sow 🌱

Plant your data, watch it grow.

Sow is an Elixir library for seeding databases with code-defined fixtures. Define your data as Elixir maps, and Sow handles planting (inserting), cultivating (updating), and pruning (deleting) records to keep your database in sync.

Features

Installation

def deps do
[{:sow, "~> 0.1.0"}]
end
# config/config.exs (optional)
config :sow, repo: MyApp.Repo

Quick Start

defmodule MyApp.Seeds.Countries do
use Sow, schema: MyApp.Country, keys: [:code]
def records do
[
%{code: "NO", name: "Norway"},
%{code: "SE", name: "Sweden"}
]
end
end
# Sow your seeds
{:ok, countries} = MyApp.Seeds.Countries.sync(MyApp.Repo)

Configuration Options

use Sow,
schema: MyApp.Country, # Required: Ecto schema module
keys: [:code], # Optional: search keys for upsert (defaults to primary key)
callback: :records # Optional: callback function name (defaults to :records)

Custom Callback Names

Use a different callback name when needed:

defmodule MyApp.Seeds.Countries do
use Sow, schema: MyApp.Country, keys: [:code], callback: :seed_data
def seed_data do
[%{code: "NO", name: "Norway"}]
end
end

Associations

belongs_to

Seeds the dependency first, then sets the foreign key.

defmodule MyApp.Seeds.Organizations do
use Sow, schema: MyApp.Organization, keys: [:slug]
def records do
[
%{
slug: "acme-norway",
name: "ACME Norway",
country: Sow.belongs_to(MyApp.Seeds.Countries, :code, "NO")
}
]
end
end

has_many

Seeds children after the parent using a separate fixture module.

defmodule MyApp.Seeds.Products do
use Sow, schema: MyApp.Product, keys: [:slug]
def records do
[
%{
slug: "premium-widget",
name: "Premium Widget",
variants: Sow.has_many(MyApp.Seeds.ProductVariants, foreign_key: :product_id)
}
]
end
end

has_many_inline

Define nested records inline without a separate fixture module:

defmodule MyApp.Seeds.Products do
use Sow, schema: MyApp.Product, keys: [:slug]
def records do
[
%{
slug: "premium-widget",
variants: Sow.has_many_inline(
[
%{sku: "SMALL", name: "Small"},
%{sku: "LARGE", name: "Large"}
],
schema: MyApp.ProductVariant,
foreign_key: :product_id,
keys: [:product_id, :sku]
)
}
]
end
end

Inline records can contain relations too:

flow_stages: Sow.has_many_inline(
[
%{position: 1, stage: Sow.belongs_to(StageFixture, :type, :intro)},
%{position: 2, stage: Sow.belongs_to(StageFixture, :type, :payment)}
],
schema: MyApp.FlowStage,
foreign_key: :flow_id,
keys: [:flow_id, :stage_id]
)

many_to_many

Seeds related records first, then associates them via put_assoc.

def records do
[
%{
slug: "premium-widget",
tags: [
Sow.many_to_many(MyApp.Seeds.Tags, :slug, "featured"),
Sow.many_to_many(MyApp.Seeds.Tags, :slug, "new")
]
}
]
end

Your schema's changeset must handle many_to_many with put_assoc:

def changeset(product, attrs) do
product
|> cast(attrs, [:slug, :name])
|> maybe_put_assoc(:tags, attrs)
end
defp maybe_put_assoc(changeset, key, attrs) do
case Map.get(attrs, key) do
nil -> changeset
assoc -> put_assoc(changeset, key, assoc)
end
end

Auto-detect with Sow.assoc

Let Sow detect the association type from your Ecto schema:

%{
organization: Sow.assoc(Organizations, :slug, "acme"), # detects belongs_to
tags: [Sow.assoc(Tags, :slug, "featured")], # detects many_to_many
variants: Sow.assoc(ProductVariants) # detects has_many
}

Runtime Lookups

Use Sow.lookup to query existing database records instead of syncing fixtures:

defmodule MyApp.Seeds.Organizations do
use Sow, schema: MyApp.Organization, keys: [:slug]
def records do
[
%{
slug: "acme-norway",
# Get country.id where code = "NO"
country_id: Sow.lookup(MyApp.Country, :code, "NO")
}
]
end
end

Lookup Options

# Simple lookup - returns :id by default
country_id: Sow.lookup(MyApp.Country, :code, "NO")
# Custom field extraction
country_name: Sow.lookup(MyApp.Country, :code, "NO", field: :name)
# Multiple match criteria
org_id: Sow.lookup(MyApp.Organization, %{country_id: 1, name: "ACME"})
# Chained lookups
org_id: Sow.lookup(MyApp.Organization, %{
country_id: Sow.lookup(MyApp.Country, :code, "NO"),
name: "ACME"
})

Wrapper Modules

Create wrapper modules to share helpers across fixtures:

defmodule MyApp.Seeds do
use Sow.Wrapper
# Default options for all fixtures
def __sow_defaults__ do
[callback: :seed_data]
end
# Shared helpers
def country_id(code), do: MyApp.Repo.get_by!(MyApp.Country, code: code).id
def image_url(path), do: "https://cdn.example.com/#{path}"
end

Use your wrapper instead of Sow directly:

defmodule MyApp.Seeds.Products do
use MyApp.Seeds, schema: MyApp.Product, keys: [:slug]
def seed_data do
[
%{
slug: "widget",
image: image_url("widget.png"), # helper from wrapper
country_id: country_id("NO") # helper from wrapper
}
]
end
end

Pruning

Remove records that aren't in your fixtures:

# Default: only create/update
{:ok, seeded} = Countries.sync(Repo)
# With pruning: also delete stale records
{:ok, seeded, pruned} = Countries.sync(Repo, prune: true)

Seeding Multiple Fixtures

Sow automatically resolves dependencies and seeds in the correct order:

{:ok, results} = Sow.sync_all([
MyApp.Seeds.Products, # depends on Organizations, Tags
MyApp.Seeds.Countries, # no dependencies
MyApp.Seeds.Organizations, # depends on Countries
MyApp.Seeds.Tags # no dependencies
], MyApp.Repo)
# Sow sorts: Countries → Tags → Organizations → Products

Using Ecto Structs

You can return Ecto structs from records/0 instead of maps:

def records do
[
%MyApp.Country{id: 1, code: "NO", name: "Norway"},
%MyApp.Country{id: 2, code: "SE", name: "Sweden"}
]
end

Sow automatically converts structs to maps for processing.

How It Works

  1. Search Keys - keys: [:field] identifies unique records for upsert
  2. Upsert - Find by keys → update if exists, insert if not
  3. Dependencies - belongs_to/many_to_many sync first; has_many syncs after
  4. Pruning - With prune: true, deletes records not in fixtures

Documentation

Full documentation is available at HexDocs.

License

MIT - see LICENSE for details.