Laravel includes the ability to seed your database with data using seed classes. All seed classes are stored in the database/seeders
directory. By default, a DatabaseSeeder
class is defined for you. From this class, you may use the call
method to run other seed classes, allowing you to control the seeding order.
Note
Mass assignment protection is automatically disabled during database seeding.
To generate a seeder, execute the make:seeder
Artisan command. All seeders generated by the framework will be placed in the database/seeders
directory:
php artisan make:seeder UserSeeder
A seeder class only contains one method by default: run
. This method is called when the db:seed
Artisan command is executed. Within the run
method, you may insert data into your database however you wish. You may use the query builder to manually insert data or you may use Eloquent model factories.
As an example, let's modify the default DatabaseSeeder
class and add a database insert statement to the run
method:
<?php
namespace Database\Seeders;
use Illuminate\Database\Seeder;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\DB;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Hash;
use Illuminate\Support\Str;
class DatabaseSeeder extends Seeder
{
/**
* Run the database seeders.
*
* @return void
*/
public function run()
{
DB::table('users')->insert([
'name' => Str::random(10),
'email' => Str::random(10).'@gmail.com',
'password' => Hash::make('password'),
]);
}
}
Note
You may type-hint any dependencies you need within therun
method's signature. They will automatically be resolved via the Laravel service container.
Of course, manually specifying the attributes for each model seed is cumbersome. Instead, you can use model factories to conveniently generate large amounts of database records. First, review the model factory documentation to learn how to define your factories.
For example, let's create 50 users that each has one related post:
use App\Models\User;
/**
* Run the database seeders.
*
* @return void
*/
public function run()
{
User::factory()
->count(50)
->hasPosts(1)
->create();
}
Within the DatabaseSeeder
class, you may use the call
method to execute additional seed classes. Using the call
method allows you to break up your database seeding into multiple files so that no single seeder class becomes too large. The call
method accepts an array of seeder classes that should be executed:
/**
* Run the database seeders.
*
* @return void
*/
public function run()
{
$this->call([
UserSeeder::class,
PostSeeder::class,
CommentSeeder::class,
]);
}
While running seeds, you may want to prevent models from dispatching events. You may achieve this using the WithoutModelEvents
trait. When used, the WithoutModelEvents
trait ensures no model events are dispatched, even if additional seed classes are executed via the call
method:
<?php
namespace Database\Seeders;
use Illuminate\Database\Seeder;
use Illuminate\Database\Console\Seeds\WithoutModelEvents;
class DatabaseSeeder extends Seeder
{
use WithoutModelEvents;
/**
* Run the database seeders.
*
* @return void
*/
public function run()
{
$this->call([
UserSeeder::class,
]);
}
}
You may execute the db:seed
Artisan command to seed your database. By default, the db:seed
command runs the Database\Seeders\DatabaseSeeder
class, which may in turn invoke other seed classes. However, you may use the --class
option to specify a specific seeder class to run individually:
php artisan db:seed
php artisan db:seed --class=UserSeeder
You may also seed your database using the migrate:fresh
command in combination with the --seed
option, which will drop all tables and re-run all of your migrations. This command is useful for completely re-building your database:
php artisan migrate:fresh --seed
Some seeding operations may cause you to alter or lose data. In order to protect you from running seeding commands against your production database, you will be prompted for confirmation before the seeders are executed in the production
environment. To force the seeders to run without a prompt, use the --force
flag:
php artisan db:seed --force