The Declarative Data Generator
Synth is a tool for generating realistic data using a declarative data model. Synth is database agnostic and can scale to millions of rows of data.
Synth answers a simple question. There are so many ways to consume data, why are there no frameworks for generating data?
Synth provides a robust, declarative framework for specifying constraint based data generation, solving the following problems developers face on the regular:
- You're creating an App from scratch and have no way to populate your fresh schema with correct, realistic data.
- You're doing integration testing / QA on production data, but you know it is bad practice, and you really should not be doing that.
- You want to see how your system will scale if your database suddenly has 10x the amount of data.
Synth solves exactly these problems with a flexible declarative data model which you can version control in git, peer review, and automate.
The key features of Synth are:
-
Data as Code: Data generation is described using a declarative configuration language allowing you to specify your entire data model as code.
-
Import from Existing Sources: Synth can import data from existing sources and automatically create data models. Synth currently has Alpha support for Postgres!
-
Data Inference: While ingesting data, Synth automatically infers the relations, distributions and types of the dataset.
-
Database Agnostic: Synth supports semi-structured data and is database agnostic - playing nicely with SQL and NoSQL databases.
-
Semantic Data Types: Synth integrates with the (amazing) Python Faker library, supporting generation of thousands of semantic types (e.g. credit card numbers, email addresses etc.) as well as locales.
To get started quickly, check out the docs.
To start generating data without having a source to import from, you need to first initialise a workspace using synth init
:
$ mkdir workspace && cd workspace && synth init
Inside the workspace we'll create a namespace for our data model and call it my_app
:
$ mkdir my_app
Next let's create a users
collection using Synth's configuration language, and put it into my_app/users.json
:
{
"type": "array",
"length": {
"type": "number",
"constant": 1
},
"content": {
"type": "object",
"id": {
"type": "number",
"id": {}
},
"email": {
"type": "string",
"faker": {
"generator": "email"
}
},
"joined_on": {
"type": "string",
"date_time": {
"format": "%Y-%m-%d",
"subtype": "naive_date",
"begin": "2010-01-01",
"end": "2020-01-01"
}
}
}
}
Finally, generate data using the synth generate
command:
$ synth generate my_app/ --size 2 | jq
{
"users": [
{
"email": "[email protected]",
"id": 1,
"joined_on": "2014-12-14"
},
{
"email": "[email protected]",
"id": 2,
"joined_on": "2013-04-06"
}
]
}
If you have an existing database, Synth can automatically generate a data model by inspecting the database.
To get started, initialise your Synth workspace locally:
$ mkdir synth_workspace && cd synth_workspace && synth init
Then use the synth import
command to build a data model from your Postgres or MongoDB database:
$ synth import tpch --from postgres://user:pass@localhost:5432/tpch
Building customer collection...
Building primary keys...
Building foreign keys...
Ingesting data for table customer... 10 rows done.
Finally, generate data into another instance of Postgres:
$ synth generate tpch --to postgres://user:pass@localhost:5433/tpch
We decided to build Synth from the ground up in Rust. We love Rust, and given the scale of data we wanted synth
to generate, it made sense as a first choice. The combination of memory safety, performance, expressiveness and a great community made it a no-brainer and we've never looked back!
If you would like to learn more, or you would like support for your use-case, feel free to open an issue on Github.
If your query is more sensitive, you can email [email protected] and we'll happily chat about your usecase.
If you intend on using Synth, we would recommend joining our growing Discord community.
The Synth project is backed by OpenQuery. We are a YCombinator backed startup based in London, England. We are passionate about data privacy, developer productivity, and building great tools for software engineers.
First of all, we sincerely appreciate all contributions to Synth, large or small so thank you.
See the contributing section for details.
Synth is source-available and licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.