Faker is a PHP library that generates fake data for you. Whether you need to bootstrap your database, create good-looking XML documents, fill-in your persistence to stress test it, or anonymize data taken from a production service, Faker is for you.
It's heavily inspired by Perl's Data::Faker, and by Ruby's Faker.
Faker requires PHP >= 7.4.
composer require fakerphp/faker
Full documentation can be found over on fakerphp.github.io.
Use Faker\Factory::create()
to create and initialize a Faker generator, which can generate data by accessing methods named after the type of data you want.
<?php
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
// use the factory to create a Faker\Generator instance
$faker = Faker\Factory::create();
// generate data by calling methods
echo $faker->name();
// 'Vince Sporer'
echo $faker->email();
// 'walter.sophia@hotmail.com'
echo $faker->text();
// 'Numquam ut mollitia at consequuntur inventore dolorem.'
Each call to $faker->name()
yields a different (random) result. This is because Faker uses __call()
magic, and forwards Faker\Generator->$method()
calls to Faker\Generator->format($method, $attributes)
.
<?php
for ($i = 0; $i < 3; $i++) {
echo $faker->name() . "\n";
}
// 'Cyrus Boyle'
// 'Alena Cummerata'
// 'Orlo Bergstrom'
If you already used this library with its properties, they are now deprecated and needs to be replaced by their equivalent methods.
You can use the provided Rector config file to automate the work.
Run
composer require --dev rector/rector
to install rector/rector
.
Run
vendor/bin/rector process src/ --config vendor/fakerphp/faker/rector-migrate.php
to run rector/rector
.
Note: do not forget to replace src/
with the path to your source directory.
Alternatively, import the configuration in your rector.php
file:
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
use Rector\Config;
return static function (Config\RectorConfig $rectorConfig): void {
$rectorConfig->import('vendor/fakerphp/faker/rector-migrate.php');
};
Faker is released under the MIT License. See LICENSE
for details.
Faker is using Semver. This means that versions are tagged with MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH. Only a new major version will be allowed to break backward compatibility (BC).
Classes marked as @experimental
or @internal
are not included in our backward compatibility promise.
You are also not guaranteed that the value returned from a method is always the
same. You are guaranteed that the data type will not change.
PHP 8 introduced named arguments, which increased the cost and reduces flexibility for package maintainers. The names of the arguments for methods in Faker is not included in our BC promise.