| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Also prevents the word "Model" from linking to the documentation
of ActiveModel::Model because that's not intended.
[ci skip]
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Calling `changed_attributes` will ultimately check if every mutable
attribute has changed in place. Since this gets called whenever an
attribute is assigned, it's extremely slow. Instead, we can avoid this
calculation until we actually need it.
Fixes #18029
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The default value for the argument `message` in
`ActiveModel::Errors#add` has a new behavior
since ca99ab2481d44d67bc392d0ec1125ff1439e9f94.
Before
person.errors.add(:name, nil)
# => ["is invalid"]
After
person.errors.add(:name, nil)
# => [nil]
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I'm not sure what's the use case for this, but apparently it broke some apps.
Since it was not the intended result from #16210 I fixed it to not raise an
exception anymore. However, I didn't add documentation for it because I don't
know if this should be officially supported without knowing how it's meant to
be used.
In general, validations should be side-effect-free (other than adding to the
error message to `@errors`). Order-dependent validations seems like a bad idea.
Fixes #18002
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since 'attr_name_will_change!' is not an actual method it should
be clearer that you have to insert the attribute name as in line 104
[ci skip]
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Active Record defines `attribute_method_suffix :?`. That suffix will
match any predicate method when the lookup occurs in Active Model. This
will make it incorrectly decide that `id_changed?` should not exist,
because it attempts to determine if the attribute `id_changed` is
present, rather than `id` with the `_changed?` suffix. Instead, we will
look for any correct match.
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The detection of in-place changes caused a weird unexpected issue with
numericality validations. That validator (out of necessity) works on the
`_before_type_cast` version of the attribute, since on an `:integer`
type column, a non-numeric string would type cast to 0.
However, strings are mutable, and we changed strings to ensure that the
post type cast version of the attribute was a different instance than
the before type cast version (so the mutation detection can work
properly).
Even though strings are the only mutable type for which a numericality
validation makes sense, special casing strings would feel like a strange
change to make here. Instead, we can make the assumption that for all
mutable types, we should work on the post-type-cast version of the
attribute, since all cases which would return 0 for non-numeric strings
are immutable.
Fixes #17852
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We will support only Ruby >= 2.1.
But right now we don't accept pull requests with syntax changes to drop
support to Ruby 1.9.
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Commit d67b289 introduced a tiny regression in the docs for #from_json,
true needs to be included when the root node is present.
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ActiveModel::Dirty#clear_attribute_changes method
In Rails 4.2 it is impossible to define a custom default value for a model's
attribute without making it appear as _changed?, especially when the model
is first initialized. Making this method publicly visible will allow such a behaviour,
without the need to use private APIs.
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This patch uniformizes warning messages. I used the most common style
already present in the code base:
* Capitalize the first word.
* End the message with a full stop.
* "Rails 5" instead of "Rails 5.0".
* Backticks for method names and inline code.
Also, converted a few long strings into the new heredoc convention.
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This will avoid naming clash with user defined methods
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Mirror Ruby's Hash#key?
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justinweiss/update_validation_context_documentation
Docs: Add a note on custom validation contexts. [ci skip]
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The documentation on `:on` for validations was inconsistent, and most
only referenced the `:create` and `:update` contexts. I fixed those to
be consistent with the documentation on `AM::Validations.validates`,
which seemed to have the best docs.
[ci skip]
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\Z allows appended newlines where \z does not.
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Inspired by @tenderlove's work in
c363fff29f060e6a2effe1e4bb2c4dd4cd805d6e, this reduces the number of
strings allocated when running callbacks for ActiveRecord instances. I
measured that using this script:
```
require 'objspace'
require 'active_record'
require 'allocation_tracer'
ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection adapter: "sqlite3",
database: ":memory:"
ActiveRecord::Base.connection.instance_eval do
create_table(:articles) { |t| t.string :name }
end
class Article < ActiveRecord::Base; end
a = Article.create name: "foo"
a = Article.find a.id
N = 10
result = ObjectSpace::AllocationTracer.trace do
N.times { Article.find a.id }
end
result.sort.each do |k,v|
p k => v
end
puts "total: #{result.values.map(&:first).inject(:+)}"
```
When I run this against master and this branch I get this output:
```
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ git checkout master
M Gemfile
Switched to branch 'master'
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ bundle exec ruby benchmark_allocation_with_callback_send.rb > allocations_before
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ git checkout remove-dynamic-send-on-built-in-callbacks
M Gemfile
Switched to branch 'remove-dynamic-send-on-built-in-callbacks'
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ bundle exec ruby benchmark_allocation_with_callback_send.rb > allocations_after
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ diff allocations_before allocations_after
39d38
<
{["/home/pete/projects/rails/activesupport/lib/active_support/callbacks.rb",
81]=>[40, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]}
42c41
< total: 630
---
> total: 590
```
In addition to this, there are two micro-optimizations present:
* Using `block.call if block` vs `yield if block_given?` when the block was being captured already.
```
pete@balloon:~/projects$ cat benchmark_block_call_vs_yield.rb
require 'benchmark/ips'
def block_capture_with_yield &block
yield if block_given?
end
def block_capture_with_call &block
block.call if block
end
def no_block_capture
yield if block_given?
end
Benchmark.ips do |b|
b.report("block_capture_with_yield") { block_capture_with_yield }
b.report("block_capture_with_call") { block_capture_with_call }
b.report("no_block_capture") { no_block_capture }
end
pete@balloon:~/projects$ ruby benchmark_block_call_vs_yield.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
block_capture_with_yield
124979 i/100ms
block_capture_with_call
138340 i/100ms
no_block_capture 136827 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
block_capture_with_yield
5703108.9 (±2.4%) i/s - 28495212 in 4.999368s
block_capture_with_call
6840730.5 (±3.6%) i/s - 34169980 in 5.002649s
no_block_capture 5821141.4 (±2.8%) i/s - 29144151 in 5.010580s
```
* Defining and calling methods instead of using send.
```
pete@balloon:~/projects$ cat benchmark_method_call_vs_send.rb
require 'benchmark/ips'
class Foo
def tacos
nil
end
end
my_foo = Foo.new
Benchmark.ips do |b|
b.report('send') { my_foo.send('tacos') }
b.report('call') { my_foo.tacos }
end
pete@balloon:~/projects$ ruby benchmark_method_call_vs_send.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
send 97736 i/100ms
call 151142 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
send 2683730.3 (±2.8%) i/s - 13487568 in 5.029763s
call 8005963.9 (±2.7%) i/s - 40052630 in 5.006604s
```
The result of this is making typical ActiveRecord operations slightly faster:
https://gist.github.com/phiggins/e46e51dcc7edb45b5f98
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- Improve the error message by suggesting that the user may have
intended to call validates instead of validate method.
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When we are loading a component and we want to know its version, we are
actually not speaking about the constant but the library itself.
[ci skip]
[Godfrey Chan & Xavier Noria]
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Update documentation to match change in #5942 [ci skip]
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This way no new object allocation is taking place. Thanks @jeremy for
the suggestion!
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The functionality has not changed, but the code is more elegant by
using `reduce` instead of `each`.
This way no accumulator needs to be declared, no explicit return is
needed.
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If the request parameters are passed to create_with and where they can
be used to do mass assignment when used in combination with
Relation#create.
Fixes CVE-2014-3514
Conflicts:
activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/query_methods.rb
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Use #model_name on instances instead of classes
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This allows rails code to be more confdent when asking for a model name, instead of having to ask for the class.
Rails core discussion here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/rubyonrails-core/ThSaXw9y1F8
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WARNING: don't use them! They might change or go away between future beta/RC/
patch releases!
Also added a CHANGELOG entry for this.
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We have to specify the `:title` option to really use the
`TitleValidator` defined above.
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This change prevents a certain class of user error which results when
mistakenly using the `validate` class method instead of the `validates`
class method.
Only apply when all arguments are symbols, because some validations use
the `validate` method and pass in additional options, namely the
`LenghValidator` via the `ActiveMode::Validations::validates_with`
method.
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Also make it accept a list of attributes to be changed. This will make
possible to restore only a subset of the changed attributes.
Closes #16203
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These methods may cause confusion with the `reset_changes` that
behaves differently
of them.
Also rename undo_changes to restore_changes to match this new set of
methods.
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