| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Any tests for a type which is not overridden by Active Record, and does
not test the specifics of the attributes API interacting in more complex
ways have no reason to be in the Active Record suite. Doing this
revealed that the implementation of the date and time types in AM was
actually completely broken, and incapable of returning any value other
than `nil`.
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Things like decorations, overrides, and priorities only matter for
Active Record, so the Active Model registry can be implemented much more
simply. At this point, I wonder if having Active Record's registry
inherit from Active Model's is even worth the trouble?
The Active Model class was also missing test cases, which have been
backfilled.
This removes the error when two types are registered with the same name,
but given that Active Model is meant to be significantly more generic, I
do not think this is an issue for now. If we want, we can raise an error
at the point that someone tries to register it.
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We do not need to require each file from AM individually, the type
module does that for us. Even if the classes are extremely small right
now, I'd rather keep any custom classes needed by AR in their own files,
as they can easily have more complex changes in the future.
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These are used by the connection adapters to convert SQL type
information into the appropriate type object, and makes no sense outside
of the context of Active Record
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The first step of bringing typecasting to ActiveModel
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The thread_safe gem is being deprecated and all its code has been merged
into the concurrent-ruby gem. The new class, Concurrent::Map, is exactly
the same as its predecessor except for fixes to two bugs discovered
during the merge.
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Example:
```ruby
class Person
include ActiveModel::Validations
attr_reader :name, :title
validates_presence_of :name, on: :create
validates_presence_of :title, on: :update
end
person = Person.new
person.valid?([:create, :update]) # => true
person.errors.messages # => {:name=>["can't be blank"], :title=>["can't be blank"]}
```
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dmitry/feature/validate-multiple-contexts-at-once"
This reverts commit 51dd2588433457960cca592d5b5dac6e0537feac, reversing
changes made to ecb4e4b21b3222b823fa24d4a0598b1f2f63ecfb.
This broke Active Record tests
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Validate multiple contexts on `valid?` and `invalid?` at once
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Example:
```ruby
class Person
include ActiveModel::Validations
attr_reader :name, :title
validates_presence_of :name, on: :create
validates_presence_of :title, on: :update
end
person = Person.new
person.valid?([:create, :update]) # => true
person.errors.messages # => {:name=>["can't be blank"], :title=>["can't be blank"]}
```
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It was not expecting the new `case_insensitive` option to be passed to
`generate_message`, instead of fixing the test we can just not pass this
option down since it is specific to the confirmation validator and not
necessary for the error message.
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Add case_sensitive option for confirmation validation
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Case :- 1. In case of email confirmation one needs case insensitive comparison
2. In case of password confirmation one needs case sensitive comparison
[ci skip] Update Guides for case_sensitive option in confirmation validation
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method_call_assertions
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`match_attribute_method?` is a bit confusing because it suggest
that a return value is a boolean which is not true.
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This includes the following classes:
- ActiveModel::Serializers::Xml
- ActiveRecord::Serialization::XmlSerializer
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I wrote a utility that helps find areas where you could optimize your program using a frozen string instead of a string literal, it's called [let_it_go](https://github.com/schneems/let_it_go). After going through the output and adding `.freeze` I was able to eliminate the creation of 1,114 string objects on EVERY request to [codetriage](codetriage.com). How does this impact execution?
To look at memory:
```ruby
require 'get_process_mem'
mem = GetProcessMem.new
GC.start
GC.disable
1_114.times { " " }
before = mem.mb
after = mem.mb
GC.enable
puts "Diff: #{after - before} mb"
```
Creating 1,114 string objects results in `Diff: 0.03125 mb` of RAM allocated on every request. Or 1mb every 32 requests.
To look at raw speed:
```ruby
require 'benchmark/ips'
number_of_objects_reduced = 1_114
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report("freeze") { number_of_objects_reduced.times { " ".freeze } }
x.report("no-freeze") { number_of_objects_reduced.times { " " } }
end
```
We get the results
```
Calculating -------------------------------------
freeze 1.428k i/100ms
no-freeze 609.000 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
freeze 14.363k (± 8.5%) i/s - 71.400k
no-freeze 6.084k (± 8.1%) i/s - 30.450k
```
Now we can do some maths:
```ruby
ips = 6_226k # iterations / 1 second
call_time_before = 1.0 / ips # seconds per iteration
ips = 15_254 # iterations / 1 second
call_time_after = 1.0 / ips # seconds per iteration
diff = call_time_before - call_time_after
number_of_objects_reduced * diff * 100
# => 0.4530373333993266 miliseconds saved per request
```
So we're shaving off 1 second of execution time for every 220 requests.
Is this going to be an insane speed boost to any Rails app: nope. Should we merge it: yep.
p.s. If you know of a method call that doesn't modify a string input such as [String#gsub](https://github.com/schneems/let_it_go/blob/b0e2da69f0cca87ab581022baa43291cdf48638c/lib/let_it_go/core_ext/string.rb#L37) please [give me a pull request to the appropriate file](https://github.com/schneems/let_it_go/blob/b0e2da69f0cca87ab581022baa43291cdf48638c/lib/let_it_go/core_ext/string.rb#L37), or open an issue in LetItGo so we can track and freeze more strings.
Keep those strings Frozen
![](https://www.dropbox.com/s/z4dj9fdsv213r4v/let-it-go.gif?dl=1)
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This reverts commit bdc1d329d4eea823d07cf010064bd19c07099ff3.
Before:
Calculating -------------------------------------
22.000 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
229.700 (± 0.4%) i/s - 1.166k
Total Allocated Object: 9939
After:
Calculating -------------------------------------
24.000 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
246.443 (± 0.8%) i/s - 1.248k
Total Allocated Object: 7939
```
begin
require 'bundler/inline'
rescue LoadError => e
$stderr.puts 'Bundler version 1.10 or later is required. Please update your Bundler'
raise e
end
gemfile(true) do
source 'https://rubygems.org'
# gem 'rails', github: 'rails/rails', ref: 'bdc1d329d4eea823d07cf010064bd19c07099ff3'
gem 'rails', github: 'rails/rails', ref: 'd2876141d08341ec67cf6a11a073d1acfb920de7'
gem 'arel', github: 'rails/arel'
gem 'sqlite3'
gem 'benchmark-ips'
end
require 'active_record'
require 'benchmark/ips'
ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection('sqlite3::memory:')
ActiveRecord::Migration.verbose = false
ActiveRecord::Schema.define do
create_table :users, force: true do |t|
t.string :name, :email
t.boolean :admin
t.timestamps null: false
end
end
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
default_scope { where(admin: true) }
end
admin = true
1000.times do
attributes = {
name: "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit.",
email: "foobar@email.com",
admin: admin
}
User.create!(attributes)
admin = !admin
end
GC.disable
Benchmark.ips(5, 3) do |x|
x.report { User.all.to_a }
end
key =
if RUBY_VERSION < '2.2'
:total_allocated_object
else
:total_allocated_objects
end
before = GC.stat[key]
User.all.to_a
after = GC.stat[key]
puts "Total Allocated Object: #{after - before}"
```
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These comments do not add a lot to the readability, grepability or
overall understanding of the tests, therefore I believe they can be
safely removed.
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Activemodel is no longer dependent on mocha, so we can make the comments
more generic.
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Also fix Minitest constant reference.
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marking serialization class in Readme
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[ci skip]
Closes #20792.
Custom validation methods are implemented in terms of
callbacks. The `validate` callback chain can't be halted using return
values of individual callbacks.
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methods.
[ci skip]
While this :nodoc: did hide the constant it also removed the following
methods from the API docs:
- #attribute_method?
- #clear_validators!
- #validate
- #validators
- #validators_on
Those are public API and should be visible.
Issue was caused by dee4fbc
/cc @zzak
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Only one constraint option can be used at a time (except for the minimum
and maximum ones that can eventually be combined). However, other
options can be used with them (e.g. the validation failure message).
So let's make the distinction between these two different options
categories.
[Yves Senn, Matthew Draper & Robin Dupret]
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The heading "Active Model Length Validator" was shown on the
"ActiveModel::Validations" page without any text following it.
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Closes #11209
[Roque Pinel & Steven Yang]
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This adds a script `bin/test` to most Rails framework components. The
script uses the rails minitest plugin to augment the runner.
See https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/19571 for details about the
plugin.
I did not yet add `bin/test` for activerecord, activejob and railties.
These components rely on specific setup performed in the rake-tasks.
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AM::Serialization#serializable_hash"
This reverts commit 3d949f34816d6eca0a6b59cfa08d91f36e8e64dd.
This was already documented in other PR.
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add docs to include option at ActiveModel::Serialization [ci skip]
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[ci skip]
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It was removed when we removed mocha at
5a6ae7f7539216931f2b3f4aa53394ac4136c74e
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