| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Now all strings will be handled as a URL.
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This reverts commit ae96f229f6501d8635811d6b22d75d43cdb880a4.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/lib/active_record/attribute_methods.rb
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This stems from [a comment](rails#17227 (comment)) by @dhh.
In summary:
* New Rails 5.0 apps will not accept `return false` as a way to halt callback chains, and will not display a deprecation warning.
* Existing apps ported to Rails 5.0 will still accept `return false` as a way to halt callback chains, albeit with a deprecation warning.
For this purpose, this commit introduces a Rails configuration option:
```ruby
config.active_support.halt_callback_chains_on_return_false
```
For new Rails 5.0 apps, this option will be set to `false` by a new initializer
`config/initializers/callback_terminator.rb`:
```ruby
Rails.application.config.active_support.halt_callback_chains_on_return_false = false
```
For existing apps ported to Rails 5.0, the initializers above will not exist.
Even running `rake rails:update` will not create this initializer.
Since the default value of `halt_callback_chains_on_return_false` is set to
`true`, these apps will still accept `return true` as a way to halt callback
chains, displaying a deprecation warning.
Developers will be able to switch to the new behavior (and stop the warning)
by manually adding the line above to their `config/application.rb`.
A gist with the suggested release notes to add to Rails 5.0 after this
commit is available at https://gist.github.com/claudiob/614c59409fb7d11f2931
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Before this commit, returning `false` in an ActiveRecord `before_` callback
such as `before_create` would halt the callback chain.
After this commit, the behavior is deprecated: will still work until
the next release of Rails but will also display a deprecation warning.
The preferred way to halt a callback chain is to explicitly `throw(:abort)`.
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Clear query cache on rollback
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Add setting of FK for throgh associations while building
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/test/cases/associations/has_many_through_associations_test.rb
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Improve a dump of the primary key support.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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If it is not a default primary key, correctly dump the type and options.
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kamipo/format_datetime_string_according_to_precision
Format the datetime string according to the precision of the datetime field.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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Incompatible to rounding behavior between MySQL 5.6 and earlier.
In 5.5, when you insert `2014-08-17 12:30:00.999999` the fractional part
is ignored. In 5.6, it's rounded to `2014-08-17 12:30:01`:
http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=68760
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Fixed automatic inverse_of for models nested in module
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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Changed ActiveRecord::Relation#update behavior so that it will work on Relation objects without giving id
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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callbacks and validations
- Right now, there is no method to update multiple records with
validations and callbacks.
- Changed the behavior of existing `update` method so that when `id`
attribute is not given and the method is called on an `Relation`
object, it will execute update for every record of the `Relation` and
will run validations and callbacks for every record.
- Added test case for validating that the callbacks run when `update` is
called on a `Relation`.
- Changed test_create_columns_not_equal_attributes test from
persistence_test to include author_name column on topics table as it
it used in before_update callback.
- This change introduces performance issues when a large number of
records are to be updated because it runs UPDATE query for every
record of the result. The `update_all` method can be used in that case
if callbacks are not required because it will only run single UPDATE
for all the records.
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Fix issue with reaping_frequency type.
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This error only happens when the foreign key is missing.
Before this fix the following exception was being raised:
NoMethodError: undefined method `val' for #<Arel::Nodes::BindParam:0x007fc64d19c218>
Now the message is:
ActiveRecord::UnknownAttributeError: unknown attribute 'foreign_key' for Model.
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- Improved wording of CHANGELOG entry for https://github.com/arthurnn/rails/commit/5acd24bbeae0e9e5e81e87b5929e17f35527b2ea.
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When table has a composite primary key, the `primary_key` method for
sqlite3 and postgresql was only returning the first field of the key.
Ensures that it will return nil instead, as AR dont support composite pks.
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Closes #7247.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/test/models/owner.rb
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Fixes #18237
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timestamps. [#18202]
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We only support classes which provide a no-args constructor to use as a
default value. We can provide a more helpful error message if we catch
this when `serialize` is called, rather than letting it error when you
try to assign the attribute.
Fixes #18224
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Example:
create_table :foos, id: :bigint do |t|
end
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Here you go, @senny. :grin:
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Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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This bug occurs when an attribute of an ActiveRecord model is an
ActiveRecord::Type::Integer type or a ActiveRecord::Type::Decimal type (or any
other type that includes the ActiveRecord::Type::Numeric module. When the value
of the attribute is negative and is set to the same negative value, it is marked
as changed.
Take the following example of a Person model with the integer attribute age:
class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
# age :integer(4)
end
The following will produce the error:
person = Person.new(age: -1)
person.age = -1
person.changes
=> { "age" => [-1, -1] }
person.age_changed?
=> true
The problematic line is here:
module ActiveRecord
module Type
module Numeric
...
def non_numeric_string?(value)
# 'wibble'.to_i will give zero, we want to make sure
# that we aren't marking int zero to string zero as
# changed.
value.to_s !~ /\A\d+\.?\d*\z/
end
end
end
end
The regex match doesn't accept numbers with a leading '-'.
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Closes #17945
`db:test:prepare` still purges the database to always keep the test
database in a consistent state.
This patch introduces new problems with `db:schema:load`. Prior
to the introduction of foreign-keys, we could run this file against
a non-empty database. Since every `create_table` containted the
`force: true` option, this would recreate tables when loading the schema.
However with foreign-keys in place, `force: true` wont work anymore and
the task will crash.
/cc @schneems
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To be possible to use a custom column name to save/read the polymorphic
associated type in a has_many or has_one polymorphic association, now users
can use the option :foreign_type to inform in what column the associated object
type will be saved.
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Users should pass strings to queries instead of classes
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[ci skp]
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