| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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https://github.com/agrobbin/rails into agrobbin-sti-subclass-from-attributes
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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If your STI class looks like this:
```ruby
class Company < ActiveRecord::Base
self.store_full_sti_class = false
class GoodCo < Company
end
class BadCo < Company
end
end
```
The expectation (which is valid) is that the `type` in the database is saved as
`GoodCo` or `BadCo`. However, another expectation should be that setting `type`
to `GoodCo` would correctly instantiate the object as a `Company::GoodCo`. That
second expectation is what this should fix.
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db:structure dump and load
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Dump indexes in `create_table` instead of `add_index`
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If the adapter supports indexes in create table, generated SQL is
slightly more efficient.
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Correctly dump `:options` on `create_table` for MySQL
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Example:
create_table :foos do |t|
t.string :string_en, collation: 'en_US.UTF-8'
t.text :text_ja, collation: 'ja_JP.UTF-8'
end
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Fix unscope for less than
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Raise ArgumentError when find_by receives no arguments
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calebthompson/dont-rely-on-environment-task-for-schema-load"
This reverts commit 08ff4ccbbb3fb143a02e6752efb974a4bcfcd3bb, reversing
changes made to 6c9ed6dbc62450cdb87559afd15798305e069146.
Caused by #17920.
Closes #19545.
This patch introduced regressions because initializers were no longer
loaded. Specifically missing inflections result in broken restores of
the database.
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Fix missing index when using timestamps with index
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The `index` option used with `timestamps` should be passed to both
`column` definitions for `created_at` and `updated_at` rather than just
the first.
This was happening because `Hash#delete` is used to extract the `index`
option passed to `timestamps`, thereby mutating the `options` hash
in-place. Now take a copy of the `options` before deleting so that the
original is not modified.
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In 1f006c an option was added called :class to allow passing anonymous
classes to association definitions. Since using :class instead of
:class_name is a fairly common typo even amongst experienced developers
this can result in hard to debug errors arising in raise_on_type_mismatch?
To fix this we're renaming the option from :class to :anonymous_class as
that is a more correct description of what the option is for. Since this
was an internal, undocumented option there is no need for a deprecation.
Fixes #19659
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To me it seems like this should only be the case if `autosave: true` is
set on the association. However, when implemented that way, it caused
issues with has many associations, where we have explicit tests stating
that child records are updated when the parent is new, even if autosave
is not set (presumably to update the parent id, but other changed
attributes would be persisted as well).
It's quirky, but at least we should be consistently quirky. This
constitutes a minor but subtle change in behavior, and therefore should
not be backported to 4.2 and earlier.
Fixes #19782
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This reverts commit 524d40591eaa2f4d007409bfad386f6b107492eb, reversing
changes made to 34d3a6095100245283861ef480a54d0643bbee4c.
Reasoning behind the revert are in the PR discussion:
https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/19755
- This means that types can no longer cast to/from `Set`, and reasonably
work with `where` (we already have this problem for `array`/`json`
types on pg)
- This adds precedent for every other `Enumerable`, and we can't target
`Enumerable` directly.
- Calling `to_a` on a `Set` is reasonable.
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Add support for Set to Relation#where
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Previously `#where` used to treat `Set`objects as nil, but now it treats
them as an array:
set = Set.new([1, 2])
Author.where(:id => set)
# => SELECT "authors".* FROM "authors" WHERE "authors"."id" IN (1, 2)
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Add charset and collation options support for MySQL string and text columns.
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columns
Example:
create_table :foos do |t|
t.string :string_utf8_bin, charset: 'utf8', collation: 'utf8_bin'
t.text :text_ascii, charset: 'ascii'
end
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use singular table name if pluralize_table_names is setted as false whil...
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We were never clearing the `PG::Result` object used to query the types
when the connection is first established. This would lead to a
potentially large amount of memory being retained for the life of the
connection.
Investigating this issue also revealed several low hanging fruit on the
performance of these methods, and the number of allocations has been
reduced by ~90%.
Fixes #19578
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When set to an integer, a warning will be logged whenever a result set
larger than the specified size is returned by a query. Fixes #16463
The warning is outputed a module which is prepended in an initializer,
so there will be no performance impact if
`config.active_record.warn_on_records_fetched_greater_than` is not set.
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Avoid loading user's psqlrc when loading test structure
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pinglamb/fix-referencing-wrong-alias-when-joining-tables-of-has-many-through-association
Fix referencing wrong aliases while joining tables of has many through association
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association
While joining table of has_many :through association, ActiveRecord will
use the actual table name instead of through-join alias. It results with
a wrong SQL and exception is raised. This only happens when calculation
methods like #count is called.
This issue is affecting Rails 4.1.x and 4.2.x as well.
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The subtype will (quite reasonably) ignore the possibility that it has
`changed_in_place?` by becoming nil.
Fixes #19467
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As described here https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/19420. When
using the Postgres BigInt[] field type the big int value was not being
translated into schema.rb. This caused the field to become just a
regular integer field when building off of schema.rb. This fix will
address this by delegating the limit from the subtype to the Array type.
https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/19420
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ActiveRecord: Add a changelog entry for issue #17680. [ci skip]
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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Reuse the CollectionAssociation#reader proxy cache if the foreign key is present from the start.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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present from the start.
When a new record has the necessary information prior to save, we can
avoid busting the cache.
We could simply clear the @proxy on #reset or #reset_scope, but that
would clear the cache more often than necessary.
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Fixes db:structure:dump when using schema_search_path and PostgreSQL
extensions.
Closes #17157.
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I’m renaming all instances of `use_transcational_fixtures` to
`use_transactional_tests` and “transactional fixtures” to
“transactional tests”.
I’m deprecating `use_transactional_fixtures=`. So anyone who is
explicitly setting this will get a warning telling them to use
`use_transactional_tests=` instead.
I’m maintaining backwards compatibility—both forms will work.
`use_transactional_tests` will check to see if
`use_transactional_fixtures` is set and use that, otherwise it will use
itself. But because `use_transactional_tests` is a class attribute
(created with `class_attribute`) this requires a little bit of hoop
jumping. The writer method that `class_attribute` generates defines a
new reader method that return the value being set. Which means we can’t
set the default of `true` using `use_transactional_tests=` as was done
previously because that won’t take into account anyone using
`use_transactional_fixtures`. Instead I defined the reader method
manually and it checks `use_transactional_fixtures`. If it was set then
it should be used, otherwise it should return the default, which is
`true`. If someone uses `use_transactional_tests=` then it will
overwrite the backwards-compatible method with whatever they set.
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Versions of the pg gem earlier than 0.18.0 cannot be used safely with Ruby 2.2.
Specifically, pg 0.17 when used with Ruby 2.2 has a known bug that causes
random bits to be added to the end of strings. Further explanation here:
https://bitbucket.org/ged/ruby-pg/issue/210/crazy-bytes-being-added-to-record
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Various behaviors needed by associations (such as creating the through
record) are lost when `where` is called, since we stop having a
`CollectionProxy` and start having an `AssociationRelation` which does
not contain this behavior. I *think* we should be able to rm
`AssociationRelation`, but we have tests saying the changes required to
do that would be bad (Without saying why. Of course. >_>)
Fixes #19073.
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MySQL unicode support is not only `utf8mb4`.
Then, The index length problem is not only `utf8mb4`.
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.6/en/charset-unicode.html
SELECT * FROM information_schema.character_sets WHERE maxlen > 3;
+--------------------+----------------------+------------------+--------+
| CHARACTER_SET_NAME | DEFAULT_COLLATE_NAME | DESCRIPTION | MAXLEN |
+--------------------+----------------------+------------------+--------+
| utf8mb4 | utf8mb4_general_ci | UTF-8 Unicode | 4 |
| utf16 | utf16_general_ci | UTF-16 Unicode | 4 |
| utf16le | utf16le_general_ci | UTF-16LE Unicode | 4 |
| utf32 | utf32_general_ci | UTF-32 Unicode | 4 |
+--------------------+----------------------+------------------+--------+
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[Toby Ovod-Everett & Andrey Nering & Yves Senn]
Closes #17726.
Closes #10939.
This patch makes three distinct modifications:
1. no longer fall back to disabling user triggers if system triggers can't be disabled
2. warn the user when referential integrity can't be disabled
3. restore aborted transactions when referential integrity can't be disabled
The motivation behind these changes is to make the behavior of Rails
transparent and less error-prone. To require superuser privileges is not optimal
but it's what Rails currently needs. Users who absolutely rely on disabling user triggers
can patch `disable_referential_integrity`.
We should investigate `SET CONSTRAINTS` as a possible solution which does not require
superuser privileges.
/cc @matthewd
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Example:
create_table :foos, id: :primary_key, limit: 8 do |t|
end
# or
create_table :foos, id: false do |t|
t.column :id, limit: 8
end
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Deprecate `required` option in favor of `optional` for belongs_to.
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