| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Use `count(:all)` in HasManyAssociation#count_records
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Problem: Calling `count` on an association can cause invalid SQL queries
to be created where the `SELECT COUNT(a, b, c)` function receives
multiple columns. This will cause a `StatementInvalid` exception later
on.
Solution: Use `count(:all)`, which generates a `SELECT COUNT(*)...`
query independently of the association.
This also includes a test case that, before the fix, broke.
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mikelikesbikes/fix-update-attribute-callbacks-issue
save attributes changed by callbacks after update_attribute
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The `app:update` rake task will regenerate `development.rb` so that it
contains this option; that means we're currently adding it to existing
apps in two places, which is unnecessary and confusing.
Also:
- Remove inaccurate comment about which stack frames are ignored
- Clarify that the feature uses `caller_locations`, not `caller`
- Remove unused return value in `extract_callstack`
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Currently `count(:all)` with `distinct` doesn't work correctly because
SELECT list is always replaced to `*` or primary key in that case even
if having custom SELECT list.
And also, PostgreSQL has a limitation that ORDER BY expressions must
appear in select list for SELECT DISTINCT.
Therefore, we should not replace custom SELECT list when using
`count(:all)` with `distinct`.
Closes #31277.
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Arel doesn't support subselect generation for DELETE unlike UPDATE yet,
but we already have that generation in connection adapters. We can
simply use the subselect generated by that one.
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This new ActiveRecord configuration option allows you to easily
pinpoint what line of application code is triggering SQL queries in the
development log by appending below each SQL statement log the line of
Ruby code that triggered it.
It’s useful with N+1 issues, and to locate stray queries.
By default this new option ignores Rails and Ruby code in order to
surface only callers from your application Ruby code or your gems.
It is enabled on newly generated Rails 5.2 applications and can be
enabled on existing Rails applications:
```ruby
Rails.application.configure do
# ...
config.active_record.verbose_query_logs = true
end
```
The `rails app:upgrade` task will also add it to
`config/development.rb`.
This feature purposely avoids coupling with
ActiveSupport::BacktraceCleaner since ActiveRecord can be used without
ActiveRecord. This decision can be reverted in the future to allow more
configurable backtraces (the exclusion of gem callers for example).
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```
# create_table :posts do |t|
# t.integer :comments_count, default: 0
# t.integer :lock_version
# t.timestamps
# end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
end
# create_table :comments do |t|
# t.belongs_to :post
# end
class Comment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :post, touch: true, counter_cache: true
end
```
Before:
```
post = Post.create!
# => begin transaction
INSERT INTO "posts" ("created_at", "updated_at", "lock_version")
VALUES ("2017-12-11 21:27:11.387397", "2017-12-11 21:27:11.387397", 0)
commit transaction
comment = Comment.create!(post: post)
# => begin transaction
INSERT INTO "comments" ("post_id") VALUES (1)
UPDATE "posts" SET "comments_count" = COALESCE("comments_count", 0) + 1,
"lock_version" = COALESCE("lock_version", 0) + 1 WHERE "posts"."id" = 1
UPDATE "posts" SET "updated_at" = '2017-12-11 21:27:11.398330',
"lock_version" = 1 WHERE "posts"."id" = 1 AND "posts"."lock_version" = 0
rollback transaction
# => ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError: Attempted to touch a stale object: Post.
Comment.take.destroy!
# => begin transaction
DELETE FROM "comments" WHERE "comments"."id" = 1
UPDATE "posts" SET "comments_count" = COALESCE("comments_count", 0) - 1,
"lock_version" = COALESCE("lock_version", 0) + 1 WHERE "posts"."id" = 1
UPDATE "posts" SET "updated_at" = '2017-12-11 21:42:47.785901',
"lock_version" = 1 WHERE "posts"."id" = 1 AND "posts"."lock_version" = 0
rollback transaction
# => ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError: Attempted to touch a stale object: Post.
```
After:
```
post = Post.create!
# => begin transaction
INSERT INTO "posts" ("created_at", "updated_at", "lock_version")
VALUES ("2017-12-11 21:27:11.387397", "2017-12-11 21:27:11.387397", 0)
commit transaction
comment = Comment.create!(post: post)
# => begin transaction
INSERT INTO "comments" ("post_id") VALUES (1)
UPDATE "posts" SET "comments_count" = COALESCE("comments_count", 0) + 1,
"lock_version" = COALESCE("lock_version", 0) + 1,
"updated_at" = '2017-12-11 21:37:09.802642' WHERE "posts"."id" = 1
commit transaction
comment.destroy!
# => begin transaction
DELETE FROM "comments" WHERE "comments"."id" = 1
UPDATE "posts" SET "comments_count" = COALESCE("comments_count", 0) - 1,
"lock_version" = COALESCE("lock_version", 0) + 1,
"updated_at" = '2017-12-11 21:39:02.685520' WHERE "posts"."id" = 1
commit transaction
```
Fixes #31199.
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Add support for specifying non-default operator classes in PostgreSQL
indexes. An example CREATE INDEX query that becomes possible is:
CREATE INDEX users_name ON users USING gist (name gist_trgm_ops);
Previously it was possible to specify the `gist` index but not the
custom operator class. The `add_index` call for the above query is:
add_index :users, :name, using: :gist, opclasses: {name: :gist_trgm_ops}
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Scoping reserved names
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Due to inconsistent behavior when chaining scopes and one scope named after a Relation method
Validation code added in 2 places:
- scope, to prevent problematic scope names.
- enum, cause it tries to auto define scope.
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statement due to user request (#31235)
This changes `StatementTimeout` to `QueryCanceled` for PostgreSQL.
In MySQL, errno 1317 (`ER_QUERY_INTERRUPTED`) is only used when the
query is manually cancelled.
But in PostgreSQL, `QUERY_CANCELED` error code (57014) which is used
`StatementTimeout` is also used when the both case. And, we can not tell
which reason happened.
So I decided to introduce new error class `QueryCanceled` closer to the
error code name.
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Since #31129, new error class `StatementTimeout` has been added.
`TransactionTimeout` is caused by the timeout shorter than
`StatementTimeout`, but its name is too generic. I think that it should
be a name that understands the difference with `StatementTimeout`.
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* Add a #populate method to migrations
* Address rubocop issues
* Rename to #up_only and use #execute in the examples intead of the model
* Update CHANGELOG
[Rich Daley & Rafael Mendonça França]
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Disallow raw SQL in dangerous AR methods
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The documentation claims that given values go through "normal AR type
casting and serialization", which to me implies
`serialize(cast(value))`, not just serialization. The docs were changed
to use this wording in #22492. The tests I cited in that PR (which is
the same test modified in this commit), is worded in a way that implies
it should be using `cast` as well.
It's possible that I originally meant "normal type casting" to imply
just the call to `serialize`, but given that `update_all(archived:
params['archived'])` seems to be pretty common, I'm inclined to make
this change as long as no tests are broken from it.
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timeout exceeded (#31129)
We are sometimes using The MAX_EXECUTION_TIME hint for MySQL depending
on the situation. It will prevent catastrophic performance down by wrong
performing queries.
The new error class `StatementTimeout` will make to be easier to handle
that case.
https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/optimizer-hints.html#optimizer-hints-execution-time
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Follow up of #30360.
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Ensure that `bin/rails db:migrate` with specified `VERSION` reverts
all migrations only if `VERSION` is `0`.
Raise error if target migration doesn't exist.
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- It is present in Rails 5.1.3 already.
- Backport commit https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/9efa0b70a638dcfdc05b30ab530f89f2847bb9c2
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Although the sqlite adapter supports index sort orders, they
weren't being written to db/schema.rb.
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`initialize_internal_metadata_table`
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object
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ar_internal_metadata's data for a test database.
Before:
```
$ RAILS_ENV=test rails dbconsole
> SELECT * FROM ar_internal_metadata;
key|value|created_at|updated_at
environment|development|2017-09-11 23:14:10.815679|2017-09-11 23:14:10.815679
```
After:
```
$ RAILS_ENV=test rails dbconsole
> SELECT * FROM ar_internal_metadata;
key|value|created_at|updated_at
environment|test|2017-09-11 23:14:10.815679|2017-09-11 23:14:10.815679
```
Fixes #26731.
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We already found the longer sequence name, but we could not consider
whether it was the sequence name created by serial type due to missed a
max identifier length limitation. I've addressed the sequence name
consideration to respect the max identifier length.
Fixes #28332.
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Currently `AUTO_INCREMENT` is implicitly used in the default primary key
definition. But `AUTO_INCREMENT` is not only used for single column
primary key, but also for composite primary key. In that case,
`auto_increment: true` should be dumped explicitly in the
`db/schema.rb`.
Fixes #30894.
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This is the fix for the regression of #29848.
In #29848, I've kept existing select list in the subquery for the count
if ORDER BY is given. But it had accidentally affect to GROUP BY
queries also. It should keep the previous behavior in that case.
Fixes #30886.
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* Add missing credit
* Add backticks
* Fix indentation
* Remove trailing spaces
And some minor tweaks.
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PostgreSQL 9.1+ introduced range types, and Rails added support for
using this datatype in ActiveRecord. However, the serialization of
`PostgreSQL::OID::Range` was incomplete, because it did not properly
quote the bounds that make up the range. A clear example of this is a
`tsrange`.
Normally, ActiveRecord quotes Date/Time objects to include the
milliseconds. However, the way `PostgreSQL::OID::Range` serialized its
bounds, the milliseconds were dropped. This meant that the value was
incomplete and not equal to the submitted value.
An example of normal timestamps vs. a `tsrange`. Note how the bounds
for the range do not include their milliseconds (they were present in
the ruby Range):
UPDATE "iterations" SET "updated_at" = $1, "range" = $2 WHERE
"iterations"."id" = $3
[["updated_at", "2017-09-23 17:07:01.304864"],
["range", "[2017-09-23 00:00:00 UTC,2017-09-23 23:59:59 UTC]"],
["id", 1234]]
`PostgreSQL::OID::Range` serialized the range by interpolating a
string for the range, which works for most cases, but does not work
for timestamps:
def serialize(value)
if value.is_a?(::Range)
from = type_cast_single_for_database(value.begin)
to = type_cast_single_for_database(value.end)
"[#{from},#{to}#{value.exclude_end? ? ')' : ']'}"
else
super
end
end
(byebug) from = type_cast_single_for_database(value.begin)
2010-01-01 13:30:00 UTC
(byebug) to = type_cast_single_for_database(value.end)
2011-02-02 19:30:00 UTC
(byebug) "[#{from},#{to}#{value.exclude_end? ? ')' : ']'}"
"[2010-01-01 13:30:00 UTC,2011-02-02 19:30:00 UTC)"
@sgrif (the original implementer for Postgres Range support) provided
some feedback about where the quoting should occur:
Yeah, quoting at all is definitely wrong here. I'm not sure what I
was thinking in 02579b5, but what this is doing is definitely in the
wrong place. It should probably just be returning a range of
subtype.serialize(value.begin) and subtype.serialize(value.end), and
letting the adapter handle the rest.
`Postgres::OID::Range` now returns a `Range` object, and
`ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::PostgreSQL::Quoting` can now encode
and quote a `Range`:
def encode_range(range)
"[#{type_cast(range.first)},#{type_cast(range.last)}#{range.exclude_end? ? ')' : ']'}"
end
...
encode_range(range)
#=> "['2010-01-01 13:30:00.670277','2011-02-02 19:30:00.745125')"
This commit includes tests to make sure the milliseconds are
preserved in `tsrange` and `tstzrange` columns
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I do not want to set the expectation that any enumerable object should
behave this way, but this case in particular comes up frequently enough
that I'm caving on this one.
Fixes #30684.
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Closes #24190
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Fixes #30586.
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