| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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`before_add` callbacks are fired before the record is saved on
`has_and_belongs_to_many` assocations *and* on `has_many :through`
associations. Before this change, `before_add` callbacks would be fired
before the record was saved on `has_and_belongs_to_many` associations, but
*not* on `has_many :through` associations.
Fixes #14144
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'chancancode/fix_instance_method_already_implemented'
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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conflicting private method defined on its ancestors.
The problem is that `method_defined_within?(name, klass, superklass)`
only works correclty when `klass` and `superklass` are both `Class`es.
If both `klass` and `superklass` are both `Class`es, they share the
same inheritance chain, so if a method is defined on `klass` but not
`superklass`, this method must be introduced at some point between
`klass` and `superklass`.
This does not work when `superklass` is a `Module`. A `Module`'s
inheritance chain contains just itself. So if a method is defined on
`klass` but not on `superklass`, the method could still be defined
somewhere upstream, e.g. in `Object`.
This fix works by avoiding calling `method_defined_within?` with a
module while still fufilling the requirement (checking that the
method is defined withing `superclass` but not is not a generated
attribute method).
4d8ee288 is likely an attempted partial fix for this problem. This
unrolls that fix and properly check the `superclass` as intended.
Fixes #11569.
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Remove 4-1 related entries from master [ci skip]
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The Ruby Range object does not support excluding beginnings.
We currently support excluding beginnings for some subtypes using
manually by incrementing them (now using the `#succ` method).
This is approach is flawed as it's not equal to an excluding beginning.
This commit deprecates the current support for excluding beginnings.
It also raises an `ArgumentError` for subtypes that do not implement the `succ`
method.
This is a temporary solution to get rid of the broken state. We might still
add complete support for excluding beginnings afterwards. (Probably with a
new `PGRange` object, which acts like a `Range` but has excluding beginnings.
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This gets AR working with custom defined range types. It also
removes the need for subtype specific branches in `OID::Range`.
This expands the interface of all `OID` types with the `infinity` method.
It's responsible to provide a value for positive and negative infinity.
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Conflicts:
actionview/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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[ci skip]
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and upgrating guides
[ci skip]
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This reverts commit 3ea840355409dc205a9e0d027fc09f1452636969, reversing
changes made to e4cde5d58cbb09d1843796f96ba86225ff94fe05.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/query_methods.rb
Reason: using `from` without `select` should not change the select list
to SELECT * because it can lead different query results. If it is needed
to change the table to a subquery or a view you can pass a table alias
in the `from` call or use `select('subquery.*')`.
Fixes #14049.
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We didn't have enough encoding for the wire protocol to store an array
of hstore types. So, further encode any hstore that is an array member.
Whilst we're here, ensure it's an HashWithIndifferentAccess being
returned, to be consistent with other serialized forms, and add testing
for arrays of hstore.
So now the following migration:
enable_extension "hstore"
create_table :servers do |t|
t.string :name
t.hstore :interfaces, array: true
end
produces a model that can used like this, to store an array of hashes:
server = Server.create(name: "server01", interfaces: [
{ name: "bge0", ipv4: "192.0.2.2", state: "up" },
{ name: "de0", state: "disabled", by: "misha" },
{ name: "fe0", state: "up" },
])
More at http://inopinatus.org/2013/07/12/using-arrays-of-hstore-with-rails-4/
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[ci skip]
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Previously when reverting a migration which added a named index it
would instead drop a corresponding index with matching columns but
without a name.
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git://github.com/emilsoman/rails into emilsoman-dump-schema-after-migration-flag
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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* Add a config on Active Record named `dump_schema_after_migration`
* Schema dump doesn't happen if the config is set to false
* Set default value of the config to true
* Set config in generated production environment file to false
* Update configuration guide
* Update CHANGELOG
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/cc @chancancode
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PostgreSQL implementation of SchemaStatements#index_name_exists?
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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Dangerous association names conflicts include instance or class
methods already defined by `ActiveRecord::Base`.
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This was a common pattern:
```
query = author.posts.select(:title)
connection.select_one(query)
```
However `.select` returns a ActiveRecord::AssociationRelation, which has
the bind information, so we can use that to get the right sql query.
Also fix select_rows on postgress and sqlite3 that were not using the binds
[fixes #7538]
[fixes #12017]
[related #13731]
[related #12056]
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after loading it from YAML - fixes #13861
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`find_in_batches` now returns an `Enumerator`
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/batches.rb
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so that it
can be chained with other `Enumerable` methods.
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Dangerous name conflicts includes instance or class method conflicts
with methods defined within `ActiveRecord::Base` but not its ancestors,
as well as conflicts with methods generated by other enums on the same
class.
Fixes #13389.
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Similar to dangerous attribute methods, a scope name conflict is
dangerous if it conflicts with an existing class method defined within
`ActiveRecord::Base` but not its ancestors.
See also #13389.
*Godfrey Chan*, *Philippe Creux*
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- fixes #13788
As per the documentation at lock!, if the :lock option is a string it should use the given SQL to generate the lock statement.
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With this we can write `Model#select(:aliased)`, `Model#order(:aliased)`,
`Model#reoder(aliased: :desc)`, etc.
Supplementary work to 54122067acaad39b277a5363c6d11d6804c7bf6b.
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Need to define #reset on CollectionProxy.
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Implement the Dirty API with the Enum feature correctly.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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To make this possible we have to override the save_changed_attribute
hook.
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Since Rails 4.0, we add an ORDER BY in the `first` method to ensure consistent
results among different database engines. But for singular associations this
behavior is not needed since we will have one record to return. As this
ORDER BY option can lead some performance issues we are removing it for singular
associations accessors.
Fixes #12623.
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This fixes a bug where `select(:id)` combined with `joins()` raised:
```
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid: SQLite3::SQLException: ambiguous column name: id:
SELECT id, authors.author_address_id
FROM "posts"
INNER JOIN "authors"
ON "authors"."id" = "posts"."author_id"
ORDER BY posts.id LIMIT 3
```
The `select_values` are still String and Symbols because other parts (mainly calculations.rb)
rely on that fact.
/cc @tenderlove
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find_in_batches
Before this patch find_in_batches raises this error only on second iteration. So you will know about the problem only when you get the batch size threshold.
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This commit bring the famous ordinal Array instance methods defined
in ActiveSupport into ActiveRecord as fully-fledged finders.
These finders ensure a default ascending order of the table's primary
key, and utilize the OFFSET SQL verb to locate the user's desired
record. If an offset is defined in the query, calling #second adds
to the offset to get the actual desired record.
Fixes #13743.
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