| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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`visit_ChangeColumnDefinition` is the same "CHANGE column_name " + `visit_ColumnDefinition(o)`.
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Example:
create_table :foos, id: :bigint do |t|
end
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Most of the documentation very closely mirrors the matching
docs from `SchemaStatements`. I reduced duplicated copy and
added links to the underlying methods for the user to follow.
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The code for `TableDefinition#references` and
`SchemaStatements#add_reference` were almost identical both
structurally, and in terms of domain knowledge. This removes that
duplication into a common class, using the `Table` API as the expected
interface of its collaborator.
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This has the same comments as 9af90ffa00ba35bdee888e3e1ab775ba0bdbe72c,
however it affects the `add_reference` method, and `t.references` in the
context of a `change_table` block.
There is a lot of duplication of code between creating and updating
tables. We should re-evaluate the structure of this code from a high
level so changes like this don't need to be made in two places. (Note to
self)
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Rather than having to do:
create_table :posts do |t|
t.references :user
end
add_foreign_key :posts, :users
You can instead do:
create_table :posts do |t|
t.references :user, foreign_key: true
end
Similar to the `index` option, you can also pass a hash. This will be
passed as the options to `add_foreign_key`. e.g.:
create_table :posts do |t|
t.references :user, foreign_key: { primary_key: :other_id }
end
is equivalent to
create_table :posts do |t|
t.references :user
end
add_foreign_key :posts, :users, primary_key: :other_id
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While we aren't taking PRs with these kinds of changes just yet, they
are fine if we're actively working on the method and it makes things
easier.
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When running the following migration:
change_table(:table_name) { |t| t/timestamps }
The following error was produced:
wrong number of arguments (2 for 1) .... /connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb:851:in `remove_timestamps'
This is due to `arguments` containing an empty hash as its second
argument.
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This makes the following changes:
* warn if `:null` is not passed to `add_timestamps`
* `timestamps` method docs link to `add_timestamps` docs
* explain where additional options go
* adjust examples to include `null: false` (to prevent deprecation warnings)
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This patch uniformizes warning messages. I used the most common style
already present in the code base:
* Capitalize the first word.
* End the message with a full stop.
* "Rails 5" instead of "Rails 5.0".
* Backticks for method names and inline code.
Also, converted a few long strings into the new heredoc convention.
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The current style for warning messages without newlines uses
concatenation of string literals with manual trailing spaces
where needed.
Heredocs have better readability, and with `squish` we can still
produce a single line.
This is a similar use case to the one that motivated defining
`strip_heredoc`, heredocs are super clean.
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`add_reference` can very helpfully add a multi-column index when you use
it to add a polymorphic reference. However, the first column in the
index is the `id` column, which is less than ideal.
The [PostgreSQL docs][1] say:
> A multicolumn B-tree index can be used with query conditions that
> involve any subset of the index's columns, but the index is most
> efficient when there are constraints on the leading (leftmost)
> columns.
The [MySQL docs][2] say:
> MySQL can use multiple-column indexes for queries that test all the
> columns in the index, or queries that test just the first column, the
> first two columns, the first three columns, and so on. If you specify
> the columns in the right order in the index definition, a single
> composite index can speed up several kinds of queries on the same
> table.
In a polymorphic relationship, the type column is much more likely to be
useful as the first column in an index than the id column. That is, I'm
more likely to query on type without an id than I am to query on id
without a type.
[1]: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.3/static/indexes-multicolumn.html
[2]: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/multiple-column-indexes.html
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In the DSL you can now do:
create_table(:foos) do |t|
t.bigint :hi
end
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Move column option handling to new_column_definition
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TableDefinition#column is not called from `add_column`.
Use TableDefinition#new_column_definition for column option handling.
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Method .strip_heredoc is defined in
active_support/core_ext/string/strip.rb so we need to require it.
[fixes #16677]
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Using heredoc would enforce line wrapping to whatever column width we decided to
use in the code, making it difficult for the users to read on some consoles.
This does make the source code read slightly worse and a bit more error-prone,
but this seems like a fair price to pay since the primary purpose for these
messages are for the users to read and the code will not stick around for too
long.
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`strip_heredoc` method is defined on active_support/core_ext/string
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As per discussion, this changes the model generators to specify
`null: false` for timestamp columns. A warning is now emitted if
`timestamps` is called without a `null` option specified, so we can
safely change the behavior when no option is specified in Rails 5.
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* Allow to specify a type for foreign key column in migrations
* unified the docs
* some cleanup in CHANGELOG
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[Andrey Novikov & Łukasz Sarnacki]
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The only case where we got a column that was not `nil`, but did not
respond to `cast_type` was when type casting the default value during
schema creation. We can look up the cast type, and add that object to
the column definition. Will allow us to consistently rely on the type
objects for type casting in all directions.
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The name of the foreign key is not relevant from a users perspective.
Using random names resolves the urge to rename the foreign key when the
respective table or column is renamed.
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skip]
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The `:timestamp` type for columns is unused. All database adapters treat
them as the same database type. All code in `ActiveRecord` which changes
its behavior based on the column's type acts the same in both cases.
However, when the type is passed to code that checks for the `:datetime`
type, but not `:timestamp` (such as XML serialization), the result is
unexpected behavior.
Existing schema definitions will continue to work, and the `timestamp`
type is transparently aliased to `datetime`.
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fixes #10613
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also override drop_table in AbstractMySQLAdapter to properly drop
temporary tables without committing the transaction
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ranjaykrishna/push_add_column_options_to_schema_creation
Push add column options to schema creation
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removed two instances of add_column_options! from abstract_mysql_adapter
reworked rename_column_sql to remove add_column_options from schema_statements
changed to use new hash syntax.
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When then PostgreSQL visitor was [added](https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/6b7fdf3bf3675a14eae74acc5241089308153a34)
`add_column` was no longer receiving the column options directly. This
caused the options to be lost along the way.
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Don't modify args in TableDefinition#primary_key
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