| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Probably that is useful for any other feature as well.
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Internal usage for the method as public has removed at #29623.
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* Remove redundant `table_names.empty?`
* Early return in `truncate_tables` since it is already deeply nested
* Move `truncate_tables` out from between `exec_delete` and `exec_update`
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Before:
```
(16.4ms) TRUNCATE TABLE `author_addresses`
(20.5ms) TRUNCATE TABLE `authors`
(19.4ms) TRUNCATE TABLE `posts`
```
After:
```
Truncate Tables (19.5ms) TRUNCATE TABLE `author_addresses`;
TRUNCATE TABLE `authors`;
TRUNCATE TABLE `posts`
```
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This is to easier make `truncate_tables` to bulk statements.
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Sample example ->
Before:
prathamesh@Prathameshs-MacBook-Pro-2 blog *$ rails server thin
DEPRECATION WARNING: Passing the Rack server name as a regular argument is deprecated
and will be removed in the next Rails version. Please, use the -u
option instead.
After:
prathamesh@Prathameshs-MacBook-Pro-2 squish_app *$ rails server thin
DEPRECATION WARNING: Passing the Rack server name as a regular argument is deprecated and will be removed in the next Rails version. Please, use the -u option instead.
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Foreign keys could be created to the same table.
So `remove_foreign_key :from_table, :to_table` is sometimes ambiguous.
This allows `remove_foreign_key` to remove the select one on the same
table with giving both `to_table` and `options`.
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Adds a method to ActiveRecord allowing records to be inserted in bulk without instantiating ActiveRecord models. This method supports options for handling uniqueness violations by skipping duplicate records or overwriting them in an UPSERT operation.
ActiveRecord already supports bulk-update and bulk-destroy actions that execute SQL UPDATE and DELETE commands directly. It also supports bulk-read actions through `pluck`. It makes sense for it also to support bulk-creation.
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Related cbcdecd, 2a56b2d.
This is a regression caused by cbcdecd.
If query caching is enabled, prepared statement handles are never
re-used, since we missed that a query is preprocessed when query caching
is enabled, but doesn't keep the `preparable` flag.
We should care about that case.
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Fix possible memory leak of ConnectionHandler
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refs #35296
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I implemented Foreign key create in `create_table` for SQLite3 at
#24743. This follows #24743 to implement `add_foreign_key` and
`remove_foreign_key`.
Unfortunately SQLite3 has one limitation that
`PRAGMA foreign_key_list(table-name)` doesn't have constraint name.
So we couldn't implement find/remove foreign key by name for now.
Fixes #35207.
Closes #31343.
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Do not allow to add column without column name
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It makes to ease to handle all short-hand methods (e.g. validates
arguments etc).
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I've found a few places in Rails code base where I think it makes sense
to calculate elapsed time more precisely by using
`Concurrent.monotonic_time`:
- Fix calculation of elapsed time in `ActiveSupport::Cache::MemoryStore#prune`
- Fix calculation of elapsed time in
`ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::ConnectionPool::Queue#wait_poll`
- Fix calculation of elapsed time in
`ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::ConnectionPool#attempt_to_checkout_all_existing_connections`
- Fix calculation of elapsed time in `ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::Mysql2Adapter#explain`
See
https://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/2.5.0/Process.html#method-c-clock_gettime
https://blog.dnsimple.com/2018/03/elapsed-time-with-ruby-the-right-way
Related to 7c4542146f0dde962205e5a90839349631ae60fb
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eileencodes/fix-query-cache-for-database-switching
Invalidate all query caches for current thread
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This change ensures that all query cahces are cleared across all
connections per handler for the current thread so if you write on one
connection the read will have the query cache cleared.
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Hint at advanced options for foreign_key
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We sometimes display simple examples of additional parameters that can be
supplied to table-wise methods like these and I found it particularly difficult
to figure out which options `t.foreign_key` accepts without drilling very deep
into the specific SchemaStatements docs.
Since it's relatively common to create foreign keys with custom column names or
primary keys, it seems like this should help quite a few people.
[ci skip]
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Eagerly materialize the fixtures transaction
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The transaction used to restore fixtures is an implementation detail
that should be abstracted away. Idealy a test should behave the same
wether or not transactional fixtures are enabled.
However since transactions have been made lazy, the fixture
transaction started leaking into tests case. e.g. consider the
following (oversimplified) test:
```ruby
class SQLSubscriber
attr_accessor :sql
def initialize
@sql = []
end
def call(*, event)
sql << event[:sql]
end
end
subscriber = SQLSubscriber.new
ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe("sql.active_record", subscriber)
User.connection.execute('SELECT 1', 'Generic name')
assert_equal ['SELECT 1'], subscriber.sql
```
On Rails 6 it starts to break because the `sql` array will be `['BEGIN', 'SELECT 1']`.
Several things are wrong here:
- That transaction is not generated by the tested code, so it shouldn't be visible.
- The transaction is not even closed yet, which again doesn't reflect the reality.
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I deprecated two unused attr_writers `visitor` and `indexes` at 8056fe0
and f4bc364 conservatively, since those are accidentaly exposed in the
docs.
https://api.rubyonrails.org/v5.2/classes/ActiveRecord/ConnectionAdapters/AbstractAdapter.html
https://api.rubyonrails.org/v5.2/classes/ActiveRecord/ConnectionAdapters/TableDefinition.html
But I've found that `view_renderer` attr_writer is removed without
deprecation at #35093, that is also exposed in the doc.
https://api.rubyonrails.org/v5.2/classes/ActionView/Base.html
I'd like to also remove the deprecated attr_writers since I think that
removing `visitor` and `indexes` attr_writers is as safe as removing
`view_renderer` attr_writer.
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While working on another feature for multiple databases (auto-switching)
I observed that in development the first request won't autoload the
application record connection for the primary database and may not yet
know about the replica connection.
In my test application this caused the application to thrown an error if
I tried to send the first request to the replica before the replica was
connected. This wouldn't be an issue in production because the
application is preloaded.
In order to fix this I decided to leave the original error message and
delete the new error message. I updated the original error message to
include the `role` to make it a bit clearer that the connection isn't
established for that particular role.
The error now reads:
```
No connection pool with 'primary' found for the 'reading' role.
```
A single database application will continue uisng the original error
message:
```
No connection pool with 'primary' found.
```
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Currently `conn.column_exists?("testings", "created_at", "datetime")`
returns false even if the table has the `created_at` column.
That reason is that `column.type` is a symbol but passed `type` is not
normalized to symbol unlike `column_name`, it is surprising behavior to
me.
I've improved that to normalize a value before comparison.
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Since #26002, `id_value` is no longer passed to `sql_for_insert`.
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`nil`, `Numeric`, and `String` are most basic objects which are passed
to `type_cast`. But now each `when *types_which_need_no_typecasting`
evaluation allocates extra two arrays, it makes `type_cast` slower.
The `types_which_need_no_typecasting` was introduced at #15351, but the
method isn't useful (never used any adapters) since all adapters
(sqlite3, mysql2, postgresql, oracle-enhanced, sqlserver) still
overrides the `_type_cast`.
Just expanding the method would make the `type_cast` 2x faster.
```ruby
module ActiveRecord
module TypeCastFast
def type_cast_fast(value, column = nil)
value = id_value_for_database(value) if value.is_a?(Base)
if column
value = type_cast_from_column(column, value)
end
_type_cast_fast(value)
rescue TypeError
to_type = column ? " to #{column.type}" : ""
raise TypeError, "can't cast #{value.class}#{to_type}"
end
private
def _type_cast_fast(value)
case value
when Symbol, ActiveSupport::Multibyte::Chars, Type::Binary::Data
value.to_s
when true then unquoted_true
when false then unquoted_false
# BigDecimals need to be put in a non-normalized form and quoted.
when BigDecimal then value.to_s("F")
when nil, Numeric, String then value
when Type::Time::Value then quoted_time(value)
when Date, Time then quoted_date(value)
else raise TypeError
end
end
end
end
conn = ActiveRecord::Base.connection
conn.extend ActiveRecord::TypeCastFast
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report("type_cast") { conn.type_cast("foo") }
x.report("type_cast_fast") { conn.type_cast_fast("foo") }
x.compare!
end
```
```
Warming up --------------------------------------
type_cast 58.733k i/100ms
type_cast_fast 101.364k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
type_cast 708.066k (± 5.9%) i/s - 3.583M in 5.080866s
type_cast_fast 1.424M (± 2.3%) i/s - 7.197M in 5.055860s
Comparison:
type_cast_fast: 1424240.0 i/s
type_cast: 708066.0 i/s - 2.01x slower
```
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directly
Since `migration_context` has `migrations_paths` itself and provides
methods which returning values from parsed migration files, so there is
no reason to use the `parse_migration_filename` low level API directly.
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`connection.assume_migrated_upto_version`
Since #31727, `migrations_paths` in `assume_migrated_upto_version` is no
longer used.
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Currently we sometimes find a redundant begin block in code review
(e.g. https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/33604#discussion_r209784205).
I'd like to enable `Style/RedundantBegin` cop to avoid that, since
rescue/else/ensure are allowed inside do/end blocks in Ruby 2.5
(https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12906), so we'd probably meets with
that situation than before.
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This PR adds the ability to prevent writes to a database even if the
database user is able to write (ie the database is a primary and not a
replica).
This is useful for a few reasons: 1) when converting your database from
a single db to a primary/replica setup - you can fix all the writes on
reads early on, 2) when we implement automatic database switching or
when an app is manually switching connections this feature can be used
to ensure reads are reading and writes are writing. We want to make sure
we raise if we ever try to write in read mode, regardless of database
type and 3) for local development if you don't want to set up multiple
databases but do want to support rw/ro queries.
This should be used in conjunction with `connected_to` in write mode.
For example:
```
ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to(role: :writing) do
Dog.connection.while_preventing_writes do
Dog.create! # will raise because we're preventing writes
end
end
ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to(role: :reading) do
Dog.connection.while_preventing_writes do
Dog.first # will not raise because we're not writing
end
end
```
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This commit adds support for the
`ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::PostgreSQLAdapter.create_unlogged_tables`
setting, which turns `CREATE TABLE` SQL statements into
`CREATE UNLOGGED TABLE` statements.
This can improve PostgreSQL performance but at the
cost of data durability, and thus it is highly recommended
that you *DO NOT* enable this in a production environment.
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Use `t.index ...` instead.
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[fatkodima & Stefan Kanev]
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When a record with transactional callbacks is saved, it's attached to
the current transaction so that the callbacks can be run when the
transaction is committed. Records can also be added manually with
`add_transaction_record`, even if they have no transactional callbacks.
When a nested transaction is committed, its records are transferred to
the parent transaction, as transactional callbacks should only be run
when the outermost transaction is committed (the "real" transaction).
However, this currently only happens when the record has transactional
callbacks, and not when added manually with `add_transaction_record`.
If a record is added to a nested transaction, we should always attach it
to the parent transaction when the nested transaction is committed,
regardless of whether it has any transactional callbacks.
[Eugene Kenny & Ryuta Kamizono]
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Follow up #32146.
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