| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Using the subscript method `#[]` on a string has several overloads and
rather complex implementation. One of the overloads is the capability to
accept a regular expression and then run a match, then return the
receiver (if it matched) or one of the groups from the MatchData.
The function of the `UUID#cast` method is to cast a UUID to a type and
format acceptable by postgres. Naturally UUIDs are supposed to be
string and of a certain format, but it had been determined that it was
not ideal for the framework to send just any old string to Postgres and
allow the engine to complain when "foobar" or "" was sent, being
obviously of the wrong format for a valid UUID. Therefore this code was
written to facilitate the checking, and if it were not of the correct
format, a `nil` would be returned as is conventional in Rails.
Now, the subscript method will allocate one or more strings on a match
and return one of them, based on the index parameter. However, there
is no need for a new string, as a UUID of the correct format is already
such, and so long as the format was verified then the string supplied is
adequate for consumption by the database.
The subscript method also creates a MatchData object which will never be
used, and so must eventually be garbage collected.
Garbage collection indeed. This innocuous method tends to be called
quite a lot, for example if the primary key of a table is a uuid, then
this method will be called. If the foreign key of a relation is a UUID,
once again this method is called. If that foreign key is belonging to
a has_many relationship with dozens of objects, then again dozens of
UUIDs shall be cast to a dup of themselves, and spawn dozens of
MatchData objects, and so on.
So, for users that:
* Use UUIDs as primary keys
* Use Postgres
* Operate on collections of objects
This accomplishes a significant savings in total allocations, and may
save many garbage collections.
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The uuid validation regex was allowing uuids to have a single leading
curly brace or single trailing curly brace. Saving with such a uuid
would cause Postgres to generate an exception even though the record
seemed valid. With this change, the regex requires both a leading *and*
a trailing curly brace or neither to be valid.
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This reverts commit 3420a14590c0e6915d8b6c242887f74adb4120f9, reversing
changes made to afb66a5a598ce4ac74ad84b125a5abf046dcf5aa.
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This helper no longer makes sense as a separate method. Instead I'll
just have `deserialize` call `cast` by default. This led to a random
infinite loop in the `JSON` pg type, when it called `super` from
`deserialize`. Not really a great way to fix that other than not calling
super, or continuing to have the separate method, which makes the public
API differ from what we say it is.
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Apparently PG does not validate against RFC 4122. The intent of the original
patch is just to protect against PG errors (which potentially breaks txns, etc)
because of bad user input, so we shouldn't try any harder than PG itself.
Closes #17931
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Adding `# :nodoc:` to the parent `class` / `module` is not going
to ignore nested classes or modules.
There is a modifier `# :nodoc: all` but sadly the containing class
or module will continue to be in the docs.
/cc @sgrif
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As we promote these classes to first class concepts, these classes are
starting to gain enough behavior to warrant being moved into their own
files. Many of them will become quite large as we move additional
behavior to the type objects.
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