| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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We were never clearing the `PG::Result` object used to query the types
when the connection is first established. This would lead to a
potentially large amount of memory being retained for the life of the
connection.
Investigating this issue also revealed several low hanging fruit on the
performance of these methods, and the number of allocations has been
reduced by ~90%.
Fixes #19578
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This obsoletes the ruby based implementations.
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The type map was introduced in aafee23, but wasn't properly filled.
This mainly adjusts many locations, that expected strings instead of
integers or boolean.
add_pg_decoders is moved after setup of the StatementPool, because
execute_and_clear could potentially make use of it.
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As described here https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/19420. When
using the Postgres BigInt[] field type the big int value was not being
translated into schema.rb. This caused the field to become just a
regular integer field when building off of schema.rb. This fix will
address this by delegating the limit from the subtype to the Array type.
https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/19420
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Fixes #19389.
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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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The latest version of the PG gem can actually convert the primitives for
us in C code, which gives a pretty substantial speed up. A few cases
were only there to add the `infinity` method, which I just put on the
range type (which is the only place it was used). Floats also needed to
parse `Infinity` and `NaN`, but it felt reasonable enough to put that on
the generic form.
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The various databases don't actually need significantly different
handling for this behavior, and they can achieve it without knowing
about the type of the object.
The old implementation was returning a string, which will cause problems
such as breaking TZ aware attributes, and making it impossible for the
adapters to supply their logic for time objects.
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If timestamp column have the precision, it need to format according to
the precision of timestamp column.
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This predicate was only to figure out if it's safe to do case
insensitive comparison, which is only a problem on PG. Turns out, PG can
just tell us whether we are able to do it or not. If the query turns out
to be a problem, let's just replace that method with checking the SQL
type for `text` or `character`. I'd rather not burden the type objects
with adapter specific knowledge.
The *real* solution, is to deprecate this behavior entirely. The only
reason we need it is because the `:case_sensitive` option for
`validates_uniqueness_of` is documented as "this option is ignored for
non-strings". It makes no sense for us to do that. If the type can't be
compared in a case insensitive way, the user shouldn't tell us to do
case insensitive comparison.
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The type code is actually quite accessible, and I'm planning to
encourage people to look at the files in the `type` folder to learn more
about how it works. This will help reduce the noise from code that is
less about type casting, and more about random AR nonsense.
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The same is not true of `define_attribute`, which is meant to be the low
level no-magic API that sits underneath. The differences between the two
APIs are:
- `attribute`
- Lazy (the attribute will be defined after the schema has loaded)
- Allows either a type object or a symbol
- `define_attribute`
- Runs immediately (might get trampled by schema loading)
- Requires a type object
This was the last blocker in terms of public interface requirements
originally discussed for this feature back in May. All the
implementation blockers have been cleared, so this feature is probably
ready for release (pending one more look-over by me).
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Keeping with our behavior elsewhere in the system, invalid input is
assumed to be `nil`.
Fixes #18629.
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The types that are affected by `time_zone_aware_attributes` (which is on
by default) have been made configurable, in case this is a breaking
change for existing applications.
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addresses https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/91949e48cf41af9f3e4ffba3e5eecf9b0a08bfc3#commitcomment-9144563
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This showed up when running BinaryTest#test_load_save with the more
restrictive input string handling of pg-0.18.0.pre20141117110243.gem .
Bytea values sent to the server are in binary format, but are
returned back as escaped text. To fulfill the assumption that
type_cast_from_database(type_cast_for_database(binary)) == binary
we unescape only, if the value was really received from the server.
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I think we should deprecate this behavior and just error if you tell us
to do a case insensitive comparison for types which are not case
sensitive. Partially reverts 35592307
Fixes #18195
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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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The user is able to pass PG string literals in 4.1, and have it
converted to an array. This is also possible in 4.2, but it would remain
in string form until saving and reloading, which breaks our
`attr = save.reload.attr` contract. I think we should deprecate this in
5.0, and only allow array input from user sources. However, this
currently constitutes a breaking change to public API that did not go
through a deprecation cycle.
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The type registration was simply looking for the OID, and eagerly
fetching/constructing the sub type when it was registered. However,
numeric types have additional parameters which are extracted from the
actual SQL string of the type during lookup, and can have their behavior
change based on the result.
We simply need to use the block form of registration, and look up the
subtype lazily instead.
Fixes #17935
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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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[ci skip]
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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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The method has been removed in 09206716f8695f6b8467f15c1befa5a4c3c10978
(PR #16074), but the delegation was apparently missed, and one instance
of the method was added back with the addition of OID::Xml in
336be2bdf7dfa1b31879d0ab27e5f3101b351923 (PR #16072), so we can safely
rm both.
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[Philippe Creux, Chris Teague]
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Don't rely on the sql type to quote XML columns in PG
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This was only used for uniqueness validations. The first usage was in
conjunction with `limit`. Types which cast to string, but are not
considered text cannot have a limit. The second case was only with an
explicit `:case_sensitive => true` option given by the user.
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Do not rely on the column type when quoting infinity
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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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Also takes a step towards supporting types which use a character other
than ',' for the delimiter (`box` is the only built in type for which
this is the case)
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The case where we have a column object, but don't have a type cast
method involves type casting the default value when changing the schema.
We get one of the column definition structs instead. That is a case that
I'm trying to remove overall, but in the short term, we can achieve the
same behavior without needing to pass the adapter to the array type by
creating a fake type that proxies to the adapter.
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Detect in-place changes on mutable AR attributes
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We have several mutable types on Active Record now. (Serialized, JSON,
HStore). We need to be able to detect if these have been modified in
place.
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