| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Postgresql bulk_change_table should flatten procs array
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### Summary
This PR changes .rubocop.yml.
Regarding the code using `if ... else ... end`, I think the coding style
that Rails expects is as follows.
```ruby
var = if cond
a
else
b
end
```
However, the current .rubocop.yml setting does not offense for the
following code.
```ruby
var = if cond
a
else
b
end
```
I think that the above code expects offense to be warned.
Moreover, the layout by autocorrect is unnatural.
```ruby
var = if cond
a
else
b
end
```
This PR adds a setting to .rubocop.yml to make an offense warning and
autocorrect as expected by the coding style.
And this change also fixes `case ... when ... end` together.
Also this PR itself is an example that arranges the layout using
`rubocop -a`.
### Other Information
Autocorrect of `Lint/EndAlignment` cop is `false` by default.
https://github.com/bbatsov/rubocop/blob/v0.51.0/config/default.yml#L1443
This PR changes this value to `true`.
Also this PR has changed it together as it is necessary to enable
`Layout/ElseAlignment` cop to make this behavior.
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An empty string is an invalid value in Ruby's range class.
So need to handle `Float::INFINITY` as it is and cast it in
`encode_range`.
Fixes #31612
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Add bulk alter support for PostgreSQL
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`BigDecimal.new` has been deprecated in BigDecimal 1.3.3
which will be a default for Ruby 2.5.
Refer https://github.com/ruby/bigdecimal/commit/533737338db915b00dc7168c3602e4b462b23503
```
$ cd rails/activerecord/
$ git grep -l BigDecimal.new | grep \.rb | xargs sed -i -e "s/BigDecimal.new/BigDecimal/g"
```
- Changes made only to Active Record. Will apply the same change to
other module once this commit is merged.
- The following deprecation has not been addressed because it has been
reported at `ActiveRecord::Result.new`. `ActiveRecord::Result.ancestors`
did not show `BigDecimal`.
* Not addressed
```ruby
/path/to/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/mysql/database_statements.rb:34:
warning: BigDecimal.new is deprecated
```
* database_statements.rb:34
```ruby
ActiveRecord::Result.new(result.fields, result.to_a) if result
```
* ActiveRecord::Result.ancestors
```ruby
[ActiveRecord::Result,
Enumerable,
ActiveSupport::ToJsonWithActiveSupportEncoder,
Object,
Metaclass::ObjectMethods,
Mocha::ObjectMethods,
PP::ObjectMixin,
ActiveSupport::Dependencies::Loadable,
ActiveSupport::Tryable,
JSON::Ext::Generator::GeneratorMethods::Object,
Kernel,
BasicObject]
```
This commit has been tested with these Ruby and BigDecimal versions
- ruby 2.5 and bigdecimal 1.3.3
```
$ ruby -v
ruby 2.5.0dev (2017-12-14 trunk 61217) [x86_64-linux]
$ gem list |grep bigdecimal
bigdecimal (default: 1.3.3, default: 1.3.2)
```
- ruby 2.4 and bigdecimal 1.3.0
```
$ ruby -v
ruby 2.4.2p198 (2017-09-14 revision 59899) [x86_64-linux-gnu]
$ gem list |grep bigdecimal
bigdecimal (default: 1.3.0)
```
- ruby 2.3 and bigdecimal 1.2.8
```
$ ruby -v
ruby 2.3.5p376 (2017-09-14 revision 59905) [x86_64-linux]
$ gem list |grep -i bigdecimal
bigdecimal (1.2.8)
```
- ruby 2.2 and bigdecimal 1.2.6
```
$ ruby -v
ruby 2.2.8p477 (2017-09-14 revision 59906) [x86_64-linux]
$ gem list |grep bigdecimal
bigdecimal (1.2.6)
```
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Actually SQLite3 doesn't have JSON storage class (so it is stored as a
TEXT like Date and Time). But emulating JSON types is convinient for
making database agnostic migrations.
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If do not execute a type changing first, filling in default value may be
failed.
```
% ARCONN=postgresql be ruby -w -Itest test/cases/migration/compatibility_test.rb -n test_legacy_change_column_with_null_executes_update
Using postgresql
Run options: -n test_legacy_change_column_with_null_executes_update --seed 20459
E
Error:
ActiveRecord::Migration::CompatibilityTest#test_legacy_change_column_with_null_executes_update:
StandardError: An error has occurred, this and all later migrations canceled:
PG::StringDataRightTruncation: ERROR: value too long for type character varying(5)
: UPDATE "testings" SET "foo"='foobar' WHERE "foo" IS NULL
```
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`options_for_index_columns`
And placed `add_options_for_index_columns` in `schema_statements.rb`
consistently to ease to find related code.
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Extract sql fragment generators from PostgreSQL adapter
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Add validate_constraint and update naming
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Add support for specifying non-default operator classes in PostgreSQL
indexes. An example CREATE INDEX query that becomes possible is:
CREATE INDEX users_name ON users USING gist (name gist_trgm_ops);
Previously it was possible to specify the `gist` index but not the
custom operator class. The `add_index` call for the above query is:
add_index :users, :name, using: :gist, opclasses: {name: :gist_trgm_ops}
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and abstract `SchemaDumper#extensions` is now an empty method.
Since #30337, every database adapter has its own `SchemaDumper`.
`extensions` are only supported by PostgreSQL database and postgresql database adapter.
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`supports_disable_referential_integrity?` used to handle
if PostgreSQL database supports
`ALTER TABLE <table name> DISABLE/ENABLE TRIGGER` statements.
Refer https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/9a947af0e79cfb8692eb7e5ae94c1b8c40756f49
These statements have been documented since 8.1.
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/8.1/static/sql-altertable.html
> DISABLE/ENABLE TRIGGER
Now Rails supports PostgreSQL 9.1 or higher only.
No need to handle `supports_disable_referential_integrity?` anymore.
Also, this method does not exist in any other adapters including AbstractAdapter.
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This basically reverts 9d4f79d3d394edb74fa2192e5d9ad7b09ce50c6d
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We already found the longer sequence name, but we could not consider
whether it was the sequence name created by serial type due to missed a
max identifier length limitation. I've addressed the sequence name
consideration to respect the max identifier length.
Fixes #28332.
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PostgreSQL 9.1+ introduced range types, and Rails added support for
using this datatype in ActiveRecord. However, the serialization of
`PostgreSQL::OID::Range` was incomplete, because it did not properly
quote the bounds that make up the range. A clear example of this is a
`tsrange`.
Normally, ActiveRecord quotes Date/Time objects to include the
milliseconds. However, the way `PostgreSQL::OID::Range` serialized its
bounds, the milliseconds were dropped. This meant that the value was
incomplete and not equal to the submitted value.
An example of normal timestamps vs. a `tsrange`. Note how the bounds
for the range do not include their milliseconds (they were present in
the ruby Range):
UPDATE "iterations" SET "updated_at" = $1, "range" = $2 WHERE
"iterations"."id" = $3
[["updated_at", "2017-09-23 17:07:01.304864"],
["range", "[2017-09-23 00:00:00 UTC,2017-09-23 23:59:59 UTC]"],
["id", 1234]]
`PostgreSQL::OID::Range` serialized the range by interpolating a
string for the range, which works for most cases, but does not work
for timestamps:
def serialize(value)
if value.is_a?(::Range)
from = type_cast_single_for_database(value.begin)
to = type_cast_single_for_database(value.end)
"[#{from},#{to}#{value.exclude_end? ? ')' : ']'}"
else
super
end
end
(byebug) from = type_cast_single_for_database(value.begin)
2010-01-01 13:30:00 UTC
(byebug) to = type_cast_single_for_database(value.end)
2011-02-02 19:30:00 UTC
(byebug) "[#{from},#{to}#{value.exclude_end? ? ')' : ']'}"
"[2010-01-01 13:30:00 UTC,2011-02-02 19:30:00 UTC)"
@sgrif (the original implementer for Postgres Range support) provided
some feedback about where the quoting should occur:
Yeah, quoting at all is definitely wrong here. I'm not sure what I
was thinking in 02579b5, but what this is doing is definitely in the
wrong place. It should probably just be returning a range of
subtype.serialize(value.begin) and subtype.serialize(value.end), and
letting the adapter handle the rest.
`Postgres::OID::Range` now returns a `Range` object, and
`ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::PostgreSQL::Quoting` can now encode
and quote a `Range`:
def encode_range(range)
"[#{type_cast(range.first)},#{type_cast(range.last)}#{range.exclude_end? ? ')' : ']'}"
end
...
encode_range(range)
#=> "['2010-01-01 13:30:00.670277','2011-02-02 19:30:00.745125')"
This commit includes tests to make sure the milliseconds are
preserved in `tsrange` and `tstzrange` columns
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Currently the normalization only exists in `primary_key` shorthand. It
should be moved to `new_column_definition` to also affect to
`add_column` with primary key.
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If collided named sequence already exists, newly created serial column
will generate alternative sequence name. Fix sequence name detection to
allow the alternative names.
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Fixes #30539.
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Currently `SchemaDumper` is only customizable for column options. But
3rd party connection adapters (oracle-enhanced etc) need to customizable
for table or index dumping also. To make it possible, I introduced
adapter specific `SchemaDumper` classes for that.
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This is only used for the internal `column_spec` and
`column_spec_for_primary_key`.
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Because `to_sql` is public API. I introduced `to_sql_and_binds` internal
API to return SQL and binds.
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It seems that it accepts only HTTPS connections.
Ref: https://github.com/postgres/postgres/commit/7f77cbd996855a06fb742ea11adbe55c42b48fe2
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A common source of bugs and code bloat within Active Record has been the
need for us to maintain the list of bind values separately from the AST
they're associated with. This makes any sort of AST manipulation
incredibly difficult, as any time we want to potentially insert or
remove an AST node, we need to traverse the entire tree to find where
the associated bind parameters are.
With this change, the bind parameters now live on the AST directly.
Active Record does not need to know or care about them until the final
AST traversal for SQL construction. Rather than returning just the SQL,
the Arel collector will now return both the SQL and the bind parameters.
At this point the connection adapter will have all the values that it
had before.
A bit of this code is janky and something I'd like to refactor later. In
particular, I don't like how we're handling associations in the
predicate builder, the special casing of `StatementCache::Substitute` in
`QueryAttribute`, or generally how we're handling bind value replacement
in the statement cache when prepared statements are disabled.
This also mostly reverts #26378, as it moved all the code into a
location that I wanted to delete.
/cc @metaskills @yahonda, this change will affect the adapters
Fixes #29766.
Fixes #29804.
Fixes #26541.
Close #28539.
Close #24769.
Close #26468.
Close #26202.
There are probably other issues/PRs that can be closed because of this
commit, but that's all I could find on the first few pages.
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Make `type_map` to private because it is only used in the connection adapter
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`type_map` is an internal API and it is only used in the connection
adapter. And also, some type map initializer methods requires passed
`type_map`, but those instances already has `type_map` in itself.
So we don't need explicit passing `type_map` to the initializers.
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Prepare AP and AR to be frozen string friendly
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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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We already have database agnostic `Type::Json` since #29220.
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This reverts commit 3420a14590c0e6915d8b6c242887f74adb4120f9, reversing
changes made to afb66a5a598ce4ac74ad84b125a5abf046dcf5aa.
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Enforce frozen string in Rubocop
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Make ActiveSupport frozen-string-literal friendly.
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`test_middleware_caches` is sometimes failed since #29454.
The failure is due to schema statements are affected by query caching.
Bypassing query caching for schema statements to avoid the issue.
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