| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Remove unused duplicated method `add_column_position` from AbstractMysqlAdapter.
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AbstractMysqlAdapter
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MySQL reports the column name as `"MAX(developer_id)"`. PG will report
it as `"max"`
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Remove redundant substitute index when constructing bind values
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We end up re-ordering them either way when we construct the Arel AST (in order
to deal with rewhere, etc), so we shouldn't bother giving it a number in the
first place beforehand.
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Skip setting sequence on a table create if the value is 0 since it will start the first value at 1 anyway.
This fixes the PG error 'setval: value 0 is out of bounds for sequence vms_id_seq...' encountered when migrating a new DB.
BugzID: 15452,9772,13475,16850
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Remove redundant `to_s` in interpolation
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mcfiredrill/doc-change-column-default-abstract-mysql-adapter
document change_column and change_column_default for abstract_mysql_adapter [ci skip]
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The MySQLAdapter type map used the lowest priority for enum types.
This was the result of a recent refactoring and lead to some broken lookups
for enums with values that match other types. Like `8bit`.
This patch restores the priority to what we had before the refactoring.
/cc @sgrif
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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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let warn with heredocs
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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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The query cache uses bind values as hash keys. The current
implementation relies on reference equality for hash equality. This is
brittle, and can easily break in the future.
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We shouldn't rely on reference equality of these objects in tests
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Use type column first in multi-column indexes
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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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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This will avoid naming clash with user defined methods
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[ci skip]
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The `select` method has the same definition in almost all database
adapters, so it can be moved from the database-specific adapters
(PostgreSQl, MySQL, SQLite) to the abstract `database_statement`:
```ruby
def select(sql, name = nil, binds = [])
exec_query(sql, name, binds)
end
```
---
More details about this commit: the only two DB-specific adapters
that have a different definition of `select` are MySQLAdapter and
MySQL2Adapter.
In MySQLAdapter, `select` invokes `exec_query(sql, name, binds)`, so
calling `super` achieves the same goal with less repetition.
In MySQL2Adapter, `select` invokes `exec_query(sql, name)`, that is,
it does not pass the `binds` parameter like other methods do. However,
[MySQL2Adapter's `exec_query`](https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/74a527cc63ef56f3d0a42cf638299958dc7cb08c/activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/mysql2_adapter.rb#L228L231)
works exactly the same whether this parameters is passed or not, so the output
does not change:
```ruby
def exec_query(sql, name = 'SQL', binds = [])
result = execute(sql, name)
ActiveRecord::Result.new(result.fields, result.to_a)
end
```
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In the DSL you can now do:
create_table(:foos) do |t|
t.bigint :hi
end
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Inspired by @tenderlove's work in
c363fff29f060e6a2effe1e4bb2c4dd4cd805d6e, this reduces the number of
strings allocated when running callbacks for ActiveRecord instances. I
measured that using this script:
```
require 'objspace'
require 'active_record'
require 'allocation_tracer'
ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection adapter: "sqlite3",
database: ":memory:"
ActiveRecord::Base.connection.instance_eval do
create_table(:articles) { |t| t.string :name }
end
class Article < ActiveRecord::Base; end
a = Article.create name: "foo"
a = Article.find a.id
N = 10
result = ObjectSpace::AllocationTracer.trace do
N.times { Article.find a.id }
end
result.sort.each do |k,v|
p k => v
end
puts "total: #{result.values.map(&:first).inject(:+)}"
```
When I run this against master and this branch I get this output:
```
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ git checkout master
M Gemfile
Switched to branch 'master'
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ bundle exec ruby benchmark_allocation_with_callback_send.rb > allocations_before
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ git checkout remove-dynamic-send-on-built-in-callbacks
M Gemfile
Switched to branch 'remove-dynamic-send-on-built-in-callbacks'
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ bundle exec ruby benchmark_allocation_with_callback_send.rb > allocations_after
pete@balloon:~/projects/rails/activerecord$ diff allocations_before allocations_after
39d38
<
{["/home/pete/projects/rails/activesupport/lib/active_support/callbacks.rb",
81]=>[40, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]}
42c41
< total: 630
---
> total: 590
```
In addition to this, there are two micro-optimizations present:
* Using `block.call if block` vs `yield if block_given?` when the block was being captured already.
```
pete@balloon:~/projects$ cat benchmark_block_call_vs_yield.rb
require 'benchmark/ips'
def block_capture_with_yield &block
yield if block_given?
end
def block_capture_with_call &block
block.call if block
end
def no_block_capture
yield if block_given?
end
Benchmark.ips do |b|
b.report("block_capture_with_yield") { block_capture_with_yield }
b.report("block_capture_with_call") { block_capture_with_call }
b.report("no_block_capture") { no_block_capture }
end
pete@balloon:~/projects$ ruby benchmark_block_call_vs_yield.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
block_capture_with_yield
124979 i/100ms
block_capture_with_call
138340 i/100ms
no_block_capture 136827 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
block_capture_with_yield
5703108.9 (±2.4%) i/s - 28495212 in 4.999368s
block_capture_with_call
6840730.5 (±3.6%) i/s - 34169980 in 5.002649s
no_block_capture 5821141.4 (±2.8%) i/s - 29144151 in 5.010580s
```
* Defining and calling methods instead of using send.
```
pete@balloon:~/projects$ cat benchmark_method_call_vs_send.rb
require 'benchmark/ips'
class Foo
def tacos
nil
end
end
my_foo = Foo.new
Benchmark.ips do |b|
b.report('send') { my_foo.send('tacos') }
b.report('call') { my_foo.tacos }
end
pete@balloon:~/projects$ ruby benchmark_method_call_vs_send.rb
Calculating -------------------------------------
send 97736 i/100ms
call 151142 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
send 2683730.3 (±2.8%) i/s - 13487568 in 5.029763s
call 8005963.9 (±2.7%) i/s - 40052630 in 5.006604s
```
The result of this is making typical ActiveRecord operations slightly faster:
https://gist.github.com/phiggins/e46e51dcc7edb45b5f98
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Honoring an overidden `rack.test` allows testing closed connection between
multiple requests. This is useful if you're working on database resiliency, to
ensure the connection is in the expected state from one request to another on
the same worker.
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it doesn't work on SQLite3 since it doesn't support truncate, but that's
OK. If you call truncate on the connection, you're now bound to that
database (same as if you use hstore or any other db specific feature).
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While investigating #16951 I found that another library's monkey-patching of
`Enumerable` was causing the test migrations helper to break when trying to
build the `CREATE DATABASE` statement. The prior approach used `#sum` to build
the string from the options hash.
As the code that combines the options to build the database statement is not
user-facing, using `#inject` here instead will remove the only place where the
database creation/migration code is dependent on ActiveSupport's monkey-patching
of `Enumerable`.
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Closes #16907.
[Matthew Draper & Yves Senn]
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Data corruption risk: Roll back open transactions when the running thread is killed.
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Allows :limit defaults to be changed without pulling the rug out from
under old migrations that omitted :limit because it matched the default
at the time.
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SQLite3Adapter now checks for views in table_exists? fixes: 14041
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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`AbstractAdapter#supports_views?` defaults to `false` so we have to turn it on
in adapter subclasses. Currently the flag only controls test execution.
/cc @yahonda
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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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