| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The `@prevent_writes` should be updated only in the
`while_preventing_writes`, it is not necessary to expose the attr
writer.
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This attr writer was introduced at 7db90aa, but the usage is already
removed at bd2f5c0 before v3.2.0.rc1 is released.
If we'd like to customize the visitor in the connection, `arel_visitor`
which is implemented in all adapters (mysql2, postgresql, sqlite3,
oracle-enhanced, sqlserver) could be used for the purpose #23515.
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Since #26002, `id_value` is no longer passed to `sql_for_insert`.
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predicate construction
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* Enable `Lint/UselessAssignment` cop to avoid unused variable warnings
Since we've addressed the warning "assigned but unused variable"
frequently.
370537de05092aeea552146b42042833212a1acc
3040446cece8e7a6d9e29219e636e13f180a1e03
5ed618e192e9788094bd92c51255dda1c4fd0eae
76ebafe594fc23abc3764acc7a3758ca473799e5
And also, I've found the unused args in c1b14ad which raises no warnings
by the cop, it shows the value of the cop.
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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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Only define attribute methods from schema cache
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To define the attribute methods for a model, Active Record needs to know
the schema of the underlying table, which is usually achieved by making
a request to the database. This is undesirable behaviour while the app
is booting, for two reasons: it makes the boot process dependent on the
availability of the database, and it means every new process will make
one query for each table, which can cause issues for large applications.
However, if the application is using the schema cache dump feature, then
the schema cache already contains the necessary information, and we can
define the attribute methods without causing any extra database queries.
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Since we already bumped the minimum version of MySQL to 5.5.8 at #33853.
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Since the `preventing_writes?` is public API.
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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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MySQL: `ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC` create table option by default
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Since MySQL 5.7.9, the `innodb_default_row_format` option defines the
default row format for InnoDB tables. The default setting is `DYNAMIC`.
The row format is required for indexing on `varchar(255)` with `utf8mb4`
columns.
As long as using MySQL 5.6, CI won't be passed even if MySQL server
setting is properly configured the same as MySQL 5.7
(`innodb_file_per_table = 1`, `innodb_file_format = 'Barracuda'`, and
`innodb_large_prefix = 1`) since InnoDB table is created as the row
format `COMPACT` by default on MySQL 5.6, therefore indexing on string
with `utf8mb4` columns aren't succeeded.
Making `ROW_FORMAT=DYNAMIC` create table option by default for legacy
MySQL version would mitigate the indexing issue on the user side, and it
makes CI would be passed on MySQL 5.6 which is configured properly.
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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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The indexing issue on `utf8mb4` columns is resolved since MySQL 5.7.9.
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consistently
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BEGIN transaction would cause COMMIT or ROLLBACK, so unless COMMIT and
ROLLBACK aren't treated as write queries as well as BEGIN, the
`ReadOnlyError` would be raised.
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Otherwise `save` method would raise the `ReadOnlyError` against `BEGIN`
and `ROLLBACK` queries.
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Without this change, mysql2 adapter with prepared statements won't pass
`base_test.rb`.
```
% ARCONN=mysql2 be ruby -w -Itest test/cases/base_test.rb
Using mysql2
Run options: --seed 27614
# Running:
....S..............................F
Failure:
BasicsTest#test_creating_a_record_raises_if_preventing_writes [test/cases/base_test.rb:1493]:
ActiveRecord::ReadOnlyError expected but nothing was raised.
rails test test/cases/base_test.rb:1492
...F
Failure:
BasicsTest#test_deleting_a_record_raises_if_preventing_writes [test/cases/base_test.rb:1513]:
ActiveRecord::ReadOnlyError expected but nothing was raised.
rails test test/cases/base_test.rb:1510
............................................................................................................F
Failure:
BasicsTest#test_updating_a_record_raises_if_preventing_writes [test/cases/base_test.rb:1503]:
ActiveRecord::ReadOnlyError expected but nothing was raised.
rails test test/cases/base_test.rb:1500
..........
Finished in 2.534490s, 62.7345 runs/s, 149.5370 assertions/s.
159 runs, 379 assertions, 3 failures, 0 errors, 1 skips
```
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Follow up #34505.
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I originally named this `StatementInvalid` because that's what we do in
GitHub, but `@tenderlove` pointed out that this means apps can't test
for or explitly rescue this error. `StatementInvalid` is pretty broad so
I've renamed this to `ReadOnlyError`.
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Pass the `connection` to the `@instrumenter.instrument` method call
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And hide the `READ_QUERY` internal constant.
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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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Fixes issue where "user post" is misinterpreted as "\"user\".\"post\""
when quoting table names with the postgres adapter.
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Patch load error in case GemSpecError
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It should be referenced by full qualified name from Active Record.
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Bump the minimum version of PostgreSQL to 9.3
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https://www.postgresql.org/support/versioning/
- 9.1 EOLed on September 2016.
- 9.2 EOLed on September 2017.
9.3 is also not supported since Nov 8, 2018. https://www.postgresql.org/about/news/1905/
I think it may be a little bit early to drop PostgreSQL 9.3 yet.
* Deprecated `supports_ranges?` since no other databases support range data type
* Add `supports_materialized_views?` to abstract adapter
Materialized views itself is supported by other databases, other connection adapters may support them
* Remove `with_manual_interventions`
It was only necessary for PostgreSQL 9.1 or earlier
* Drop CI against PostgreSQL 9.2
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When running `exec_query` with `INSERT` (or other write commands), MySQL
returns `ActiveRecord::Result`.
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Redact SQL in errors
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Move `ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid` SQL to error property.
Also add bindings as an error property.
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Before:
```
LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT t.oid, t.typname
FROM pg_type as t
WHERE t.typname IN ('int2', 'int4', 'int8', 'oid', 'float4', 'float8', 'bool')
LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT t.oid, t.typname, t.typelem, t.typdelim, t.typinput, r.rngsubtype, t.typtype, t.typbasetype
FROM pg_type as t
LEFT JOIN pg_range as r ON oid = rngtypid
WHERE
t.typname IN ('int2', 'int4', 'int8', 'oid', 'float4', 'float8', 'text', 'varchar', 'char', 'name', 'bpchar', 'bool', 'bit', 'varbit', 'timestamptz', 'date', 'money', 'bytea', 'point', 'hstore', 'json', 'jsonb', 'cidr', 'inet', 'uuid', 'xml', 'tsvector', 'macaddr', 'citext', 'ltree', 'interval', 'path', 'line', 'polygon', 'circle', 'lseg', 'box', 'time', 'timestamp', 'numeric')
OR t.typtype IN ('r', 'e', 'd')
OR t.typinput::varchar = 'array_in'
OR t.typelem != 0
LOG: statement: SHOW TIME ZONE
LOG: statement: SELECT 1
LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM pg_class c
LEFT JOIN pg_namespace n ON n.oid = c.relnamespace
WHERE c.relkind IN ('r','v','m') -- (r)elation/table, (v)iew, (m)aterialized view
AND c.relname = 'accounts'
AND n.nspname = ANY (current_schemas(false))
```
After:
```
LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT t.oid, t.typname
FROM pg_type as t
WHERE t.typname IN ('int2', 'int4', 'int8', 'oid', 'float4', 'float8', 'bool')
LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT t.oid, t.typname, t.typelem, t.typdelim, t.typinput, r.rngsubtype, t.typtype, t.typbasetype
FROM pg_type as t
LEFT JOIN pg_range as r ON oid = rngtypid
WHERE
t.typname IN ('int2', 'int4', 'int8', 'oid', 'float4', 'float8', 'text', 'varchar', 'char', 'name', 'bpchar', 'bool', 'bit', 'varbit', 'timestamptz', 'date', 'money', 'bytea', 'point', 'hstore', 'json', 'jsonb', 'cidr', 'inet', 'uuid', 'xml', 'tsvector', 'macaddr', 'citext', 'ltree', 'interval', 'path', 'line', 'polygon', 'circle', 'lseg', 'box', 'time', 'timestamp', 'numeric')
OR t.typtype IN ('r', 'e', 'd')
OR t.typinput::varchar = 'array_in'
OR t.typelem != 0
LOG: statement: SHOW TIME ZONE
LOG: statement: SELECT 1
LOG: execute <unnamed>: SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM pg_class c
LEFT JOIN pg_namespace n ON n.oid = c.relnamespace
WHERE c.relkind IN ('r','v','m') -- (r)elation/table, (v)iew, (m)aterialized view
AND c.relname = 'accounts'
AND n.nspname = ANY (current_schemas(false))
```
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in indexdef to be wrapped up by double quotes
Fixes #34493.
*Thomas Bianchini*
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This commit fixes a small typo in documentation of the
"UNLOGGED" table option for PostgreSQL databases, and
clarifies the documentation slightly.
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Adjust bind length of SQLite to default (999)
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Change `#bind_params_length` in SQLite adapter to return the default
maximum amount (999). See https://www.sqlite.org/limits.html
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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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Since quoted `Infinity` and `NaN` are valid data for PostgreSQL.
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[fatkodima & Stefan Kanev]
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