| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Fixes #18905. `#touch` now takes time as an option. Setting the option
saves the record with the updated_at/on attributes set to the current time
or the time specified. Updated tests and documentation accordingly.
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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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This reverts commit 1502caefd30b137fd1a0865be34c5bbf85ba64c1.
The test suite for the mysql adapter broke when this commit was used
with MySQL 5.6.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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favour of `begin_at` value.
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Add `foreign_key_exists?` method.
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We do this in the adapter classes specifically, so the types aren't
registered if we don't use that adapter. Constants under the PostgreSQL
namespace for example are never loaded if we're using mysql.
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As per previous discussions, we want to give users the ability to
reference their own types with symbols, instead of having to pass the
object manually. This adds the class that will be used to do so.
ActiveRecord::Type.register(:money, MyMoneyType)
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A model cannot have two `:belongs_to` with the same exact name, so
we are better off avoiding this code in our examples, which might
mislead users in thinking it's admissible.
[ci skip]
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...so it doesn't look like you *have* to use SQL strings for that case (not
anymore!). Would like to replace the SQL string example with something that
you cannot do with the "normal" query API, but I could not come up with a
short, realistic example. Suggestions welcome!
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Using enum names in SQL strings doesn't actually work, the test was wrong (fixed
in 3dfd1ba).
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The previous edit kind of de-emphasized that, so changing it to be more explict.
(It also avoids showing it as if it's a string-keyed hash.)
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Also updated the documentation about the new ability to query them normally,
and added test to make sure they work!
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```
user = User.create(token: "custom-secure-token")
user.token # => "custom-secure-token"
```
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Use SQL COUNT and LIMIT 1 queries for none? and one? methods if no block or limit is given,
instead of loading the entire collection to memory. The any? and many? methods already
follow this behavior.
[Eugene Gilburg & Rafael Mendonça França]
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Allow `:precision` option for time type columns
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In addition to cleaning up the implementation, this allows type casting
behavior to be applied consistently everywhere. (#where for example). A
good example of this was the previous need for handling value to key
conversion in the setter, because the number had to be passed to `where`
directly. This is no longer required, since we can just pass the string
along to where. (It's left around for backwards compat)
Fixes #18387
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It looks like the only reason `current_scope` was thread local on
`base_class` instead of `self` is to ensure that when we call a named
scope created with a proc on the parent class, it correctly uses the
default scope of the subclass. The reason this wasn't happening was
because the proc captured `self` as the parent class, and we're not
actually defining a real method. Using `instance_exec` fixes the
problem.
Fixes #18806
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Refactor `quote_default_expression`
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`quote_default_expression` and `quote_default_value` are almost the same
handling for do not quote default function of `:uuid` columns. Rename
`quote_default_value` to `quote_default_expression`, and remove
duplicate code.
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As far as I can tell, the original reason that this behavior was added
has been sufficiently resolved elsewhere, as we no longer remove the
encoding of strings coming out of the database.
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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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kamipo/fix_datetime_precision_dumping_zero_for_postgresql
The datetime precision with zero should be dumped
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`precision: 0` was not dumped by f1a0fa9e19b7e4ccaea191fc6cf0613880222ee7.
However, `precision: 0` is valid value for PostgreSQL timestamps.
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MySQL rejects to remove an index which is used in a foreign key constraint:
```
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid: Mysql2::Error: Cannot drop index 'index_copies_on_title_id': needed in a foreign key constraint: ALTER TABLE `copies` DROP `title_id`
```
Removing the constraint before removing the column (and the index) solves this problem.
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Remove `cast_type` in `ColumnDefinition`
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This is no longer needed.
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The keys are already validated, so it is better to use the built-in
feature to do this.
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Add an option `end` to `find_in_batches`
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that complements the `start`parameter to specify where to stop batch processing
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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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alex-handley/enhancement/dependent_documentation_fix
Documentation Fix: Corrects explanation of what happens when dependent is not set
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By default the foreign key will remain set with the parent id after
destroy is fired.
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Fixes #18871
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Significantly faster than `SimpleDelegator`.
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