| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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I think that these signs are probably mistake.
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Conflicts:
guides/source/getting_started.md
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particularly, `all(options)` would warn
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Some tests were raising the following error:
Could not log "sql.active_record" event. NoMethodError: undefined method
`type' for nil:NilClass`
Due to the way binds were being logged, the column info was considered
always present, but that is not true for some of the tests listed in the
issue.
Closes #8806.
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refactor reset_primary_key and change !blank? to present? in get_primary...
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Closes #8804 [ci skip]
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All the valids parameters for libpq are used.
See http://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/libpq-connect.html for the
full list
Fixes #8784
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Also covers any non-castable case by returning nil, which
is in-line with the intention of the former implementation,
but covers the odd cases which respond to to_i but raise
an error when it's called, such as NaN, Infinity and -Infinity.
Fixes #8757
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* dependencies/autoload
* concern
* deprecation
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This commit fixes a bug introduced in 96a13fc7 which breaks behaviour of
integer fields.
In 3.2.8, setting the value of an integer field to a non-integer (eg.
Array, Hash, etc.) would default to 1 (true) :
# 3.2.8
p = Post.new
p.category_id = [ 1, 2 ]
p.category_id # => 1
p.category_id = { 3 => 4 }
p.category_id # => 1
In 3.2.9 and above, this will raise a NoMethodError :
# 3.2.9
p = Post.new
p.category_id = [ 1, 2 ]
NoMethodError: undefined method `to_i' for [1, 2]:Array
Whilst at first blush this appear to be sensible, it combines in bad
ways with scoping.
For example, it is common to use scopes to control access to data :
@collection = Posts.where(:category_id => [ 1, 2 ])
@new_post = @collection.new
In 3.2.8, this would work as expected, creating a new Post object
(albeit with @new_post.category_id = 1). However, in 3.2.9 this will
cause the NoMethodError to be raised as above.
It is difficult to avoid triggering this error without descoping before
calling .new, breaking any apps running on 3.2.8 that rely on this
behaviour.
This patch deviates from 3.2.8 in that it does not retain the somewhat
spurious behaviour of setting the attribute to 1. Instead, it explicitly
sets these invalid values to nil :
p = Post.new
p.category_id = [ 1, 2 ]
p.category_id # => nil
This also fixes the situation where a scope using an array will
"pollute" any newly instantiated records.
@new_post = @collection.new
@new_post.category_id # => nil
Finally, 3.2.8 exhibited a behaviour where setting an object to an
integer field caused it to be coerced to "1". This has not been
retained, as it is spurious and surprising in the same way that setting
Arrays and Heshes was :
c = Category.find(6)
p = Post.new
# 3.2.8
p.category_id = c
p.category_id # => 1
# This patch
p.category_id = c
p.category_id # => nil
This commit includes explicit test cases that expose the original issue
with calling new on a scope that uses an Array. As this is a common
situation, an explicit test case is the best way to prevent regressions
in the future.
It also updates and separates existing tests to be explicit about the
situation that is being tested (eg. AR objects vs. other objects vs.
non-integers)
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When dumping database structure with `rake db:structure:dump` and
using migrations, the resulting file will not end with a newline char.
Although it's not mandatory, it breaks a lot of simple use cases with
programs like cat, more, grep, etc.
This changes use `puts' instead of `<<' to append migration versions
data to the dump and also split the line where this is happening as it
was a bit long.
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* Fix Migration#reversible by not using `transaction`.
* Adapt mysql adapter to updated api for remove_column
* Update test after aedcd683684d08eaf30623a4b48ce31a31426372
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(e.g., in Pow)
* Fixes #8025
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[#8267]
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