| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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As described in the "Follow Coding Conventions" section in our
contribution guide (http://edgeguides.rubyonrails.org/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.html#follow-the-coding-conventions)
we favor `assert_not` over `refute`.
While we don't usually make stylistic changes on it's own I opted to do
it in this case. The reason being that test cases are usually copied as
a starting point for new tests. This results in a spread of `refute` in
files that have been using it already.
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this fixes a failing test case
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support it. Fixes #19711
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The behavior tested by the removed lines is sufficiently covered
elsewhere.
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The decision to wrap type registrations in a proc was made for two
reasons.
1. Some cases need to make an additional decision based on the type
(e.g. a `Decimal` with a 0 scale)
2. Aliased types are automatically updated if they type they point to is
updated later. If a user or another adapter decides to change the
object used for `decimal` columns, `numeric`, and `number` will
automatically point to the new type, without having to track what
types are aliased explicitly.
Everything else here should be pretty straightforward. PostgreSQL ranges
had to change slightly, since the `simplified_type` method is gone.
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Part of #15134. In order to perform typecasting polymorphically, we need
to add another argument to the constructor. The order was chosen to
match the `oid_type` on `PostgreSQLColumn`.
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RUNNING_UNIT_TESTS file for details, but essentially you can now configure things in test/config.yml. You can also run tests directly via the command line, e.g. ruby path/to/test.rb (no rake needed, uses default db connection from test/config.yml). This will help us fix the CI by enabling us to isolate the different Rails versions to different databases.
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