| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Fix failing tests
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Refactor of #22911.
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Daer <jeremydaer@gmail.com>
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in the case of sqlite.
Others adapters need to perform a check for validity.
Add coverage for mysql2 db type validation
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Previously we were assuming that the only valid types for encoding were
arrays and hashes. However, any JSON primitive is an accepted value by
both PG and MySQL.
This does involve a minor breaking change in the handling of `default`
in the schema dumper. This is easily worked around, as passing a
hash/array literal would have worked fine in previous versions of Rails.
However, because of this, I will not be backporting this to 4.2 or
earlier.
Fixes #24234
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We support microsecond datetime precision for MySQL 5.6.4+. MariaDB has
supported it since 5.3.0, but even 10.x versions return a compatible
version string like `5.5.5-10.1.8-MariaDB-log` which we parse as 5.5.5,
before MySQL supported microsecond precision.
Specialize our version check to account for MariaDB to fix.
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Because we define `QUOTED_TRUE` as `"1"` and `QUOTED_FALSE` as `"0"`.
And add test cases to ensure this commit does not break current
behavior even if the value of `attributes_before_type_cast` is false.
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For keep the default SQL mode.
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kamipo/case_sensitive_comparison_for_non_string_column
The BINARY Operator is only needed for string columns
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Follow up to #13040.
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Before:
```ruby
create_table "big_numbers", force: :cascade do |t|
t.integer "bigint_column", limit: 8
end
```
After:
```ruby
create_table "big_numbers", force: :cascade do |t|
t.bigint "bigint_column"
end
```
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kamipo/fix_tests_failure_with_prepared_statements_false
Fix tests failure with `prepared_statements: false`
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Currently `exec_query` raises `NoMethodError` when executing no result
queries (`INSERT`, `UPDATE`, `DELETE`, and all DDL) in mysql2 adapter.
```
irb(main):002:0> conn.execute("create table t(a int)")
(43.3ms) create table t(a int)
=> nil
irb(main):003:0> conn.execute("insert into t values (1)")
(19.3ms) insert into t values (1)
=> nil
irb(main):004:0> conn.exec_query("insert into t values (1)")
SQL (28.6ms) insert into t values (1)
NoMethodError: undefined method `fields' for nil:NilClass
```
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`initialize_schema_migrations_table` is called in every migrations.
https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/v5.0.0.beta1/activerecord/lib/active_record/migration.rb#L1080
https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/v5.0.0.beta1/activerecord/lib/active_record/schema.rb#L51
This means that extra `show variables` is called regardless of the
existence of `schema_migrations` table.
This change is to avoid extra `show variables` if `schema_migrations`
table exists.
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Follow up to #22896.
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Mysql has a weird bug where it cannot index a string column of utf8mb4 if it is over a certain character limit. To get compatibility with msql we can add a limit to the key column. 191 characters is a very long key, it seems reasonable to limit across all adapters since using a longer key wouldn't be supported in mysql.
Thanks to @kamipo for the original PR and the test refactoring.
Conversation: https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/23009#issuecomment-171416629
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Add `columns_for_distinct` for MySQL 5.7 with ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY
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In MySQL 5.7.5 and up, ONLY_FULL_GROUP_BY affects handling of queries
that use DISTINCT and ORDER BY. It requires the ORDER BY columns in the
select list for distinct queries, and requires that the ORDER BY include
the distinct column.
See https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/group-by-handling.html
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Avoid instanciate `ActiveRecord::Result` and calling
`ActiveRecord::Result#hash_rows` for the performance.
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Follow up to #22642.
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Fix white-space
Add test case demonstrating flags are received by the adapter
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Follow up to #21601.
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- key was a poor choice of name. A key implies something that will
unlock a lock. The concept is actually more like a 'lock identifier'
- mysql documentation calls this a 'lock name'
- postgres documentation calls it a 'lock_id'
- Updated variable names to reflect the preferred terminology for the database in
question
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Reported on #21509, how views is treated by `#tables` are differ
by each adapters. To fix this different behavior, after Rails 5.0
is released, deprecate `#tables`.
And `#table_exists?` would check both tables and views.
To make their behavior consistent with `#tables`, after Rails 5.0
is released, deprecate `#table_exists?`.
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This test case was definded by 51de8cee82d61541725ff4c2462b083f37e64017.
`float` and `double` is registered in abstract_mysql_adapter.rb,
we should test not only for mysql adapter, but mysql2 adapter.
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samphilipd/sam/manual_locking_on_schema_migrations
Make migrations concurrent safe (using advisory locks)
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- Addresses issue #22092
- Works on Postgres and MySQL
- Uses advisory locks because of two important properties:
1. The can be obtained outside of the context of a transaction
2. They are automatically released when the session ends, so if a
migration process crashed for whatever reason the lock is not left
open perpetually
- Adds get_advisory_lock and release_advisory_lock methods to database
adapters
- Attempting to run a migration while another one is in process will
raise a ConcurrentMigrationError instead of attempting to run in
parallel with undefined behavior. This could be rescued and
the migration could exit cleanly instead. Perhaps as a configuration
option?
Technical Notes
==============
The Migrator uses generate_migrator_advisory_lock_key to build the key
for the lock. In order to be compatible across multiple adapters there
are some constraints on this key.
- Postgres limits us to 64 bit signed integers
- MySQL advisory locks are server-wide so we have to scope to the
database
- To fulfil these requirements we use a Migrator salt (a randomly
chosen signed integer with max length of 31 bits) that identifies
the Rails migration process as the owner of the lock. We multiply
this salt with a CRC32 unsigned integer hash of the database name to
get a signed 64 bit integer that can also be converted to a string
to act as a lock key in MySQL databases.
- It is important for subsequent versions of the Migrator to use the
same salt, otherwise different versions of the Migrator will not see
each other's locks.
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The first one is quite straightforward. We want to give the proper error
message in the case where a top level constant exists, but we're looking
for a nested one. We just need to port over the change to use
`subclass.name` into these changes.
The second set of failures, which are only present in the mysql adapter
tests, are stranger to me. The failure occurs because we were
previously comparing `subclass.name == self.name` instead of `subclass
== self`. However, I don't think that we need to support creating
anonymous classes which share a table with a class that uses STI,
overrides `name` to return the same name as athe class that we have no
other relationship with, when not assigned to a constant so it could
never be used anyway...
The commits around why that exist give no context, and I think they're
just poorly written tests (WTF does `test_schema` mean anyway, and why
does calling `.first` on some anonymous class test it?). We'll just
disable STI on that class.
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This solves the following issue:
```
$ bin/test
Using sqlite3
/Users/senny/Projects/rails/activerecord/test/cases/adapters/mysql2/sp_test.rb:16:in `<class:Mysql2StoredProcedureTest>': undefined method `version' for #<ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLite3Adapter:0x007f8bab4b5b70> (NoMethodError)
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/activerecord/test/cases/adapters/mysql2/sp_test.rb:5:in `<top (required)>'
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/activesupport/lib/active_support/dependencies.rb:302:in `require'
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/activesupport/lib/active_support/dependencies.rb:302:in `block in require'
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/activesupport/lib/active_support/dependencies.rb:268:in `load_dependency'
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/activesupport/lib/active_support/dependencies.rb:302:in `require'
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/railties/lib/rails/test_unit/test_requirer.rb:11:in `block in require_files'
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/railties/lib/rails/test_unit/test_requirer.rb:10:in `each'
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/railties/lib/rails/test_unit/test_requirer.rb:10:in `require_files'
from /Users/senny/Projects/rails/railties/lib/rails/test_unit/minitest_plugin.rb:69:in `plugin_rails_init'
from /Users/senny/.rbenv/versions/2.2.3/lib/ruby/gems/2.2.0/gems/minitest-5.3.3/lib/minitest.rb:73:in `block in init_plugins'
from /Users/senny/.rbenv/versions/2.2.3/lib/ruby/gems/2.2.0/gems/minitest-5.3.3/lib/minitest.rb:71:in `each'
from /Users/senny/.rbenv/versions/2.2.3/lib/ruby/gems/2.2.0/gems/minitest-5.3.3/lib/minitest.rb:71:in `init_plugins'
from /Users/senny/.rbenv/versions/2.2.3/lib/ruby/gems/2.2.0/gems/minitest-5.3.3/lib/minitest.rb:122:in `run'
from bin/test:19:in `<main>'
```
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Add stored procedure test in mysql2
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Currently `tinyblob` is dumped to `t.binary "tiny_blob", limit: 255`.
But `t.binary ... limit: 255` is generating SQL to `varchar(255)`.
It is incorrect. This commit fixes this problem.
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`table_exists?` calls `tables` twice when passed `'dbname.tblname'` arg.
This change is that `table_exists?` execute only once query always and
extra args of `tables` is removed.
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Add `unsigned` support for numeric data types in MySQL
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In the case of using `unsigned` as the type:
create_table :foos do |t|
t.unsigned_integer :unsigned_integer
t.unsigned_bigint :unsigned_bigint
t.unsigned_float :unsigned_float
t.unsigned_decimal :unsigned_decimal, precision: 10, scale: 2
end
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Example:
create_table :foos do |t|
t.integer :unsigned_integer, unsigned: true
t.bigint :unsigned_bigint, unsigned: true
t.float :unsigned_float, unsigned: true
t.decimal :unsigned_decimal, unsigned: true, precision: 10, scale: 2
end
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Some test cases are testing only mysql adapter. We should test mysql2
adapter also.
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As of MySQL 5.7.8, MySQL supports a native JSON data type.
Example:
create_table :json_data_type do |t|
t.json :settings
end
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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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support it. Fixes #19711
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Related with #17370.
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Correctly dump `:options` on `create_table` for MySQL
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