| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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There's a lot more that can be moved to these, but this felt like a good
place to introduce the object. Plans are:
- Remove all knowledge of type casting from the columns, beyond a
reference to the cast_type
- Move type_cast_for_database to these objects
- Potentially make them mutable, introduce a state machine, and have
dirty checking handled here as well
- Move `attribute`, `decorate_attribute`, and anything else that
modifies types to mess with this object, not the columns hash
- Introduce a collection object to manage these, reduce allocations, and
not require serializing the types
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- The following is now true for all types, all the time
- `model.attribute_before_type_cast == given_value`
- `model.attribute == model.save_and_reload.attribute`
- `model.attribute == model.dup.attribute`
- `model.attribute == YAML.load(YAML.dump(model)).attribute`
- Removes the remaining types implementing `type_cast_for_write`
- Simplifies the implementation of time zone aware attributes
- Brings tz aware attributes closer to being implemented as an attribute
decorator
- Adds additional point of control for custom types
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Nearly completely implemented in terms of custom properties.
`_before_type_cast` now stores the raw serialized string consistently,
which removes the need to keep track of "state". The following is now
consistently true:
- `model.serialized == model.reload.serialized`
- A model can be dumped and loaded infinitely without changing
- A model can be saved and reloaded infinitely without changing
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`ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::Type::Value` =>
`ActiveRecord::Type::Value`
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Adds the ability to save custom types, which type cast to non-primitive
ruby objects.
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We're going to want all of the benefits of the type map object for
registrations, including block registration and real aliasing. Moves
type name registrations to the adapter, and aliases the OIDs to the
named types
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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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* by default composite types are mapped as `OID::Identity` and issue a warning
* the user is advised to register his own `OID::Type` to make use of composite types
Registering a new `OID::Type` does currently not allow to specify the type casting
behavior when writing to the database. In order for it to work we need to use the
values within `@attributes`. They are already being type casted and are ready to be
written to the DB.
See https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/57643c961feb24b662620d330e71103a830003e8/activerecord/lib/active_record/attribute_methods.rb#L460-L462
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Follow-Up to https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/14348
Ensure that SQLCounter.clear_log is called after each test.
This is a step to prevent side effects when running tests. This will allow us to run them in random order.
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