| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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since the minimum version of PostgreSQL currently Rails supports is 9.1,
there is no need to handle if `supports_extensions?`
Refer https://www.postgresql.org/docs/9.1/static/sql-createextension.html
"CREATE EXTENSION"
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This reverts commit 3420a14590c0e6915d8b6c242887f74adb4120f9, reversing
changes made to afb66a5a598ce4ac74ad84b125a5abf046dcf5aa.
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If keep the extension, can not test properly to make sure that
extension can be enabled.
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Per the regression commit below, the commit changes the behavior of
`#changed?`to consult the `#changed_in_place?` method on `Type::Value` classes.
Per this change, `PostgreSQL::OID::Hstore` needs to override this method
in order to compare the deserialized forms of the two arguments. In
Ruby, two hashes are considered equal even if their key order is
different. This commit helps to bring that behavior to `Hstore` values.
Fixes regression introduced by 8e633e505880755e7e366ccec2210bbe2b5436e7
Fixes #27502
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As reported via #26904, there is a regression in how values for
Postgres' HStore column type are being processed, beginning in Rails 5.
Currently, the way that Active Record checks whether or not values need
to be serialized and put into the correct storage format is whether or
not it is a `Hash` object. Since `ActionController::Parameters` no
longer inherits from `Hash` in Rails 5, this conditional now returns
false. To remedy this, we are now checking to see whether the `value`
parameters being passed in responds to a certain method, and then
calling the `serialize` method, except this time with a real Hash
object. Keeping things DRY!
Fixes #26904.
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assert [1, 3].includes?(2) fails with unhelpful "Asserting failed" message
assert_includes [1, 3], 2 fails with "Expected [1, 3] to include 2" which makes it easier to debug and more obvious what went wrong
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Style/SpaceBeforeBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideHashLiteralBraces
Fix all violations in the repository.
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The current code base is not uniform. After some discussion,
we have chosen to go with double quotes by default.
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Apart from specific versioning support, our tests should focus on the
behaviour of whatever version they're accompanying, regardless of when
they were written.
Application code should *not* do this.
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The table is being modified in tests, without reloading the column
information on the appropriate class. This is leading to incorrect
column information in many cases.
The failures fixed by this commit can be replicated with:
ARCONN=postgresql ruby -Itest test/cases/adapters/postgresql/hstore_test.rb --seed 21574
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/cc @yahonda
This makes it easier for third party adapters to run our tests,
even if that database does not support IF EXISTS.
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This predicate is only used in `query_attribute`, and is relatively easy
to remove without adding a bunch of is a checks.
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onwards.
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Remaining are `limit`, `precision`, `scale`, and `type` (the symbol
version). These will remain on the column, since they mirror the options
to the `column` method in the schema definition DSL
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`.` is regexp meta character. It should be escape for `assert_match`
correctly.
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Slightly refactoring `PostgreSQLColumn`. `array` should be readonly.
`default_function` should be initialized by `super`. `sql_type` has been
removed `[]`. Since we already choose to remove it we should not change.
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This was only used for uniqueness validations. The first usage was in
conjunction with `limit`. Types which cast to string, but are not
considered text cannot have a limit. The second case was only with an
explicit `:case_sensitive => true` option given by the user.
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We have several test cases on "tricky" types that are essentially
testing that `update_all` goes through the same type casting behavior as
a normal assignment + save. We recently had another case to add this
test for another type in https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/12742.
Rather than testing this separately for every type which is "tricky"
when round tripping, let's instead have a fairly exhaustive test that
ensures we're getting the correct values at every step for `update_all`.
Given the structure of the code now, we can be confident that if the
type is correct, and `update_all` is type casting correctly, we're going
to get the right behavior for all types.
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If we want to have type decorators mess with the attribute, but not the
column, we need to stop type casting on the column. Where possible, we
changed the tests to test the value of `column_defaults`, which is
public API. `Column#default` is not.
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HStore columns come back from the database separated by a comma and a
space, not just a comma. We need to mirror that behavior since we
compare the two values.
Also adds a regression test against JSON to ensure we don't have the
same bug there.
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We have several mutable types on Active Record now. (Serialized, JSON,
HStore). We need to be able to detect if these have been modified in
place.
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In some cases there is a difference between the two, we should always
be doing one or the other. For convenience, `type_cast` is still a
private method on type, so new types that do not need different behavior
don't need to implement two methods, but it has been moved to private so
it cannot be used accidentally.
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Remove workaround for non-lazy serialize in tests
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`serialize` is now lazy, so the workaround is no longer needed.
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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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This adds a regression test for #14411, which was fixed by #15503.
Closes #14411
Closes #14595
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`@raw_attributes` should not contain the type-cast, mutable version of
the value.
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Revert "test pg, remove unused column assignments. Follow up to 254cdf47"
Related to #15492
This reverts commit 254cdf4728291277f3fbaa854f34495030e476b4.
This reverts commit 4bcf9029452e0c760af04faab6b549710401e8cf.
There are public methods that assume `Column#default` is type casted.
The return value of `Column#default` is publicly relevant and should not change.
/cc @sgrif
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That data is internal to Active Record. What we care about is that
new records have the right default value.
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The solution presented in this patch is not efficient. We should replace it
in the near future. The following needs to be worked out:
* Is `@attributes` storing the Ruby or SQL representation?
* `cacheable_column?` is broken but `hstore` and `json` rely on that behavior
Refs #15369.
/cc @sgrif @rafaelfranca
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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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