| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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* * *
This bug can be triggered when serializing record R (the instance) of type C
(the class), provided that the following conditions are met:
1. The name of one or more columns/attributes on C/R matches an existing private
method on C (e.g. those defined by `Kernel`, such as `format`).
2. The attribute methods have not yet been generated on C.
In this case, the matching private methods will be called by the serialization
code (with no arguments) and their return values will be serialized instead. If
the method requires one or more arguments, it will result in an `ArgumentError`.
This regression is introduced in d1316bb.
* * *
Attribute methods (e.g. `#name` and `#format`, assuming the class has columns
named `name` and `format` in its database table) are lazily defined. Instead of
defining them when a the class is defined (e.g. in the `inherited` hook on
`ActiveRecord::Base`), this operation is deferred until they are first accessed.
The reason behind this is that is defining those methods requires knowing what
columns are defined on the database table, which usually requires a round-trip
to the database. Deferring their definition until the last-possible moment helps
reducing unnessary work, especially in development mode where classes are
redefined and throw away between requests.
Typically, when an attribute is first accessed (e.g. `a_book.format`), it will
fire the `method_missing` hook on the class, which triggers the definition of
the attribute methods. This even works for methods like `format`, because
calling a private method with an explicit receiver will also trigger that hook.
Unfortunately, `read_attribute_for_serialization` is simply an alias to `send`,
which does not respect method visibility. As a result, when serializing a record
with those conflicting attributes, the `method_missing` is not fired, and as a
result the attribute methods are not defined one would expected.
Before d1316bb, this is negated by the fact that calling the `run_callbacks`
method will also trigger a call to `respond_to?`, which is another trigger point
for the class to define its attribute methods. Therefore, when Active Record
tries to run the `after_find` callbacks, it will also define all the attribute
methods thus masking the problem.
* * *
The proper fix for this problem is probably to restrict `read_attribute_for_serialization`
to call public methods only (i.e. alias `read_attribute_for_serialization` to
`public_send` instead of `send`). This however would be quite risky to change
in a patch release and would probably require a full deprecation cycle.
Another approach would be to override `read_attribute_for_serialization` inside
Active Record to force the definition of attribute methods:
def read_attribute_for_serialization(attribute)
self.class.define_attribute_methods
send(attribute)
end
Unfortunately, this is quite likely going to cause a performance degradation.
This patch therefore restores the behaviour from the 4-0-stable branch by
explicitly forcing the class to define its attribute methods in a similar spot
(when records are initialized). This should not cause any extra roundtrips to
the database because the `@columns` should already be cached on the class.
Fixes #15188.
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Closes #9459.
The PR #6597 unified the configuration for `include_root_in_json`
in AM and AR to `false`.
Later on with the refactoring commit: e030f26 the value in AR was
set to `true` but I think this was not on purpose.
With this commit both AM and AR will have the same configuration
for `include_root_in_json`, which is `false`.
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another value has been specified).
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Previously we would just silently write the attribute. This can lead to
subtle bugs (for example, see the change in AutosaveAssociation where a
through association would wrongly gain an attribute.
Also, ensuring that we never gain any new attributes after
initialization will allow me to reduce our dependence on method_missing.
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One duplicate was eliminated: test_to_xml_including_methods/
test_methods_are_called_on_object.
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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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's/[ \t]*$//' -i {} \;)
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to relevant files.
Number of assertions before refactoring:
2391 tests, 7579 assertions, 0 failures, 0 errors
Number of assertions after refactoring:
2391 tests, 7579 assertions, 0 failures, 0 errors
Signed-off-by: José Valim <jose.valim@gmail.com>
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state:resolved]
Signed-off-by: José Valim <jose.valim@gmail.com>
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git-svn-id: http://svn-commit.rubyonrails.org/rails/trunk@8681 5ecf4fe2-1ee6-0310-87b1-e25e094e27de
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git-svn-id: http://svn-commit.rubyonrails.org/rails/trunk@8661 5ecf4fe2-1ee6-0310-87b1-e25e094e27de
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git-svn-id: http://svn-commit.rubyonrails.org/rails/trunk@8660 5ecf4fe2-1ee6-0310-87b1-e25e094e27de
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