| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This reverts commit 16f279ebd474626577ced858e3626ac4535a33df, reversing
changes made to 6c6a30a7c357ce1eafa093d77d2b08684fe50887.
The config can be named anything, not just default (although all
generated apps will be named default). We can't just delete configs that
don't have a database because that will break three-tier configs. Oh
well.
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Because of this default configuration we're constantly checking if the
database exists when looping through configurations. This is unnecessary
and we should just delete it before we need to loop through
configurations.
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Rails has some support for multiple databases but it can be hard to
handle migrations with those. The easiest way to implement multiple
databases is to contain migrations into their own folder ("db/migrate"
for the primary db and "db/seconddb_migrate" for the second db). Without
this you would need to write code that allowed you to switch connections
in migrations. I can tell you from experience that is not a fun way to
implement multiple databases.
This refactoring is a pre-requisite for implementing other features
related to parallel testing and improved handling for multiple
databases.
The refactoring here moves the class methods from the `Migrator` class
into it's own new class `MigrationContext`. The goal was to move the
`migrations_paths` method off of the `Migrator` class and onto the
connection. This allows users to do the following in their
`database.yml`:
```
development:
adapter: mysql2
username: root
password:
development_seconddb:
adapter: mysql2
username: root
password:
migrations_paths: "db/second_db_migrate"
```
Migrations for the `seconddb` can now be store in the
`db/second_db_migrate` directory. Migrations for the primary database
are stored in `db/migrate`".
The refactoring here drastically reduces the internal API for migrations
since we don't need to pass `migrations_paths` around to every single
method. Additionally this change does not require any Rails applications
to make changes unless they want to use the new public API. All of the
class methods from the `Migrator` class were `nodoc`'d except for the
`migrations_paths` and `migrations_path` getter/setters respectively.
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`dump_schema_cache` fills `schema_cache` even if the test that modifies
the schema has properly cleared the schema cache.
Fixes #31463.
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These changes prevent ignoring environments name of which is a `Symbol`
```
config.active_record.protected_environments = ['staging', :production]
```
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Ensure that `bin/rails db:migrate` with specified `VERSION` reverts
all migrations only if `VERSION` is `0`.
Raise error if target migration doesn't exist.
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This reverts commit 3420a14590c0e6915d8b6c242887f74adb4120f9, reversing
changes made to afb66a5a598ce4ac74ad84b125a5abf046dcf5aa.
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Fix #28905
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Add cases to ensure that environment variables VERBOSE and VERSION have
correct typecast.
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Add stronger assertions to rake migration tasks to make sure the user is providing a numeric VERSION
An empty string was getting converted to version = 0. This would in turn pass the presence check.
Address linting warning
Add test for rake task and refactor code to meet expectations
In particular passing VERSION=0 should not raise an error.
Addressed Comments for PR #28485. Trimmed empty lines + change of wording for error message
Adjust test for change of wording in error message
Change condition to follow rails idioms
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since 79887593c18919fed49f441d64236362cb755872, create_all task recreates the connection to AR::Base
which doesn't connect to the in_memory database that is set up for tests
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Today `rake db:schema:cache:dump` only supports dumping cache for a
single connection (`ActiveRecord::Base.connection`). This doesn't work
for apps with multiple databases.
This PR makes `DatabaseTasks` to provide an API for dumping schema cache
for any connection.
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Without this patch it's impossible to pass extra flags to
mysqldump/pg_dump when running `rake db:structure:dump` or `load`
The following config variables (`structure_load_flags` and `structure_dump_flags`)
make it better configurable.
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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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test_migrate_clears_schema_cache_afterward test.
Disable transactions for this test.
Fixes #24391
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Without clearing the caches afterward, removals done in migrations would
not be reflected in a separate task in the same process. That is, given
a table with a migration to remove a column, the schema cache would
still reflect that a table has that in something such as the
'db:seed' task:
`rake db:migrate db:seed`
(A common thing to do in a script for a project ala `bin/setup`)
vs
`rake db:migrate && rake db:seed`
(Two processes)
The first would not reflect that the column was removed.
The second would (cache reset).
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This reverts a334425caff9b2140d5e99fcfc2eb8c4ab10bdfa.
The main reason is that now the workflow is inconsistent when using
spring.
When using spring `RAILS_ENV` is always set, so only one database is
created.
This means that in development `bin/rake db:create` and `bundle exec
rake db:create` have different results.
It also breaks the `bin/setup` script since `bin/rake db:setup
db:test:prepare` will fail.
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Prevent destructive action on production database
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Discussion: https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/22967#discussion_r49137035
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This PR introduces a key/value type store to Active Record that can be used for storing internal values. It is an alternative implementation to #21237 cc @sgrif @matthewd.
It is possible to run your tests against your production database by accident right now. While infrequently, but as an anecdotal data point, Heroku receives a non-trivial number of requests for a database restore due to this happening. In these cases the loss can be large.
To prevent against running tests against production we can store the "environment" version that was used when migrating the database in a new internal table. Before executing tests we can see if the database is a listed in `protected_environments` and abort. There is a manual escape valve to force this check from happening with environment variable `DISABLE_DATABASE_ENVIRONMENT_CHECK=1`.
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Follow up to #22642.
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database_tasks instead of Migrator
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[Joshua Cody & Yves Senn]
Closes #16757.
Prior to this patch schema loading rake tasks had the potential to leak a
connection to a different database. This had side-effects when rake tasks
operating on the current connection (like `db:seed`) were chained.
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This extracts the logic that was embedded in a Rake task into a static
method.
Bonus: the first test for `rake db:migrate`
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Closes #13625
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for an unknown adapter
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When running tasks such "rake db:setup", instead of showing messages
like "db_development already exists", it was showing a big stack trace
and a message "Couldn't create database for ..." with the configuration
options, a very confusing message with a big trace.
This brings back the functionality present in 3-2, showing the same
message.
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Allow to register database tasks from different adapters
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