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The reverse_order method was using a flag to control if the order should
be reversed or not. Instead of using this variable just build the reverse order
inside its proper method.
This implementation was leading to an unexpected behavior when using
reverse_order and then applying reorder(nil).
Example:
Before
Post.order(:name).reverse_order.reorder(nil)
# => SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" ORDER BY "posts"."id" DESC
After
Post.order(:name).reverse_order.reorder(nil)
# => SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts"
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Use connection-specific bytea escaping
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In our normal usage, it's rare for this to make a difference... but is
more technically correct.
As well as a spec that proves this is a good idea, let's also add a more
sane-looking one that just covers basic to_sql functionality. There
aren't many places where we actually use escape_bytea, but that's one
that won't be going away.
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This is necessary because Postgresql doesn't play nice with ORDER BY and
no GROUP BY.
Fixes #14621.
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PostgreSQL, remove varchar limit.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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This is an illustration of https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/13435#issuecomment-33789752
Removing the limit from the PG and SQLite adapter solves the issue.
MySQL is still affected by the issue.
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& Yves Senn]
There is no reason for the PG adapter to have a default limit of 255 on :string
columns. See this snippet from the PG docs:
Tip: There is no performance difference among these three types, apart
from increased storage space when using the blank-padded type, and a
few extra CPU cycles to check the length when storing into a
length-constrained column. While character(n) has performance
advantages in some other database systems, there is no such advantage
in PostgreSQL; in fact character(n) is usually the slowest of the
three because of its additional storage costs. In most situations text
or character varying should be used instead.
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Renamed private methods _create_record and _update_record
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This is to ensure that they are not accidentally called by the app code.
They are renamed to _create_record and _update_record respectively.
Closes #11645
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CollectionProxy uses the arel of its association's scope.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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CollectionProxy should be able to reuse the behavior (methods) of its parent class,
but with its own state. This change allows CollectionProxy to use the arel object
corresponding to its association's scope.
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This will allow us to run the tests in random order.
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Add tests to make sure scopes cannot be create with names such as:
private, protected, public.
Make sure enum values don't collide with those methods too.
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Fix error when using `with_options` with lambda.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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It was causing error when using `with_options` passing a lambda as its
last argument.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
with_options dependent: :destroy do |assoc|
assoc.has_many :profiles, -> { where(active: true) }
end
end
It was happening because the `option_merger` was taking the last
argument and checking if it was a Hash. This breaks the HasMany usage,
because its last argument can be a Hash or a Proc.
As the behavior described in this test:
https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/master/activesupport/test/option_merger_test.rb#L69
the method will only accept the lambda, this way it will keep the expected behavior. See 9eaa0a34
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Revise 'sqlite3:' URL handling for smoother upgrades
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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That which was now relative is now absolute.
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Restore the 4.0 behaviour for 'sqlite3:///', but deprecate it. We'll
change to the absolute-path interpretation in 4.2.
The current "correct" spellings for in-memory, relative, and absolute
URLs, respectively, are:
sqlite3::memory:
sqlite3:relative/path
sqlite3:/full/path
Substantially reverses/defers fbb79b517f3127ba620fedd01849f9628b78d6ce.
Uncovered by @guilleiguaran while investigating #14495, though that
sounds like a different issue.
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Avoid a spurious deprecation warning for database URLs
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This is all about the case where we have a `DATABASE_URL`, and we have a
`database.yml` present, but the latter doesn't contain the key we're
looking for.
If the key is a symbol, we'll always connect to `DATABASE_URL`, per the
new behaviour in 283a2edec2f8ccdf90fb58025608f02a63948fa0.
If the key is a string, on the other hand, it should always be a URL:
the ability to specify a name not present in `database.yml` is new in
this version of Rails, and that ability does not stretch to the
deprecated use of a string in place of a symbol.
Uncovered by @guilleiguaran while investigating #14495 -- this actually
may be related to the original report, but we don't have enough info to
confirm.
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Add ConnectionHelper to refactor tests.
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connection.
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Expand the query used in #table_exists? to include materialized views in the
kinds of relations it searches.
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Also do not use transactional fixtures. We drop the type and the
table after every run, so there is nothing for the transaction to clean up.
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Creating and dropping similar tables within the same connection causes postgresql to look up old values in the cache of tables which have already been dropped.
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This patch registers custom domains in our OID-type_map.
They will behave exactly as the type specified by `pg_type.typbasetype`.
/cc @matthewd
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PostgreSQL determine `Column#type` through corresponding OID. #7814
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I ran the whole test suite and compared the old to the new types.
Following is the list of types that did change with this patch:
```
DIFFERENT TYPE FOR mood: NEW: enum, BEFORE:
DIFFERENT TYPE FOR floatrange: NEW: floatrange, BEFORE: float
```
The `floatrange` is a custom type. The old type `float` was simply a coincidence
form the name `floatrange` and our type-guessing.
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set assert_sql to reuse the capture_sql method from above
instead of repeating the code
in response to comments on issue #14546
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eileencodes/fix_delete_all_to_not_use_IN_statement
Fix delete all to not produce sql in statement
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delete_all sql if an association is not loaded should behave
the same as if the association is loaded. This test ensures
the SQL statements are exactly the same.
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Other methods compare specific patterns, this method outputs
the actual sql query that is generated.
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Fix polymorphic preloads on NOT NULL _type columns
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The new method relies on AR::Associations::Association knowing about both reflection and a model class.
AR::Base#association now raises a descriptive error when trying to access non-existent associations. Previously it would blow up with a confusing NoMethodError: undefined method `association_class' for nil:NilClass.
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Defer to Association#klass instead of having a custom/duplicate code.
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fixes #10613
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Follow-Up to https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/14400
This ensures that all tables are removed after each test and thereby
allowing us to run the tests in a random order.
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Fix tests not unsubscribing from Notifications.
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See https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/master/activesupport/lib/active_support/notifications.rb#L131
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460eb83d cused `ActiveRecord::Base#==` to sometimes return `nil` in some cases,
this ensures we always return a boolean value. Also fixed a similar problem in
AR reflections.
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Pass a base relation to build_default_scope when joining
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This allows the default scope to be built using the current table alias.
Resolves #12770
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