| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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callbacks
We pretty frequently get bug reports that "dirty is broken inside of
after callbacks". Intuitively they are correct. You'd expect
`Model.after_save { puts changed? }; model.save` to do the same thing as
`model.save; puts model.changed?`, but it does not.
However, changing this goes much farther than just making the behavior
more intuitive. There are a _ton_ of places inside of AR that can be
drastically simplified with this change. Specifically, autosave
associations, timestamps, touch, counter cache, and just about anything
else in AR that works with callbacks have code to try to avoid "double
save" bugs which we will be able to flat out remove with this change.
We introduce two new sets of methods, both with names that are meant to
be more explicit than dirty. The first set maintains the old behavior,
and their names are meant to center that they are about changes that
occurred during the save that just happened. They are equivalent to
`previous_changes` when called outside of after callbacks, or once the
deprecation cycle moves.
The second set is the new behavior. Their names imply that they are
talking about changes from the database representation. The fact that
this is what we really care about became clear when looking at
`BelongsTo.touch_record` when tests were failing. I'm unsure that this
set of methods should be in the public API. Outside of after callbacks,
they are equivalent to the existing methods on dirty.
Dirty itself is not deprecated, nor are the methods inside of it. They
will only emit the warning when called inside of after callbacks. The
scope of this breakage is pretty large, but the migration path is
simple. Given how much this can improve our codebase, and considering
that it makes our API more intuitive, I think it's worth doing.
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This was caused by 6d0d83a33f59d9415685852cf77818c41e2e2700. While the
bug it's trying to fix is handled if the association is loaded in an
after_(create|save) callback, it doesn't handle any cases that load the
association before the persistence takes place (validation, or before_*
filters). Instead of caring about the timing of persistence, we can just
ensure that we're not double adding the record instead.
The test from that commit actually broke, but it was not because the bug
has been re-introduced. It was because `Bulb` in our test suite is doing
funky things that look like STI but isn't STI, so equality comparison
didn't happen as the loaded model was of a different class.
Fixes #26661.
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Make name of attribute medium instead of normal
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Preserve readonly flag only for readonly association
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Fixes #24093
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Style/SpaceBeforeBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideHashLiteralBraces
Fix all violations in the repository.
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A few have been left for aesthetic reasons, but have made a pass
and removed most of them.
Note that if the method `foo` returns an array, `foo << 1`
is a regular push, nothing to do with assignments, so
no self required.
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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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So this bug is kinda funky. The code path is basically "if we weren't passed an
instance of the class we compose to, and we have a converter, call that".
Ignoring the hash case for a moment, everything after that was roughly intended
to be the "else" clause, meaning that we are expected to have an instance of
the class we compose to. Really, we should be blowing up in that case, as we
can give a much better error message than what they user will likely get (e.g.
`NameError: No method first for String` or something). Still, Ruby is duck
typed, so if the object you're assigning responds to the same methods as the
type you compose to, knock yourself out.
The hash case was added in 36e9be8 to remove a bunch of special cased code from
multiparameter assignment. I wrongly assumed that the only time we'd get a hash
there is in that case. Multiparameter assignment will construct a very specific
hash though, where the keys are integers, and we will have a set of keys
covering `1..part.size` exactly. I'm pretty sure this could actually be passed
around as an array, but that's a different story. Really I should convert this
to something like `class MultiParameterAssignment < Hash; end`, which I might
do soon. However for a change that I'm willing to backport to 4-2-stable, this
is what I want to go with for the time being.
Fixes #25978
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kamipo/association_name_is_the_same_as_join_table_name
Correctly return `associated_table` when `associated_with?` is true
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`AssociationQueryHandler` requires `association` initialized
`TableMetadata` even if `table_name == arel_table.name`.
Fixes #25689.
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- Refer https://github.com/rsim/oracle-enhanced/pull/845
Remove `set_date_columns` which has been deprecated in Oracle enhanced adapter
- Refer https://github.com/rsim/oracle-enhanced/pull/869
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This behavior was broken by 36e9be85. When the value is assigned
directly, either through mass assignment or directly assigning a hash,
the hash gets passed through to this writer method directly. While this
is intended to handle certain cases, when an explicit converter has been
provided, we should continue to use that instead. The positioning of the
added guard caused the new behavior to override that case.
Fixes #25210
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* Fix undefined method `owners' for NullPreloader:Class
Fixing undefined method `owners' for
ActiveRecord::Associations::Preloader::NullPreloader:Class
* Use Ruby 1.9 hash format
Use Ruby 1.9 hash format
#24192
[Rafael Mendonça França + Ladislav Smola]
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```
$ ARCONN=mysql2 be ruby -w -Itest test/cases/scoping/default_scoping_test.rb
Using mysql2
/Users/kamipo/src/github.com/rails/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/scoping/named.rb:158: warning: method redefined; discarding old female
/Users/kamipo/src/github.com/rails/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/scoping/named.rb:158: warning: previous definition of female was here
/Users/kamipo/src/github.com/rails/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/scoping/named.rb:158: warning: method redefined; discarding old male
/Users/kamipo/src/github.com/rails/rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/scoping/named.rb:158: warning: previous definition of male was here
```
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Closes #23934.
This is a forward port of ac832a43b4d026dbad28fed196d2de69ec9928ac
Previously the scope of all associations with extensions were wrapped in
an instance dependent proc. This made it impossible to preload such
associations.
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Honour joining model order in `has_many :through` associations when
eager loading
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association when eager loading.
Previously, eager loading a `has_many :through` association with no
defined order would return the records in the natural order of the
database. Now, these records will be returned in the order that the
joining record is returned, in case there is a defined order there.
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I ran into an issue where validations on a suppressed record were
causing validation errors to be thrown on a record that was never going
to be saved.
There isn't a reason to run the validations on a record that doesn't
matter.
This change moves the suppressor up the chain to be run on the `save` or
`save!` in the validations rather than in persistence. The issue with
running it when we hit persistence is that the validations are run
first, then we hit persistance, and then we hit the suppressor. The
suppressor comes first.
The change to the test was required since I added the
`validates_presence_of` validations. Adding this alone was enough to
demonstrate the issue. I added a new test to demonstrate the new
behavior is explict.
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Fix issue #23625
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This resolves a bug where if the primary key used is not `id` (ex:
`uuid`), and has a `validates_uniqueness_of` in the model, a uniqueness error
would be raised. This is a partial revert of commit `119b9181ece399c67213543fb5227b82688b536f`, which introduced this behavior.
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different types.
When passing in an array of different types of objects to `where`, it would only take into account the class of the first object in the array.
PriceEstimate.where(estimate_of: [Treasure.find(1), Car.find(2)])
# => SELECT "price_estimates".* FROM "price_estimates"
WHERE ("price_estimates"."estimate_of_type" = 'Treasure' AND "price_estimates"."estimate_of_id" IN (1, 2))
This is fixed to properly look for any records matching both type and id:
PriceEstimate.where(estimate_of: [Treasure.find(1), Car.find(2)])
# => SELECT "price_estimates".* FROM "price_estimates"
WHERE (("price_estimates"."estimate_of_type" = 'Treasure' AND "price_estimates"."estimate_of_id" = 1)
OR ("price_estimates"."estimate_of_type" = 'Car' AND "price_estimates"."estimate_of_id" = 2))
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Allow `joins` to be unscoped
Fixes #13775
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Fixes #23209
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This fixes incorrect assumptions made by e991c7b that we can assume the
DB is already casting the value for us. The enum type needs additional
information to perform casting, and needs a subtype.
I've opted not to call `super` in `cast`, as we have a known set of
types which we accept there, and the subtype likely doesn't accept them
(symbol -> integer doesn't make sense)
Close #23190
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glittershark/if-and-unless-in-secure-token"
This reverts commit 224eddfc0eeff6555ae88691306e61c7a9e8b758, reversing
changes made to 9d681fc74c6251d5f2b93fa9576c9b2113116680.
When merging the pull request, I misunderstood `has_secure_token` as declaring a model
has a token from birth and through the rest of its lifetime.
Therefore, supporting conditional creation doesn't make sense. You should never mark a
model as having a secure token if there's a time when it shouldn't have it on creation.
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Given a default_scope on a parent of the current class, where that
parent is not the base class, the parent's STI condition would become
attached to the evaluated default scope, and then override the child's
own STI condition.
Instead, we can treat the STI condition as though it is a default scope,
and skip it in this situation: the scope will be merged into the base
relation, which already contains the correct STI condition.
Fixes #22426.
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Pass through :if and :unless options from has_secure_token to the
generated before_create callback
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When same association is loaded in the model creation callback
The new object is inserted into association twice
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initialize_attributes
If argument of `build_record` has key and value which is same as
default value of database, we should also except the key from
`create_scope` in `initialize_attributes`.
Because at first `build_record` initialize record object with argument
of `build_record`, then assign attributes derived from Association's scope.
In this case `record.changed` does not include the key, which value is
same as default value of database, so we should add the key to except list.
Fix #21893.
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Before this commit, if
`ActiveRecord::Base.belongs_to_required_by_default` is set to `true`,
then creating a record through `has_and_belongs_to_many` fails with the
cryptic error message `Left side must exist`. This is because
`inverse_of` isn't working properly in this case, presumably since we're
doing trickery with anonymous classes in the middle.
Rather than following this rabbit hole to try and get `inverse_of` to
work in a case that we know is not publicly supported, we can just turn
off this validation to match the behavior of 4.2 and earlier.
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I'm making this commit separately because this has failing tests and
style nitpicks that I'd like to make as individual commits, to make the
changes I'm making explicit.
We still want a single merge commit at the end, however.
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the newer method used for discriminating new records did not
use the older and more robust method used for instantiating
existing records, but did have a better post-check to ensure
the sublass was in the hierarchy. so move the descendants check
to find_sti_class, and then simply call find_sti_class from
subclass_from_attributes
now with fixed specs
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sebjacobs/support-bidirectional-destroy-dependencies
Add support for bidirectional destroy dependencies
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Prior to this commit if you defined a bidirectional relationship
between two models with destroy dependencies on both sides, a call to
`destroy` would result in an infinite callback loop.
Take the following relationship.
class Content < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one :content_position, dependent: :destroy
end
class ContentPosition < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :content, dependent: :destroy
end
Calling `Content#destroy` or `ContentPosition#destroy` would result in
an infinite callback loop.
This commit changes the behaviour of `ActiveRecord::Callbacks#destroy`
so that it guards against subsequent callbacks.
Thanks to @zetter for demonstrating the issue with failing tests[1].
[1] rails#13609
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This reverts commit 60c9701269f5b412849f1a507df61ba4735914d7, reversing
changes made to 6a25202d9ea3b4a7c9f2d6154b97cf8ba58403db.
Reason: Broken build
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This triggers the JoinDependency work to reflect on the associations
and trigger an error as follows:
ActiveRecord::ConfigurationError: Association named 'account' was
not found on Company; perhaps you misspelled it?
Fix Company.of_first_firm joins association name
Should be `Company.joins(:accounts)` not `Company.joins(:account)`.
Do the same for Client.of_first_firm
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Errors can be indexed with nested attributes
Close #8638
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`has_many` can now take `index_errors: true` as an
option. When this is enabled, errors for nested models will be
returned alongside an index, as opposed to just the nested model name.
This option can also be enabled (or disabled) globally through
`ActiveRecord::Base.index_nested_attribute_errors`
E.X.
```ruby
class Guitar < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :tuning_pegs
accepts_nested_attributes_for :tuning_pegs
end
class TuningPeg < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :guitar
validates_numericality_of :pitch
end
```
- Old style
- `guitar.errors["tuning_pegs.pitch"] = ["is not a number"]`
- New style (if defined globally, or set in has_many_relationship)
- `guitar.errors["tuning_pegs[1].pitch"] = ["is not a number"]`
[Michael Probber, Terence Sun]
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