| 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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These comment sometimes explain a face which does not match
the face.
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In ActiveRecord test :men, :faces, :interests and :zines tables are
used for `:inverse_of` test cases, not `:wheels`.
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Fix for has_and_belongs_to_many & has_many_through associations
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partial_writes is false
This will fix #19663
Also with this fix, active record does not fire unnecassary update queries while partial_writes is true
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Remove unnecessary `respond_to?(:indexes)` checking
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Currently all adapters (postgresql, mysql2, sqlite3, oracle-enhanced,
and sqlserver) implemented `indexes` and schema dumper expects
implemented `indexes`.
https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/v5.0.0/activerecord/lib/active_record/schema_dumper.rb#L208
Therefore `respond_to?(:indexes)` checking is unnecessary.
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Using Constant and symbol class_name option for associations are valid but raises exception on HABTM associations.
There was a test case which tries to cover symbol class_name usage but doesn't cover correctly. Fixed both symbol usage and constant usage as well.
These are all working as expected now;
```
has_and_belongs_to_many :foos, class_name: 'Foo'
has_and_belongs_to_many :foos, class_name: :Foo
has_and_belongs_to_many :foos, class_name: Foo
```
Closes #23767
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Use Regexp#match? rather than Regexp#===
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Follow up to 99cf7558000090668b137085bfe6bcc06c4571dc.
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Regexp#match? should be considered to be part of the Ruby core library. We are
emulating it for < 2.4, but not having to require the extension is part of the
illusion of the emulation.
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This executor currently relies on `ActiveRecord::Base.connection` not
changing between `prepare` and `complete`. If something else returns
the current ActiveRecord connection to the pool early then this
`complete` call will fail to clear the correct query cache and restore
the original `query_cache_enabled` status.
This has for example been happening in Sidekiq:
https://github.com/mperham/sidekiq/pull/3166
We can just keep track of the connection as part of the exector state.
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- These tests were fixed earlier on master in https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/f13ec72664fd13d33d617103ca964a7592295854.
- They started failing in first place due to change in https://github.com/brianmario/mysql2/commit/f14023fcfee9e85e6fc1b0e568048811518f8c23.
- They will fail again when the message is changed in mysql2 so let's
not rely on the error message.
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This reverts commit 671eb742eec77b5c8281ac2a2e3976ef32a6e424.
This is not a change we would like moving forward.
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- CollectionAssociation#select was removed in
https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/25989 in favor of
QueryMethods#select but it caused a regression when passing arguments
to select and a block.
- This used to work earlier in Rails 4.2 and Rails 5. See gist
https://gist.github.com/prathamesh-sonpatki/a7df922273473a77dfbc742a4be4b618.
- This commit restores the behavior of Rails 4.2 and Rails 5.0.0 to
allow passing arguments and block at the same time but also deprecates
it.
- Because, these arguments do not have any effect on the output of
select when select is used with a block.
- Updated documentation to remove the example passing arguments and
block at the same time to `CollectionProxy#select`.
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Query cache doesn't type cast bind parameters since it isn't
actually querying the database, so it can't pass those values in. Type
casting in the query cache method would cause the values to be type cast
twice in the case that there is a cache miss (since the methods it calls
will type cast *again*). If logging is disabled, then adding the type
cast code to the query cache method will needlessly typecast the values
(since the only reason those values are type cast is for display in the
logs).
Fixes #26828.
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If does not quote table name properly, invalid SQL is generated.
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```
test/cases/adapters/postgresql/case_insensitive_test.rb:12: warning: ambiguous first argument; put parentheses or a space even after `/' operator
test/cases/adapters/postgresql/case_insensitive_test.rb:16: warning: ambiguous first argument; put parentheses or a space even after `/' operator
test/cases/adapters/postgresql/case_insensitive_test.rb:20: warning: ambiguous first argument; put parentheses or a space even after `/' operator
test/cases/adapters/postgresql/case_insensitive_test.rb:24: warning: ambiguous first argument; put parentheses or a space even after `/' operator
```
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Fix case insensitive check for text column in pg
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There's no 'text to text' casting in the cast table so the feature detection fails.
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Follow up to #26735.
If `table_options` returns `{ comment: nil }`, `create_table` line is
broken.
Example:
```ruby
create_table "accounts", force: :cascade, do |t|
```
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```ruby
# Before
t.index ["firm_id", "type", "rating"], name: "company_index", order: {"rating"=>:desc}, using: :btree
# After
t.index ["firm_id", "type", "rating"], name: "company_index", order: { rating: :desc }, using: :btree
```
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https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12739
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Remove duplicated `unless current_adapter?(:SQLite3Adapter)` condition
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`test_native_decimal_insert_manual_vs_automatic` exists inside
`unless current_adapter?(:SQLite3Adapter)`. This condition is
duplicated.
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`:text_too_big` column should be `:text`, not `:integer`
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Print the proper ::Float::INFINITY value when used as a default value
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Addresses https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/22396
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ActiveModel::Type)
Some code was previously referring to ActiveModel::Type::*. This could
cause issues in the future if any of the ActiveRecord::Type classes were
overridden in the future.
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Fix issue with `cache_key` when the named timestamp column has value nil
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- When the named timestamp column is nil, we should just return the
cache_key with model name and id similar to the behavior of implicit
timestamp columns.
- Fixed one of the issue mentioned in https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/26417.
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We've seen occasional Travis failures mentioning deadlocks. I think
they're escaping from this test.
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Preserve cached queries name in AS notifications
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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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Test: JSON attribute value nil can be used in where(attr: nil)
Add changelog entry
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- If the attribute is not changed, then update_attribute does not run
SQL query, this effectively means that no change was made to the
attribute.
- This change was made in https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/0fcd4cf5
to avoid a SQL call.
- But the change resulted into `nil` being returned when there was no
change in the attribute value.
- This commit corrects the behavior to return true if there is no change
in attribute value. This is same as previous behavior of Rails 4.2
plus benefit of no additional SQL call.
- Fixes #26593.
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When the association is autosaved we were storing the details with
string keys. This was creating inconsistency with other details that are
added using the `Errors#add` method. It was also inconsistent with the
`Errors#messages` storage.
To fix this inconsistency we are always storing with symbols. This will
cause a small breaking change because in those cases the details could
be accessed as strings keys but now it can not.
The reason that we chose to do this breaking change is because `#details`
should be considered a low level object like `#messages` is.
Fix #26499.
[Rafael Mendonça França + Marcus Vieira]
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Clear attribute changes after handling locking
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Without this the changes to the lock version column will stick around
even after `touch` returns.
Before:
model.touch
model.changes
# => {"lock_version"=>[0, "1"]}
After:
model.touch
model.changes
# {}
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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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All indentation was normalized by rubocop auto-correct at 80e66cc4d90bf8c15d1a5f6e3152e90147f00772.
But comments was still kept absolute position. This commit aligns
comments with method definitions for consistency.
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