| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Fix realization
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Mysql2 doesn't support binds, which means no binds payload is set when
logging, so the logic to render binary data differently here doesn't work.
Introduced in 99d142a9375f9ba1960863b3cc745265aa9a14df.
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They tend to be large and not very useful in the log.
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This commit fixes reported issue #7630 in which counter
caches were not being updated properly when replacing
has_many_through relationships
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Closes #8492
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Conflicts:
activerecord/test/cases/base_test.rb
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The Time.time_with_datetime_fallback, Time.utc_time and Time.local_time
methods were added to handle the limitations of Ruby's native Time
implementation. Those limitations no longer apply so we are deprecating
them in 4.0 and they will be removed in 4.1.
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This can be done using the class attribute cache_timestamp_format
Conflicts:
railties/guides/source/configuring.textile
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Conflicts:
activerecord/test/models/bulb.rb
activerecord/test/schema/schema.rb
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Pending work on graceful app upgrades.
Revert "Merge pull request #8439 from joshsusser/fixes"
This reverts commit ce8ac39338f86388e70356b3a470b3ea443802ae, reversing
changes made to b0e7b6f67c984d4b1502e801781ed75fad681633.
Revert "Merge pull request #8431 from joshsusser/schemadump"
This reverts commit 036d3e1c2b65c4b8cbd23de2e20ad67b9b756182, reversing
changes made to 0c692f4d121792117b6a71e5ed590a31c3b9d12e.
Revert "Merge branch 'joshsusser-master' into merge"
This reverts commit 0c692f4d121792117b6a71e5ed590a31c3b9d12e, reversing
changes made to 2e299fca715b083a60222a85e48f9d3b8dd8ce93.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_statements.rb
activerecord/test/cases/schema_dumper_test.rb
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in the new 'variables:' hash in each database config section in database.yml.
The key-value pairs of this hash will be sent in a 'SET key = value, ...'
query on new database connections.
The configure_connection methods from mysql and mysql2 into are
consolidated into the abstract_mysql base class.
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The real win with these chain methods is where.not, that takes care of
different scenarios in a graceful way, for instance when the given value
is nil.
where("author.id != ?", author_to_ignore.id)
where.not("author.id", author_to_ignore.id)
Both where.like and where.not_like compared to the SQL versions doesn't
seem to give us that much:
Post.where("title LIKE 'ruby on%'")
Post.where.like(title: 'ruby on%'")
Post.where("title NOT LIKE 'ruby on%'")
Post.where.not_like(title: 'ruby on%'")
Thus Rails is adding where.not, but not where.like/not_like and others.
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This commit stems from https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/8332#issuecomment-11127957
Since the formats in which conditions can be passed to `not` differ
from the formats in which conditions can be passed to `like` and `not_like`,
then I think it's worth adding rdoc and tests to show this behavior
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Arel::Nodes::In inherits from Arel::Nodes::Equality, so the case
statement was always using the Equality operator for both scenarios,
resulting in a not equal query instead.
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This test does not belong to has many associations test.
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Consider this scenario:
if params[:foo]
conditions = { foo: true }
end
foos = Foo.where(conditions).order(:id)
When params[:foo] is nil, this would call:
foos = Foo.where(nil).order(:id)
In this scenario, we want Foo.where(conditions) to be the same as calling
Foo.all, otherwise we'd get a "NoMethodError order for WhereChain".
Related to #8332.
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Relation.where with no args can be chained with not, like, and not_like
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/query_methods.rb
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examples:
Model.where.not field: nil
#=> "SELECT * FROM models WHERE field IS NOT NULL
Model.where.like name: 'Jeremy%'
#=> "SELECT * FROM models WHERE name LIKE 'Jeremy%'
this feature was originally suggested by Jeremy Kemper https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/5950#issuecomment-5591330
Closes #5950
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When applying default_scope to a class with a where clause, using
update_column(s) could generate a query that would not properly update
the record due to the where clause from the default_scope being applied
to the update query.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
default_scope where(active: true)
end
user = User.first
user.active = false
user.save!
user.update_column(:active, true) # => false
In this situation we want to skip the default_scope clause and just
update the record based on the primary key. With this change:
user.update_column(:active, true) # => true
Fixes #8436.
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LOCALTIMESTAMP is not support by sqlite3, and travis was giving us these
errors: https://travis-ci.org/rails/rails/jobs/3535241/#L570
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why is this a Time to start with?
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* joshsusser-master:
style cleanup
Add migration history to schema.rb dump
Add metadata to schema_migrations
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/lib/active_record/schema.rb
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migrated_at: timestamp when migration run
fingerprint: md5 hash of migration source
name: filename without version or extension
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Closes #3313
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At present, ActiveRecord::Delegation compiles delegation methods on a
global basis. The compiled methods apply to all subsequent Relation
instances. This creates several problems:
1) After Post.all.recent has been called, User.all.respond_to?(:recent)
will be true, even if User.all.recent will actually raise an error due
to no User.recent method existing. (See #8080.)
2) Depending on the AR class, the delegation should do different things.
For example, if a Post.zip method exists, then Post.all.zip should call
it. But this will then result in User.zip being called by a subsequent
User.all.zip, even if User.zip does not exist, when in fact
User.all.zip should call User.all.to_a.zip. (There are various
variants of this problem.)
We are creating these compiled delegations in order to avoid method
missing and to avoid repeating logic on each invocation.
One way of handling these issues is to add additional checks in various
places to ensure we're doing the "right thing". However, this makes the
compiled methods signficantly slower. In which case, there's almost no
point in avoiding method_missing at all. (See #8127 for a proposed
solution which takes this approach.)
This is an alternative approach which involves creating a subclass of
ActiveRecord::Relation for each AR class represented. So, with this
patch, Post.all.class != User.all.class. This means that the delegations
are compiled for and only apply to a single AR class. A compiled method
for Post.all will not be invoked from User.all.
This solves the above issues without incurring significant performance
penalties. It's designed to be relatively seamless, however the downside
is a bit of complexity and potentially confusion for a user who thinks
that Post.all and User.all should be instances of the same class.
Benchmark
---------
require 'active_record'
require 'benchmark/ips'
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
establish_connection adapter: 'sqlite3', database: ':memory:'
connection.create_table :posts
def self.omg
:omg
end
end
relation = Post.all
Benchmark.ips do |r|
r.report('delegation') { relation.omg }
r.report('constructing') { Post.all }
end
Before
------
Calculating -------------------------------------
delegation 4392 i/100ms
constructing 4780 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
delegation 144235.9 (±27.7%) i/s - 663192 in 5.038075s
constructing 182015.5 (±21.2%) i/s - 850840 in 5.005364s
After
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Calculating -------------------------------------
delegation 6677 i/100ms
constructing 6260 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
delegation 166828.2 (±34.2%) i/s - 754501 in 5.001430s
constructing 116575.5 (±18.6%) i/s - 563400 in 5.036690s
Comments
--------
Bear in mind that the standard deviations in the above are huge, so we
can't compare the numbers too directly. However, we can conclude that
Relation construction has become a little slower (as we'd expect), but
not by a huge huge amount, and we can still construct a large number of
Relations quite quickly.
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Keying these hashes by klass causes reloadable classes to never get
freed. Thanks to @thedarkone for pointing this out in
the comments on 221571beb6b4bb7437989bdefaf421f993ab6002.
This doesn't seem to make a massive difference to performance.
Benchmark
---------
require 'active_record'
require 'benchmark/ips'
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
establish_connection adapter: 'sqlite3', database: ':memory:'
end
GC.disable
Benchmark.ips(20) do |r|
r.report { Post.connection }
end
Before
------
Calculating -------------------------------------
5632 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
218671.0 (±1.9%) i/s - 4364800 in 19.969401s
After
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Calculating -------------------------------------
8743 i/100ms
-------------------------------------------------
206525.9 (±17.8%) i/s - 4039266 in 19.992590s
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This reverts commit a3024f81228d7b3b446408114a5dc2a86870cd35.
REASON: Since warning doesn't exist
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Allows you to do BaseClass.new(:type => "SubClass") as well as
parent.children.build(:type => "SubClass") or parent.build_child
to initialize an STI subclass. Ensures that the class name is a
valid class and that it is in the ancestors of the super class
that the association is expecting.
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They was extracted from a plugin.
See https://github.com/rails/rails-observers
[Rafael Mendonça França + Steve Klabnik]
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Fixes #7418.
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This table is being used to verify if the :limit options is being
ignored for text and binary columns
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Remove FIXME tag from abstract adapter test.
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Corrects typo in test name [ci skip]
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Setting a nil datetime attribute to a blank string should not cause the
attribute to be dirty.
Fix #8310
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prevent mass assignment of polymorphic type when using `build`
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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Closes #8265
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To perform a sum calculation over the array of elements, use to_a.sum(&block).
Please check the discussion in f9cb645dfcb5cc89f59d2f8b58a019486c828c73
for more context.
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This reverts commit f9cb645dfcb5cc89f59d2f8b58a019486c828c73.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
Revert "Allow blocks for count with ActiveRecord::Relation. Document and test that sum allows blocks"
This reverts commit 9cc2bf69ce296b7351dc612a8366193390a305f3.
Conflicts:
activerecord/lib/active_record/relation/calculations.rb
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