| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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in indexdef to be wrapped up by double quotes
Fixes #34493.
*Thomas Bianchini*
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Fix query cache for multiple connections
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Currently the query cache is only aware of one handler so once we added
multiple databases switching on the handler we broke query cache for
those reading connections.
While #34054 is the proper fix, that fix is not straight forward and I
want to make sure that the query cache isn't just broken for all other
connections not in the main handler.
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The connection handler was using the RuntimeRegistry which kind of
implies it's a per thread registry. But it's actually per fiber.
If you have an application that uses fibers and you're using multiple
databases, when you switch the connection handler to swap connections
new fibers running on the same thread used to get a different connection
id. This PR changes the code to actually use a thread so that we get
the same connection.
Fixes https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/30047
[Eileen M. Uchitelle, Aaron Patterson, & Arthur Neeves]
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febeling/inconsistent-assignment-has-many-through-33942
Fix handling of duplicates for `replace` on has_many-through
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There was a bug in the handling of duplicates when
assigning (replacing) associated records, which made the result
dependent on whether a given record was associated already before
being assigned anew. E.g.
post.people = [person, person]
post.people.count
# => 2
while
post.people = [person]
post.people = [person, person]
post.people.count
# => 1
This change adds a test to provoke the former incorrect behavior, and
fixes it.
Cause of the bug was the handling of record collections as sets, and
using `-` (difference) and `&` (union) operations on them
indiscriminately. This temporary conversion to sets would eliminate
duplicates.
The fix is to decorate record collections for these operations, and
only for the `has_many :through` case. It is done by counting
occurrences, and use the record together with the occurrence number as
element, in order to make them work well in sets. Given
a, b = *Person.all
then the collection used for finding the difference or union of
records would be internally changed from
[a, b, a]
to
[[a, 1], [b, 1], [a, 2]]
for these operations. So a first occurrence and a second occurrence
would be distinguishable, which is all that is necessary for this
task.
Fixes #33942.
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Exercise `connected_to` and `connects_to` methods
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Since both methods are public API I think it makes sense to add these tests
in order to prevent any regression in the behavior of those methods after the 6.0 release.
Exercise `connected_to`
- Ensure that the method raises with both `database` and `role` arguments
- Ensure that the method raises without `database` and `role`
Exercise `connects_to`
- Ensure that the method returns an array of established connections(as mentioned
in the docs of the method)
Related to #34052
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* Arel: Implemented DB-aware NULL-safe comparison
* Fixed where clause inversion for NULL-safe comparison
* Renaming "null_safe_eq" to "is_not_distinct_from", "null_safe_not_eq" to "is_distinct_from"
[Dmytro Shteflyuk + Rafael Mendonça França]
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Fix: Arel now emits a single pair of parens for UNION and UNION ALL
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mysql has a great implementation to suppress multiple parens for union
sql statements.
This moves that functionality to the generic implementation
This also introduces that functionality for UNION ALL
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Adjust bind length of SQLite to default (999)
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Change `#bind_params_length` in SQLite adapter to return the default
maximum amount (999). See https://www.sqlite.org/limits.html
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bogdanvlviv/ensure-that-connected_to-establish_connection
Ensure that `ActiveRecord::Base#connected_to` with `:database` establishes connection
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connection
Related to #34052
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This commit adds support for the
`ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::PostgreSQLAdapter.create_unlogged_tables`
setting, which turns `CREATE TABLE` SQL statements into
`CREATE UNLOGGED TABLE` statements.
This can improve PostgreSQL performance but at the
cost of data durability, and thus it is highly recommended
that you *DO NOT* enable this in a production environment.
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Follow up a741208f80dd33420a56486bd9ed2b0b9862234a.
Since a741208, `Decimal#serialize` which is superclass of `Money` type
is no longer no-op, so it consistently serialize/deserialize a value as
a decimal even if schema default.
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Related 34cc301f03aea2e579d6687a9ea9782afc1089a0.
`QueryAttribute#value_for_database` calls only `type.serialize`, and
`Decimal#serialize` is a no-op unlike other attribute types.
Whether or not `serialize` will invoke `cast` is undefined in our test
cases, but it actually does not work properly unless it does so for now.
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Since quoted `Infinity` and `NaN` are valid data for PostgreSQL.
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[fatkodima & Stefan Kanev]
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When a record with transactional callbacks is saved, it's attached to
the current transaction so that the callbacks can be run when the
transaction is committed. Records can also be added manually with
`add_transaction_record`, even if they have no transactional callbacks.
When a nested transaction is committed, its records are transferred to
the parent transaction, as transactional callbacks should only be run
when the outermost transaction is committed (the "real" transaction).
However, this currently only happens when the record has transactional
callbacks, and not when added manually with `add_transaction_record`.
If a record is added to a nested transaction, we should always attach it
to the parent transaction when the nested transaction is committed,
regardless of whether it has any transactional callbacks.
[Eugene Kenny & Ryuta Kamizono]
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The `read_attribute` method always returns the primary key when asked to
read the `id` attribute, even if the primary key isn't named `id`, and
even if another attribute named `id` exists.
For the `inspect`, `attribute_for_inspect` and `pretty_print` methods,
this behaviour is undesirable, as they're used to examine the internal
state of the record. By using `_read_attribute` instead, we'll get the
real value of the `id` attribute.
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The `@connection` is no longer used since ee5ab22.
Originally the `@connection` was useless because it is only used in
`timestamp_column_names`, which is only used if `model_class` is given.
If `model_class` is given, the `@connection` is always
`model_class.connection`.
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Previosly, `update_columns` would just take whatever keys you gave it
and tried to run the update query. Most likely this would result in an
error from the database. However, if the column actually did exist, but
was in `ignored_columns`, this would result in the method returning
successfully when it should have raised, and an attribute that should
not exist written to `@attributes`.
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Avoid violating key constraints in fixture HABTM associations
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When loading fixtures, Ruby 1.9's hash key ordering means that HABTM
join table rows are always loaded before the parent table rows,
violating foreign key constraints that may be in place. This very
simple change ensures that the parent table's key appears first in the
hash. Violations may still occur if fixtures are loaded in the wrong
order but those instances can be avoided unlike this one.
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Add support for hash and url configs to be used in connected_to
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Add support for hash and url configs in database hash
of `ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to`.
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Any type can be a primary key, so blank string is also valid value.
Closes #26356.
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Use column definition with `primary_key: true` instead.
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At https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/fc0e3354af7e7878bdd905a95ce4c1491113af9a,
```rb
relation = relation.where(conditions)
```
was rewritten to:
```rb
relation.where!(condition)
```
This change accidentally changed the result of `Topic.exists?({})` from true to false.
To fix this regression, first I moved the blank check logic (`opts.blank?`) from `#where` to `#where!`,
because I thought `#where!` should be identical to `#where`, except that instead of returning a new relation,
it adds the condition to the existing relation.
But on second thought after some discussion on https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/34329,
I started to think that just fixing `#construct_relation_for_exists` is more preferable
than changing `#where` and `#where!`.
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Implement AR#inspect using ParameterFilter
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AR instance support `filter_parameters` since #33756.
Though Regex or Proc is valid as `filter_parameters`,
they are not supported as AR#inspect.
I also add :mask option and #filter_params to
`ActiveSupport::ParameterFilter#new` to implement this.
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Support default expression and expression indexes for MySQL
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MySQL 8.0.13 and higher supports default value to be a function or
expression.
https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/create-table.html
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MySQL 8.0.13 and higher supports functional key parts that index
expression values rather than column or column prefix values.
https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/create-index.html
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The PR#31819 changed `#preloaders_on` and added some test,
then #33938 reverted changes that were added to the method in #31819.
Since changes in the method were reverted and as mentioned in the
comment https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/31819#discussion_r221847481
that titles of the tests added in #31819 don't reflect implementation I
think we can remove those test for now.
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There are two main reasons why `assert_called_with` should require
`args` argument:
1) If we want to assert that some method should be called and we don't
need to check with which arguments it should be called then we should use
`assert_called`.
2) `assert_called_with` without `args` argument doesn't assert anything!
```ruby
assert_called_with(@object, :increment) do
@object.decrement
end
```
It causes false assertions in tests that could cause regressions in the project.
I found this bug by working on
[minitest-mock_expectations](https://github.com/bogdanvlviv/minitest-mock_expectations) gem.
This gem is an extension for minitest that provides almost the same method call
assertions.
I was wondering whether you would consider adding "minitest-mock_expectations"
to `rails/rails` instead of private `ActiveSupport::Testing::MethodCallAssertions` module.
If yes, I'll send a patch - https://github.com/bogdanvlviv/rails/commit/a970ecc42c3a9637947599f2c13e3762e4b59208
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The default collation for utf8mb4 is changed to utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci in
MySQL 8.0, so `test_mysql_connection_collation_is_configured` is
affected by MySQL version and/or default_collation_for_utf8mb4 system
variable.
https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/server-system-variables.html#sysvar_default_collation_for_utf8mb4
```
% ARCONN=mysql2 be ruby -w -Itest test/cases/adapters/mysql2/connection_test.rb -n test_mysql_connection_collation_is_configured
Using mysql2
Run options: -n test_mysql_connection_collation_is_configured --seed 10421
# Running:
F
Failure:
Mysql2ConnectionTest#test_mysql_connection_collation_is_configured [test/cases/adapters/mysql2/connection_test.rb:108]:
Expected: "utf8mb4_general_ci"
Actual: "utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci"
rails test test/cases/adapters/mysql2/connection_test.rb:106
Finished in 0.013842s, 72.2450 runs/s, 144.4900 assertions/s.
1 runs, 2 assertions, 1 failures, 0 errors, 0 skips
```
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Since #33844, eager loading/preloading with too many and/or too large
ids won't be broken by pre-checking whether the value is constructable
or not.
But the pre-checking caused the type to be evaluated at relation build
time instead of at the query execution time, that is breaking an
expectation for some apps.
I've made the pre-cheking lazy as much as possible, that is no longer
happend at relation build time.
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Starting in Rails 5.0.0 and still present in Rails 5.2.1, `singular_ids`
got memoized and didn't reload after more items were added to the
relation.
Although 19c8071 happens to fix the issue, it only adds tests for
`has_many` relations while this bug only affected
`has_and_belongs_to_many` relations.
This commit adds a regression test to ensure it never happens again with
`habtm` relations.
Ensures #34179 never gets reproduced.
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Change query to use alias name for timestamp_column to avoid ambiguity problems when using timestamp from subquery.
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`developers.name desc` was added at d59f3a7, but any test case isn't
failed even if the `developers.name desc` is removed since all tested
developers are consistently ordered on both `name` and `id`.
I changed one developers creation ordering to ensure to test that
`project.developers` is ordered by `developers.name desc`.
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This PR adds the ability to 1) connect to multiple databases in a model,
and 2) switch between those connections using a block.
To connect a model to a set of databases for writing and reading use
the following API. This API supercedes `establish_connection`. The
`writing` and `reading` keys represent handler / role names and
`animals` and `animals_replica` represents the database key to look up
the configuration hash from.
```
class AnimalsBase < ApplicationRecord
connects_to database: { writing: :animals, reading: :animals_replica }
end
```
Inside the application - outside the model declaration - we can switch
connections with a block call to `connected_to`.
If we want to connect to a db that isn't default (ie readonly_slow) we
can connect like this:
Outside the model we may want to connect to a new database (one that is
not in the default writing/reading set) - for example a slow replica for
making slow queries. To do this we have the `connected_to` method that
takes a `database` hash that matches the signature of `connects_to`. The
`connected_to` method also takes a block.
```
AcitveRecord::Base.connected_to(database: { slow_readonly: :primary_replica_slow }) do
ModelInPrimary.do_something_thats_slow
end
```
For models that are already loaded and connections that are already
connected, `connected_to` doesn't need to pass in a `database` because
you may want to run queries against multiple databases using a specific
role/handler.
In this case `connected_to` can take a `role` and use that to swap on
the connection passed. This simplies queries - and matches how we do it
in GitHub. Once you're connected to the database you don't need to
re-connect, we assume the connection is in the pool and simply pass the
handler we'd like to swap on.
```
ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to(role: :reading) do
Dog.read_something_from_dog
ModelInPrimary.do_something_from_model_in_primary
end
```
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When defining a Hash enum it can be easy to use [] instead of {}. This
commit checks that only valid definition values are provided, those can
be a Hash, an array of Symbols or an array of Strings. Otherwise it
raises an ArgumentError.
Fixes #33961
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Generate delegation methods to named scope in the definition time
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