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Incompatible to rounding behavior between MySQL 5.6 and earlier.
In 5.5, when you insert `2014-08-17 12:30:00.999999` the fractional part
is ignored. In 5.6, it's rounded to `2014-08-17 12:30:01`:
http://bugs.mysql.com/bug.php?id=68760
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Fixed automatic inverse_of for models nested in module
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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Changed ActiveRecord::Relation#update behavior so that it will work on Relation objects without giving id
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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callbacks and validations
- Right now, there is no method to update multiple records with
validations and callbacks.
- Changed the behavior of existing `update` method so that when `id`
attribute is not given and the method is called on an `Relation`
object, it will execute update for every record of the `Relation` and
will run validations and callbacks for every record.
- Added test case for validating that the callbacks run when `update` is
called on a `Relation`.
- Changed test_create_columns_not_equal_attributes test from
persistence_test to include author_name column on topics table as it
it used in before_update callback.
- This change introduces performance issues when a large number of
records are to be updated because it runs UPDATE query for every
record of the result. The `update_all` method can be used in that case
if callbacks are not required because it will only run single UPDATE
for all the records.
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Fix issue with reaping_frequency type.
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When using DATABASE_URL to configure ActiveRecord, :reaping_frequency
does not get converted from a string to a numeric value. This value is
eventually passed to 'sleep' and must be numeric to avoid exceptions.
This commit converts :reaping_frequency to a float when present.
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So we can change the arity later.
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A few of the tests weren't testing anything of value. The IP Address
tests are testing the type, not behavior of the connection adapter.
There are two CVE regression tests which are important, but don't have a
good place to go, so I've left them alone for now, as they call `quote`
and the focus right now is removing `column` from `type_cast`
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The column itself has no actual impact on the return value. These were
actually testing the behavior of the type object, which is sufficiently
covered elsewhere.
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The behavior tested by the removed lines is sufficiently covered
elsewhere.
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The string encoding test wasn't using the types for anything. The
boolean casting test included logic that should be in the tests for the
types, and the string test was legitimately not testing anything useful.
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This error only happens when the foreign key is missing.
Before this fix the following exception was being raised:
NoMethodError: undefined method `val' for #<Arel::Nodes::BindParam:0x007fc64d19c218>
Now the message is:
ActiveRecord::UnknownAttributeError: unknown attribute 'foreign_key' for Model.
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PostgreSQL, Fix change detection caused by superfluous bytea unescaping
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This showed up when running BinaryTest#test_load_save with the more
restrictive input string handling of pg-0.18.0.pre20141117110243.gem .
Bytea values sent to the server are in binary format, but are
returned back as escaped text. To fulfill the assumption that
type_cast_from_database(type_cast_for_database(binary)) == binary
we unescape only, if the value was really received from the server.
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When table has a composite primary key, the `primary_key` method for
sqlite3 and postgresql was only returning the first field of the key.
Ensures that it will return nil instead, as AR dont support composite pks.
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Closes #7247.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
activerecord/test/models/owner.rb
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Fixes #18237
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This is no longer required now that we are injecting a type caster
object into the Arel table, with the exception of uniqueness
validations. Since it calls `ConnectionAdapter#type_cast`, the value has
already been cast for the database. We don't want Arel to attempt to
cast it further, so we need to continue wrapping it in a quoted node.
This can potentially go away when this validator is refactored to make
better use of `where` or the predicate builder.
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timestamps. [#18202]
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We only support classes which provide a no-args constructor to use as a
default value. We can provide a more helpful error message if we catch
this when `serialize` is called, rather than letting it error when you
try to assign the attribute.
Fixes #18224
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Example:
create_table :foos, id: :bigint do |t|
end
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Part of the larger refactoring to remove type casting from Arel. We can
inform it that we already have the right type by wrapping the value in
an `Arel::Nodes::Quoted`. This commit can be reverted when we have
removed type casting from Arel in Rail 5.1
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Part of the larger refactoring to remove type casting from Arel. We can
inform it that we already have the right type by wrapping the value in
an `Arel::Nodes::Quoted`. This commit can be reverted when we have
removed type casting from Arel in Rail 5.1
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Part of the larger refactoring to remove type casting from Arel. We can
inform it that we already have the right type by wrapping the value in
an `Arel::Nodes::Quoted`. This commit can be reverted when we have
removed type casting from Arel in Rail 5.1
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This will allow eager type casting to take place as needed. There
doesn't seem to be any particular reason that the `in` statement was
forced for single values, and the commit message where it was introduced
gives no context.
See
https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/d90b4e2615e8048fdeffc6dffe3246704adee01f
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Part of a larger refactoring to remove type casting from Arel.
/cc @mrgilman
[Sean Griffin & Melanie Gilman]
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As part of the larger refactoring to remove type casting from Arel, we
need to do the casting of values eagerly. The predicate builder is the
closest place that knows about the Active Record class, and can
therefore have the type information.
/cc @mrgilman
[Sean Griffin & Melanie Gilman]
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This class cares far too much about the internals of other parts of
Active Record. This is an attempt to break out a meaningful object which
represents the needs of the predicate builder. I'm not fully satisfied
with the name, but the general concept is an object which represents a
table, the associations to/from that table, and the types associated
with it. Many of these exist at the `ActiveRecord::Base` class level,
not as properties of the table itself, hence the need for another
object. Currently it provides these by holding a reference to the class,
but that will likely change in the future. This allows the predicate
builder to remain wholy concerned with building predicates.
/cc @mrgilman
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This will allow us to pass the predicate builder into the constructor of
these handlers. The procs had to be changed to objects, because the
`PredicateBuilder` needs to be marshalable. If we ever decide to make
`register_handler` part of the public API, we should come up with a
better solution which allows procs.
/cc @mrgilman
[Sean Griffin & Melanie Gilman]
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Construction of relations can be a hotspot, we don't want to create one
of these in the constructor. This also allows us to do more expensive
things in the predicate builder's constructor, since it's created once
per AR::Base subclass
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I think we should deprecate this behavior and just error if you tell us
to do a case insensitive comparison for types which are not case
sensitive. Partially reverts 35592307
Fixes #18195
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We were ignoring the `default_value?` escape clause in the serialized
type, which caused the default value to always be treated as changed.
Fixes #18169
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Fix connection leak when a thread checks in additional connections.
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The code in `ConnectionPool#release` assumed that a single thread only
ever holds a single connection, and thus that releasing a connection
only requires the owning thread_id.
There is a trivial counterexample to this assumption: code that checks
out additional connections from the pool in the same thread. For
instance:
connection_1 = ActiveRecord::Base.connection
connection_2 = ActiveRecord::Base.connection_pool.checkout
ActiveRecord::Base.connection_pool.checkin(connection_2)
connection_3 = ActiveRecord::Base.connection
At this point, connection_1 has been removed from the
`@reserved_connections` hash, causing a NEW connection to be returned as
connection_3 and the loss of any tracking info on connection_1. As long
as the thread in this example lives, connection_1 will be inaccessible
and un-reapable. If this block of code runs more times than the size of
the connection pool in a single thread, every subsequent connection
attempt will timeout, as all of the available connections have been
leaked.
Reverts parts of 9e457a8654fa89fe329719f88ae3679aefb21e56 and
essentially all of 4367d2f05cbeda855820e25a08353d4b7b3457ac
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Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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This bug occurs when an attribute of an ActiveRecord model is an
ActiveRecord::Type::Integer type or a ActiveRecord::Type::Decimal type (or any
other type that includes the ActiveRecord::Type::Numeric module. When the value
of the attribute is negative and is set to the same negative value, it is marked
as changed.
Take the following example of a Person model with the integer attribute age:
class Person < ActiveRecord::Base
# age :integer(4)
end
The following will produce the error:
person = Person.new(age: -1)
person.age = -1
person.changes
=> { "age" => [-1, -1] }
person.age_changed?
=> true
The problematic line is here:
module ActiveRecord
module Type
module Numeric
...
def non_numeric_string?(value)
# 'wibble'.to_i will give zero, we want to make sure
# that we aren't marking int zero to string zero as
# changed.
value.to_s !~ /\A\d+\.?\d*\z/
end
end
end
end
The regex match doesn't accept numbers with a leading '-'.
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If there is a method defined such as `find_and_do_stuff(id)`, which then
gets called on an association, we will perform statement caching and the
parent ID will not change on subsequent calls.
Fixes #18117
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