| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Follow up of #33358 for SQLite3.
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Add strict argument checking to ActiveRecord callbacks
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This ends up adding it to all save-related callbacks defined in `ActiveRecord::DefineCallbacks`, including e.g. `after_create`. Which should be fine: they didn't support `:on` in the first place.
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Step 6 in #33162
When using Mocha like this:
`ActiveRecord::Base.expects(:establish_connection).with(some_args)`,
the expectations created look something like this:
```
@expectations=
[#<Expectation:0x561350d968e0 expected exactly once, not yet invoked: ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection("adapter" => "mysql2", "database" => nil) >,
#<Expectation:0x561350dab8f8 allowed any number of times, not yet invoked: ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection(any_parameters) >,
#<Expectation:0x561350dc30c0 allowed any number of times, not yet invoked: ActiveRecord::Base.connection(any_parameters) >]
```
Minitest mocking (and the way we use it in `MethodCallAssertions`)
expressly refuses to facilitate such permissiive expectations, insisting
that all calls be specified in the actual expected order.
This patch replaces such calls to `Mocha#expects` with
`ActiveSupport::Testing::MethodCallAssertions` and specifies all
expected calls in the epxected order.
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A correct, but not obvious use of `ActiveSupport::Testing::MethodCallAssertions`, which might also have been part of #33337 or #33391.
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Avoid extra scoping in delegating to klass methods in the `scope` block
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Since #29301, delegating to klass methods in the `scope` block would
cause extra scoping by the receiver itself. The extra scoping would
always override intermediate scoping like `unscoped` and caused the
regression #33387. To keep the original scoping behavior, should avoid
the extra scoping in the `scope` block.
Fixes #33387.
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Use MethodCallAssertions instead of Mocha#expects
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Many calls to `Mocha#expects` preceded the introduction of
`ActiveSupport::Testing::MethodCallAssertions` in 53f64c0fb,
and many are simple to replace with `MethodCallAssertions`.
This patch makes all these simple replacements.
Step 5 in #33162
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#33363 has two regressions. First one is that `insert_fixtures_set` is
failed if flags is an array. Second one is that connection flags are not
restored if `set_server_option` is not supported.
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use set_server_option if possible
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Normalize the date component to 2000-01-01 automatically
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Also?
Updated failing test.
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Missed these in preparing #33337
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Should have been removed in #33309.
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Remove extra stub of `ActiveRecord::Base::connection` in
`activerecord/test/cases/tasks/mysql_rake_test.rb`.
Remove extra stub of `File::exist?` in
`activerecord/test/cases/tasks/sqlite_rake_test.rb`.
`ActiveRecord::Base::establish_connection` shouldn't return `true`
in test cases.
Related to https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/33337.
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Step 4 in #33162
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We sometimes ask "✂️ extra blank lines" to a contributor in reviews like
https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/33337#discussion_r201509738.
It is preferable to deal automatically without depending on manpower.
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Remove returning of `false` value for stubbed `lock_thread=` methods
since there aren't any needs in it.
Remove unnecessary returning of `true` for stubbed `drop_database` method.
Follow up #33309.
Related to #33162, #33326.
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While preparing this I realised that some stubbed returns values
serve no purpose, so this patch drops those as well.
Step 3 in #33162
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Step 2 in #33162
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Remove unnecessary Mocha stubs
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Step 1 in #33162
[utilum + bogdanvlviv]
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Related #31201.
If creating custom primary key (like a string) in SQLite, it would also
create an internal index implicitly which named begin with "sqlite_".
It need to be hidden since the internal object names are reserved and
prohibited for public use.
See https://www.sqlite.org/fileformat2.html#intschema
Fixes #33320.
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The TIME, DATETIME, and TIMESTAMP types [have supported](https://mariadb.com/kb/en/library/microseconds-in-mariadb/)
a fractional seconds precision from 0 to 6.
Default values from time columns with specified precision is read
as `current_timestamp(n)` from information schema.
rake `db:schema:dump` produces `schema.rb` **without** default values for time columns with the specified precision:
t.datetime "last_message_at", precision: 6, null: false
rake `db:schema:dump` produces `schema.rb` **with** default values for time columns with the specified precision:
t.datetime "last_message_at", precision: 6, default: -> { "current_timestamp(6)" }, null: false
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Currently, the seen object cache is shared if join nodes have the same
target class. But it is a wrong assumption, we can't share the seen
object cache between different join nodes (e.g. `:readonly_account` and
`:accounts` have the same target class `Account`, but the instances
have the different state `readonly`).
Fixes #26805.
Closes #27737.
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Support readonly option in SQLite3Adapter
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Readonly sqlite database files are very useful as a data format for
storing configuration/lookup data that is too complicated for YAML
files. But since such files would typically be committed to a source
control repository, it's important to ensure that they are truly safe
from being inadvertently modified. Unfortunately using unix permissions
isn't enough, as sqlite will "helpfully" add the write bit to a database
file whenever it's written to.
sqlite3-ruby has supported a `:readonly` option since version 1.3.2 (see
https://github.com/sparklemotion/sqlite3-ruby/commit/c20c9f5dd2990042)
This simply passes that option through to the adapter if present in the
config hash. I think this is best considered an adapter-specific option
since no other supported database has an identical concept.
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* master:
Call initialize after allocate
Remove `ActiveSupport::Concern` from `ActiveRecord::Aggregations`
Add example for no_touching? in active_record/no_touching for api docs [ci skip]
Generate a new key for each service test
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If someone calls allocate on the object, they'd better also call an
initialization routine too (you can't expect allocate to do any
initialization work). Before this commit, AR objects that are
instantiated from the database would call `define_attribute_methods`
twice.
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This commit speeds up allocating homogeneous lists of AR objects. We
can know if the result set contains an STI column before initializing
every AR object, so this change pulls the "does this result set contain
an STI column?" test up, then uses a specialized instantiation function.
This way we only have to check for an STI column once rather than N
times.
This change also introduces a new initialization function that is meant
for use when allocating AR objects that come from the database. Doing
this allows us to eliminate one hash allocation per AR instance.
Here is a benchmark:
```ruby
require 'active_record'
require 'benchmark/ips'
ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection adapter: "sqlite3", database: ":memory:"
ActiveRecord::Migration.verbose = false
ActiveRecord::Schema.define do
create_table :users, force: true do |t|
t.string :name
t.timestamps null: false
end
end
class User < ActiveRecord::Base; end
2000.times do
User.create!(name: "Gorby")
end
Benchmark.ips do |x|
x.report("find") do
User.limit(2000).to_a
end
end
```
Results:
Before:
```
[aaron@TC activerecord (master)]$ be ruby -I lib:~/git/allocation_tracer/lib speed.rb
Warming up --------------------------------------
find 5.000 i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
find 56.192 (± 3.6%) i/s - 285.000 in 5.080940s
```
After:
```
[aaron@TC activerecord (homogeneous-allocation)]$ be ruby -I lib:~/git/allocation_tracer/lib speed.rb
Warming up --------------------------------------
find 7.000 i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
find 72.204 (± 2.8%) i/s - 364.000 in 5.044592s
```
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hash condition
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[Jon Moss & Xavier Noria]
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Reduce Memory Allocation when using .pluck
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to speed up pluck
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Currently, column aliases which is used for eager loading are calculated
before constructing all table aliases in FROM clause.
`JoinDependency#join_constraints` constructs table aliases for `joins`
first, and then always re-constructs table aliases for eager loading.
If both `joins` and eager loading are given a same table association,
the re-construction would cause the discrepancy between column aliases
and table aliases.
To avoid the discrepancy, the column aliases should be calculated after
all table aliases are constructed.
Fixes #30603.
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`touch` option was added to `increment!` (#27660) and `update_counters`
(#26995). But that option behaves inconsistently with
`Persistence#touch` method.
If `touch` option is passed attribute names, it won't update
update_at/on attributes unlike `Persistence#touch` method.
Due to changed from `Persistence#touch` to `increment!` with `touch`
option, #31405 has a regression that `counter_cache` with `touch` option
which is passed attribute names won't update update_at/on attributes.
I think that the inconsistency is not intended. To get back consistency,
ensure that `touch` option updates update_at/on attributes.
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Allow prefix/suffix options for store accessors
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This may seem like an unnecessary refactoring but some apps want / need
to configure the information passed to the query cache logger. In order
to do that we can add a method here that can be easily overridden by the
app itself, rather than hacking the query cache logger to include that
information.
To override apps can call
```
def cache_notifications_info
super.merge(connected_host: "hostname")
end
```
This will take what's already in the query cache logger and add
`@something="yea"` to the object.
At GitHub we use this to log the number of queries that are cached, the
connection host and the connection url.
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It mark the association as loaded and this can cause the object to be in
an stale state.
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This also mark the association as loaded given we changed it in memory
and avoid the next access to the reader to make a query to the databse.
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left_joins
This regression was caused by #30995 due to `Hash#fetch` won't invoke
default proc. Just revert the change since #30995 is completely fixed by
e9c1653.
Fixes #33048.
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If `eager_loading` is true, `apply_join_dependency` force applies
LIMIT/OFFSET before JOINs by `limited_ids_for` to keep parent records
count. But for aggregation queries, LIMIT/OFFSET should be applied after
aggregations the same as SQL semantics.
And also, we could not replace SELECT list by `limited_ids_for` when a
query has a GROUP BY clause. It had never been worked since it will
causes generating invalid SQL for MySQL, PostgreSQL, and probably most
backends.
```
% ARCONN=postgresql be ruby -w -Itest test/cases/calculations_test.rb -n test_group_by_with_limit
Using postgresql
Run options: -n test_group_by_with_limit --seed 20925
# Running:
E
Error:
CalculationsTest#test_group_by_with_limit:
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid: PG::GroupingError: ERROR: column "posts.id" must appear in the GROUP BY clause or be used in an aggregate function
LINE 1: SELECT DISTINCT "posts"."id", "posts"."type" AS alias_0 FRO... ^
: SELECT DISTINCT "posts"."id", "posts"."type" AS alias_0 FROM "posts" LEFT OUTER JOIN "comments" ON "comments"."post_id" = "posts"."id" GROUP BY "posts"."type" ORDER BY "posts"."type" ASC LIMIT $1
```
Fixes #8103.
Closes #27249.
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In `_create_record`, explicit `transaction` block requires rollback
handling manually when `insert_record` is failed.
We need to handle it in `_create_record`, not in `insert_record`, since
our test cases expect a record added to target and returned even if
`insert_record` is failed,
Closes #31488.
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