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Describe better the changes related to raising errors with empty
array/hash values in where clauses.
[ci skip]
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active_record: Quote numeric values compared to string columns.
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Travis failed because the postgresql version installed there does not
support extensions, so we just need to skip this for now.
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There is no need to create the extension in the database just to test if
it's dumped, we can stub that instead.
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When extensions are supported but there's no one enabled in the
database, we should not print anything related to them in schema.rb.
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[ci skip]
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ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::PostgreSQLAdapter#extensions to allow dumping of enabled extensions to schema.rb, add ActiveRecord::SchemaDumper#extensions to dump extensions to schema.rb
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dumped extensions if they are unsupported by the database
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So that they are printed nicely on GitHub.
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the strings true and false into boolean types, in order to match how
YAML would parse the same values from database.yml and prevent
unexpected type errors in the database adapters.
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Raise an exception with a useful message if a rake task is requested for an unknown adapter
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for an unknown adapter
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adapters can register rake tasks
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extensions
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This caused a bug with the new associations implementation, because now
association conditions are represented as Arel nodes internally right up
to when the whole thing gets turned to SQL.
In Rails 3.2, association conditions get turned to raw SQL early on,
which prevents Relation#merge from interfering.
The current implementation was buggy when a default_scope existed on the
target model, since we would basically end up doing:
default_scope.merge(association_scope)
If default_scope contained a where(foo: 'a') and association_scope
contained a where(foo: 'b').where(foo: 'c') then the merger would see
that the same column is representated on both sides of the merge and
collapse the wheres to all but the last: where(foo: 'c')
Now, the RHS of the merge is left alone.
Fixes #8990
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because of an ambiguous column name. This happened if the association
model had a default scope that referenced a third table, and the third
table also referenced the original table (with an identical
foreign_key).
Mysql requires that ambiguous columns are deambiguated by using the full
table.column syntax. Postgresql and Sqlite use a different syntax for
updates altogether (and don't tolerate table.name syntax), so the fix
requires always including the full table.column and discarding it later
for Sqlite and Postgresql.
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`Kernel.quietly` silences `STDOUT` and `STDERR`, which is useless if
the logger is writing to a file, while `AS::Logger#silence` swaps the
logger level to `ERROR`.
Related to #8820 and #8052.
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With the addition of String#in_time_zone and Date#in_time_zone
we can simplify the type casting code by checking if the value
has an `in_time_zone` method.
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Previously, when `time_zone_aware_attributes` were enabled, after
changing a datetime or timestamp attribute and then changing it back
to the original value, `changed_attributes` still tracked the
attribute as changed. This caused `[attribute]_changed?` and
`changed?` methods to return true incorrectly.
Example:
in_time_zone 'Paris' do
order = Order.new
original_time = Time.local(2012, 10, 10)
order.shipped_at = original_time
order.save
order.changed? # => false
# changing value
order.shipped_at = Time.local(2013, 1, 1)
order.changed? # => true
# reverting to original value
order.shipped_at = original_time
order.changed? # => false, used to return true
end
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Conflicts:
actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/form_options_helper.rb
guides/code/getting_started/app/controllers/comments_controller.rb
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I think that these signs are probably mistake.
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closes #6865
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https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/4beb4dececcf10c642c74fbcb8548c833e921a86#commitcomment-2482869
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