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kamipo/join_to_delete_is_same_as_join_to_update"
This reverts commit 4d06ea9a829de8f6f5a345589828e182eacab6a3, reversing
changes made to e9d15072a94e2ae4dec5b7a121c84a5db38547b8.
Reason: This will break oracle-enhanced, see
https://github.com/rsim/oracle-enhanced/blob/3c42131db82b64ac41645db3affc6e4650289df6/lib/active_record/connection_adapters/oracle_enhanced_adapter.rb#L1254
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`join_to_delete` is same as `join_to_update`
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All public methods are tasks, so we need to move it to protected
visibility.
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This test was failing when run on Windows using PostgreSQL. Depending on
the OS (and 32 vs 64 bit), this type could be a `BigNum`. We could loosen
the assertion to `Numeric`, but if the value is equal to the expected, and
responds to `bitlength` properly, who cares?
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Unlike unix, the TZ variable on Windows does not look at a database. It is
always expected to be in the form {Standard Time
Abbreviation}{UTC-Offset}{Daylight Time Abbriviation}. This changes the
relevant tests to use the Windows form when run from Windows.
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When this test was run on Windows, the database file would still be in
use, and `File.unlink` would fail. This would cause the temp directory to
be unable to be removed, and error out. By disconnecting the connection
when finished, we can avoid this error.
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Introduce ApplicationRecord, an Active Record layer supertype
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It's pretty common for folks to monkey patch `ActiveRecord::Base` to
work around an issue or introduce extra functionality. Instead of
shoving even more stuff in `ActiveRecord::Base`, `ApplicationRecord` can
hold all those custom work the apps may need.
Now, we don't wanna encourage all of the application models to inherit
from `ActiveRecord::Base`, but we can encourage all the models that do,
to inherit from `ApplicationRecord`.
Newly generated applications have `app/models/application_record.rb`
present by default. The model generators are smart enough to recognize
that newly generated models have to inherit from `ApplicationRecord`,
but only if it's present.
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Delete dead code comments
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Deprecate passing string to define callback.
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Allow users to pass flags from database.yml
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Fix white-space
Add test case demonstrating flags are received by the adapter
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remove extra spaces from deprecation message
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```
# before
DEPRECATION WARNING: Time columns will become time zone aware in Rails 5.1. This
still causes `String`s to be parsed as if they were in `Time.zone`,
and `Time`s to be converted to `Time.zone`.
To keep the old behavior, you must add the following to your initializer:
config.active_record.time_zone_aware_types = [:datetime]
To silence this deprecation warning, add the following:
config.active_record.time_zone_aware_types << :time
```
```
# after
DEPRECATION WARNING: Time columns will become time zone aware in Rails 5.1. This
still causes `String`s to be parsed as if they were in `Time.zone`,
and `Time`s to be converted to `Time.zone`.
To keep the old behavior, you must add the following to your initializer:
config.active_record.time_zone_aware_types = [:datetime]
To silence this deprecation warning, add the following:
config.active_record.time_zone_aware_types << :time
```
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Even though this means more things to change when we bump after a
release, it's more important that our examples are directly copyable.
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.. it also showed a deprecation warning, but we obviously needn't retain
that.
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Apart from specific versioning support, our tests should focus on the
behaviour of whatever version they're accompanying, regardless of when
they were written.
Application code should *not* do this.
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If we use a real version, at best that'll be an onerous update required
for each release; at worst, it will encourage users to write new
migrations against an older version than they're using.
The other option would be to leave these bare, without any version
specifier. But as that's just a variant spelling of "4.2", it would seem
to raise the same concerns as above.
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This reverts commit 6d5b1fdf55611de2a1071c37544933bb588ae88e.
`eager_load` and `references` can include hashes, which won't match up
with `references`
A test case has been added to demonstrate the problem
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`ActiveRecord::Base#becomes` should copy the errors
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This was changed in 421c81b, as `exists?` blows up if you are eager
loading a polymorphic association, as it'll try to construct a join to
that table. The previous change decided to execute a `count` instead,
which wouldn't join.
Of course, the only time we actually need to perform a join on the eager
loaded values (which would perform a left outer join) is if they're
being referenced in the where clause. This doesn't affect inner joins.
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There was a test remaining for PG only that was checking for an exact
limit clause
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We currently generate an unbounded number of prepared statements when
`limit` or `offset` are called with a dynamic argument. This changes
`LIMIT` and `OFFSET` to use bind params, eliminating the problem.
`Type::Value#hash` needed to be implemented, as it turns out we busted
the query cache if the type object used wasn't exactly the same object.
This drops support for passing an `Arel::Nodes::SqlLiteral` to `limit`.
Doing this relied on AR internals, and was never officially supported
usage.
Fixes #22250.
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Some backends allow `LIMIT 1,2` as a shorthand for `LIMIT 1 OFFSET 2`.
Supporting this in Active Record massively complicates using bind
parameters for limit and offset, and it's trivially easy to build an
invalid SQL query by also calling `offset` on the same `Relation`.
This is a niche syntax that is only supported by a few adapters, and can
be trivially worked around by calling offset explicitly.
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yui-knk/add_test_sanitize_sql_array_handles_named_bind_variables
Add test cases for `#sanitize_sql_array` with named_bind_variables
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And add code examples to `sanitize_sql_for_conditions`,
`sanitize_sql_for_assignment`, and `sanitize_sql_array`.
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travel back
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Use adapter supports_datetime_with_precision
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This reverts commit c2e70ca9b042a3461aac0dc073a80e84bd77eb57, reversing
changes made to b0e5fc2737ed0b2f67f9b9538d01e084545493fd.
this broke the build
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Remove unused deprecation notice
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The `rake db:test:*` tasks were deprecated in #13528, but were
undeprecated and added back in via #17739.
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Typo correction
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In the doc the `dependent` option was set with: `dependent: destroy`.
This is not working because destroy would call the method of the activerecord::base object.
The right way is: `dependent: :destroy`
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[ci skip] Add a dollar sign to each command in the READMEs
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According to pr #22443 in the guides there's always a dollar sign before every command, so why is in the main README a `$` and in every submodule a `%`?
Just eye candy..
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The problem was that when saving an object, we would
call touch_later on the parent which wont be saved immediteally, and
it wont call any callbacks. That was working one level up because
we were calling touch, during the touch_later commit phase. However that still
didnt solve the problem when you have a 3+ levels of parents to be touched,
as calling touch would affect the parent, but it would be too late to run callbacks
on its grand-parent.
The solution for this, is instead, call touch_later upwards when the first
touch_later is called. So we make sure all the timestamps are updated without relying
on callbacks.
This also removed the hard dependency BelongsTo builder had with the TouchLater module.
So we can still have the old behaviour if TouchLater module is not included.
[fixes 5f5e6d924973003c105feb711cefdb726f312768]
[related #19324]
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