| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The changes introduced to through associations in c80487eb were quite
interesting. Changing `relation.merge!(scope)` to `relation =
relation.merge(scope)` should in theory never cause any changes in
behavior. The subtle breakage led to a surprising conclusion.
The old code wasn't doing anything! Since `merge!` calls
`instance_exec` when given a proc, and most scopes will look something
like `has_many :foos, -> { where(foo: :bar) }`, if we're not capturing
the return value, it's a no-op. However, removing the `merge` causes
`unscope` to break.
While we're merging in the rest of the chain elsewhere, we were never
merging in `unscope` values, causing a breakage on associations where a
default scope was being unscoped in an association scope (yuk!). This is
subtly related to #20722, since it appears we were previously relying on
this mutability.
Fixes #20721.
Fixes #20727.
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Closes #20743.
The task `db:_dump` now only dumps the schema if
`ActiveRecord::Base.dump_schema_after_migration` is true. This has
effects:
- `db:migrate:up`
- `db:migrate:down`
- `db:forward`
- `db:rollback`
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These classes are part of Active Record Preloader, which is not part of
the public API.
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With this change, we will always assume the association name is the same
as the table it's referencing. This is subtly different than treating
the hash key passed to `where` as the table name, as it still allows the
class referenced by the association to provide additional type
information.
After exploring several possible solutions to the ambiguity problem, I
do not think there is a short term answer that will maintain backwards
compatibility.
This change will make it so the following code does not work:
class User
has_many :approved_posts, -> { where(approved: true) }, class_name: "Post"
end
User.where(approved_posts: { id: 1 })
But prevents potential ambiguity and collision as demonstrated in [this
gist](https://gist.github.com/senny/1ae4d8ea7b0e269ed7a0).
Unfortunately, truely solving this requires significantly
re-architecting this code, so that what is currently represented as an
`Arel::Attribute` is instead another data structure that also references
the association it is representing, so we can identify the proper table
name for aliasing when we construct the final tree.
While I'd still like to accomplish that in the long run, I don't think
I'll be able to get there in time for Rails 5 (since I'm not full time
OSS any more, and this is several weeks worth of work). I'm hoping to
achieve this for Rails 5.1.
Fixes #20308
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More granular console SQL coloration
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This new coloration approach makes it easier to scan the rails console
for specific types of activity with more fine-grained visual cues.
Virtual terminal ANSI color escape codes are used when displaying SQL
statements in the rails console. The former implementation alternates
line prefix information (including the statement name and execution
latency) between CYAN and MAGENTA. This visually differentiates any SQL
statements in the log and is useful for quickly scanning for database
activity.
While a great idea and a solid foundation, alternating between just two
colors on an even/odd basis (much like striping an HTML table) can be
improved upon.
This patch replaces the even/odd striping with a more comprehensive
scheme that applies coloration based on the type of statement being
run. Every statement logged has its prefix (name and latency) colored
white (as the statement body was previously). The statement body is now
colored according to the nature of the statement:
- INSERT statements are GREEN (symbolic of creation or genesis)
- SELECT statements are BLUE (typically used for informational
displays, as SELECT statements do not normally have side-effects)
- DELETE statements are RED (commonly used to indicate the danger of
a destructive action)
- UPDATE statements are YELLOW (it's like a less extreme RED :P)
- TRANSACTION statements are CYAN (arbitrary)
- and any other statements are MAGENTA (again, arbitrary)
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vngrs/foreign_key_with_table_name_suffix_and_prefix
Add table name prefix and suffix support for foreign keys
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remove_foreign_key methods
fix tests
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Add reversible syntax for change_column_default
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Passing `:from` and `:to` to `change_column_default` makes this command
reversible as user has defined its previous state.
So, instead of having the migration command as:
change_column_default(:posts, :state, "draft")
They can write it as:
change_column_default(:posts, :state, from: nil, to: "draft")
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This is to show users that they can chain `.uniq` and `.pluck` to get
the `DISTINCT column` result. They don't have to do `DISTINCT column`
themselves.
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Display decimal defaults as strings to keep precision
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[ci skip] correct for ActiveRecord::Associations::Preloader
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Fix `undefined method uncached` for polymorphic belongs_to #20426
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Unitialized polymorphic `belongs_to` associations raise an error while
attempting to reload, as they attempt to make an uncached reload, but
don't have a klass to fetch uncachedly. In this case, `loaded?` should
be `false` anyway.
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thrown ActiveRecord::AssociationTypeMismatch when assigning a wrong value for a namespaced association
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for a namespaced association
fixes #20541
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This is a small refactoring that simplifies the Active Record specific
lenght validator.
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Associated objects that were marked for destruction are considered absent.
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fix test not failing when executed isolated
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the test was created in 7659fb6
the fixtures were added in c092dbe
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After discussing, we've decided it makes more sense to include it. We're
already forwarding every conflicting method to `to_a`, and there's no
conflation of concerns. `Enumerable` has no mutating methods, and it
just allows us to simplify the code. No existing methods will have a
change in behavior. Un-overridden Enumerable methods will simply
delegate to `each`.
[Sean Griffin & bogdan]
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This matches our behavior in other cases where useful enumerable methods
might have a different definition in `Relation`. Wanting to actually
enumerate over the records in this case is completely reasonable, and
wanting `.sum` is reasonable for the same reason it is on `Enumerable`
in the first place.
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Update documentation for ActiveRecord::Migration#remove_index
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`remove_index` works with multiple column names as `add_index`
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Let WITH (CTE) queries be explainable
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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Fixes #20626
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revert create and drop task descriptions
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relationship without the foreign key attribute
fixes regression reported on #20253
ActiveRecord::Base#[] was not used cause of 8b95420
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Small refactor on db:reset
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db:reset should not prematurely load the environment, so, for instance,
if there is any initializer that touches th DB, it will not touch that
before droping it.
Also this makes the code simpler.
This changed was made back in 15fb4302b6ff16e641b6279a3530eb8ed97f2899
, not sure why. But I am pretty much sure we should do it like this, as
drop and setup should load its dependencies tasks if necessary.
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prathamesh-sonpatki/test-for-serial-for-quoted-sequence
Added test case for serial? method when sequence name is not quoted
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- Followup of https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/20190/.
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make sure to load_config for db:abort_if_pending_migrations
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This used to raise a `IrreversibleMigration` error (since #10437).
However since `remove_index :table, :column` is probably the most basic
use-case we should make it reversible again.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
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Add RDoc about add_reference to ActiveRecord::Migration
[ci skip]
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[ci skip]
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My impression of the code sample is that the intent is to assign guy_1, guy_2, etc. The code as it stood would have assigned guy_1, guy_1, etc.
This simply replaces the 1 with the iterator variable i.
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