| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Document `Logger#broadcast_messages` option
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Add support for Petabyte and Exabyte in number to human size
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Fixes LoggerSilence#silence threadsafety
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- uses instance defined level if no custom local log level defined
- Keeps track of local log level per [ thread + object-instance ]
- prevents memory leakage by removing local level hash key/value on #silence method exit
- avoids the use of Thread local variables
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I've worked on a few applications that have gone through the
internationalization process and had issues because they were using
`number_to_currency`. The minute a user is allowed to change their
locale, they can change the price displayed on a page from 10 US dollars
to 10 Mexican Pesos, which is far from the same amount of money.
Unlike other helpers that rely on i18n, `number_to_currency` does not
produce equivalent results when the locale is changed.
As I've explained this to a few groups of developers now, I thought it
might make for a good caveat in the docs.
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[ci skip]
Change output timming of sample code
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- Expect returns "new value 1" but, retuns nil, because output at thread is not finished. Move val_1 output to finished thread.
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It is in the code to provides backward compatibility for people that
have this class serialized as YAML in some storage.
Closes #22681
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Also, added a test case to make sure that the default deprecation horizon is
always bigger than the current Rails version.
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Fix cache fetch miss notification order
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Fixes https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/22477.
When I improved the caching instrumentation in
edd33c08d98723ae9bb89cf7f019277117ed6414, I inadvertently changed the
order of AS notifications when there is a cache miss.
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:tada: :beers:
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We went back to `Thread.current[]` in 33e11e59.
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accessors"
This reverts commit 301f43820562c6a70dffe30f4227ff0751f47d4f per @matthewd on https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/22630/files#r47997074
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We call the thread variable accessors on `Thread.current`, which matches Ruby's
documentation:
http://ruby-doc.org/core-2.2.0/Thread.html#method-i-thread_variable_get
Fix these to stay `current` ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
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[ci skip]
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[ci skip]
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class and module variables that live per-thread
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Add Logger option to disable message broadcasts
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When setting the Rails logger to log to STDOUT, it would broadcast the
log twice in development. This adds a setting that will prevent messages
from being broadcast to multiple logs, while still allowing calls to
`#close`, `#level=`, `#progname=`, and `#formatter=` to be broadcasted.
Fixes #14769, #11415
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Use Module.prepend instead of alias_method for Range#to_s
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Delete dead code comments
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Deprecate passing string to define callback.
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See the rationale in the comment present in this patch.
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Corrects the time comparison to be `Time.now < time` which allows the user to
be set only when the current time is less than the 2 week window given in the
example.
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Better English.
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Subscribing to notifications while inside the said instrumented section
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The issue is that on the exit from Instrumenter#instrument section,
an Evented listener will run into an error because its thread local
(Thread.current[:_timestack]) has not been set up by the #start
method (this obviously happens because the Evented listeners didn't
exist at the time, since no subscribtion to that section was made yet).
Note: support for subscribing to instrumented sections, while being
inside those instrumented sections, might be removed in the future.
Maybe fixes #21873.
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even if a write fails, store the raw value
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rescue memcached errors in a consistent way
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Fix wrong timezone mapping for Switzerland (no deprecation warn) [22233]
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Fixes #22376.
JRuby 9.0.5.0 will support ObjectSpace.each_object against a
class's singleton class, since that's essentially just walking an
internal subclasses structure we already maintain. This test was
too narrow, requiring that each_object support an arbitrary class
but only actually needing it to work against a class's singleton.
This improves performance of Class.descendants by nearly two orders
of magnitude when run against JRuby 9.0.5.0:
```ruby
5.times { puts Benchmark.measure { 100_000.times { Numeric.descendants } } }
```
Before:
```
11.510000 0.140000 11.650000 ( 10.082384)
9.990000 0.020000 10.010000 ( 9.931233)
10.520000 0.040000 10.560000 ( 10.502978)
10.290000 0.030000 10.320000 ( 10.276027)
10.000000 0.030000 10.030000 ( 9.942429)
```
After:
```
1.380000 0.040000 1.420000 ( 0.365850)
0.210000 0.000000 0.210000 ( 0.149574)
0.180000 0.020000 0.200000 ( 0.141094)
0.140000 0.000000 0.140000 ( 0.140634)
0.190000 0.010000 0.200000 ( 0.147962)
```
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This method needs to ensure that if a change happens, it is going to be registered.
With this refactor suggested by @matthewd race conditions do not matter because if
no file is watched, nothing is done. And as long as some invocation sets the flag
to true, it will stay true.
The refactor leaves a race condition in which two simultaneous threads that watch
some of the files passed do the actual work in `any?`, whereas the mutex guaranteed
that was done at most once. But this is considered to be a better tradeoff.
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listen is calling us from its own thread, we need to synchronize reads and writes to this flag.
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