| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Follow up of #31390.
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This reverts commit 3420a14590c0e6915d8b6c242887f74adb4120f9, reversing
changes made to afb66a5a598ce4ac74ad84b125a5abf046dcf5aa.
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`set_callback` and `skip_callback`
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And raise `ArgumentError` when passing string to define callback.
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Some methods were added to public API in
5b14129d8d4ad302b4e11df6bd5c7891b75f393c and they should be not part of
the public API.
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It's questionable whether this is a good thing -- it forces any later/
inner callback to handle multiple invocations, along with the actual
wrapped action. But it worked prior to 871ca21f6a1d65c0ec78cb5a9641411e2210460b,
so we shouldn't break it unintentionally.
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Callbacks are everywhere, so it's better if we can avoid making a mess
of the backtrace just because we've passed through a callback hook.
I'm making no effort to the before/after invocations: those only affect
backtraces while they're running. The calls that matter are the ones
that remain on the call stack after run_callbacks yields: around
callbacks, and internal book-keeping around the before/afters.
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Style/SpaceBeforeBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideHashLiteralBraces
Fix all violations in the repository.
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A few have been left for aesthetic reasons, but have made a pass
and removed most of them.
Note that if the method `foo` returns an array, `foo << 1`
is a regular push, nothing to do with assignments, so
no self required.
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The current code base is not uniform. After some discussion,
we have chosen to go with double quotes by default.
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Move from `AS::Callbacks::CallbackChain.halt_and_display_warning_on_return_false`
to `AS::Callbacks.halt_and_display_warning_on_return_false` base on
[this
discussion](https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/21218#discussion_r39354580)
Fix the documentation broken by 0a120a818d413c64ff9867125f0b03788fc306f8
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Rails 4.2.3 AS::Callbacks will not halt chain if `false` is returned.
That is the behavior of specific callbacks like AR::Callbacks and
AM::Callbacks.
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At present, if you skip a callback that hasn't been defined,
activesupport callbacks silently does nothing. However, it's easy to
mistype the name of a callback and mistakenly think that it's being
skipped, when it is not.
This problem even exists in the current test suite.
CallbacksTest::SkipCallbacksTest#test_skip_person attempts to skip
callbacks that were never set up.
This PR changes `skip_callback` to raise an `ArgumentError` if the
specified callback cannot be found.
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This stems from [a comment](rails#17227 (comment)) by @dhh.
In summary:
* New Rails 5.0 apps will not accept `return false` as a way to halt callback chains, and will not display a deprecation warning.
* Existing apps ported to Rails 5.0 will still accept `return false` as a way to halt callback chains, albeit with a deprecation warning.
For this purpose, this commit introduces a Rails configuration option:
```ruby
config.active_support.halt_callback_chains_on_return_false
```
For new Rails 5.0 apps, this option will be set to `false` by a new initializer
`config/initializers/callback_terminator.rb`:
```ruby
Rails.application.config.active_support.halt_callback_chains_on_return_false = false
```
For existing apps ported to Rails 5.0, the initializers above will not exist.
Even running `rake rails:update` will not create this initializer.
Since the default value of `halt_callback_chains_on_return_false` is set to
`true`, these apps will still accept `return true` as a way to halt callback
chains, displaying a deprecation warning.
Developers will be able to switch to the new behavior (and stop the warning)
by manually adding the line above to their `config/application.rb`.
A gist with the suggested release notes to add to Rails 5.0 after this
commit is available at https://gist.github.com/claudiob/614c59409fb7d11f2931
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This commit changes arguments and default value of CallbackChain's :terminator
option.
After this commit, Chains of callbacks defined **without** an explicit
`:terminator` option will be halted as soon as a `before_` callback throws
`:abort`.
Chains of callbacks defined **with** a `:terminator` option will maintain their
existing behavior of halting as soon as a `before_` callback matches the
terminator's expectation. For instance, ActiveModel's callbacks will still
halt the chain when a `before_` callback returns `false`.
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`define_callbacks` from `ActiveSupport::Callbacks` accepts the
`:skip_after_callbacks_if_terminated` option since #4866 but the option
is not tested anywhere.
This commit adds tests and fixes documentation for the option, making it clear
that halting a callback chain only stops following `before_` and `around_`
callbacks by default.
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* master:
private callback methods should work
Update mail to minimum version 2.5.4
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* master:
adding more callback type coverage
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object filter
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This allows you to skip callbacks that are defined by objects, e.g. for
`ActionController`:
skip_after_filter MySpecialFilter
Previously this didn't work due to a bug in how Rails compared callbacks
in `Callback#matches?`. When a callback is compiled, if it's an object
filter (i.e. not a method, proc, etc.), `Callback` now defines a method on
`@klass` that is derived from the class name rather than `@callback_id`.
So, when `skip_callback` tries to find the appropriate callback to
remove, `Callback` can regenerate the method name for the filter
object and return the correct value for `Callback#matches?`.
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When you add one callack in two separate `set_callback` calls - it is
only called once.
When you do it in one `set_callback` call - it is called twice.
This violates the principle of least astonishment for me. Duplicating
callback is usually an error. There is a correct and obvious way to do
anything without this "feature".
If you want to do
before_save :clear_balance, :calculate_tax, :clear_balance
or whatever, you should better do
before_save :carefully_calculate_tax
def carefully_calculate_tax
clear_balance
calculate_tax
clear_balance
end
And this even opens gates for some advanced refactorings, unlike the
first approach.
My assumptions are:
- Principle of least astonishment is violated, when callbacks are either
prevented from duplication, or not.
- Duplicating callbacks is usually an error. When it is intentional -
it's a smell of a bad design and can be approached without abusing
this "feature".
My suggestion is: do not allow duplicating callbacks in one callback
call, like it is not allowed in separate callbacks call.
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