| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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This reverts commit bad3a120f1690f393d8f6204b3ceee60f0ce707b, reversing
changes made to 2384317465ccb1dfca456a2b7798714b99f32711.
Reason: Adding a new option in the API for something that can be done
with a `#presence` check could do.
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value. See also http://patshaughnessy.net/2014/1/9/how-big-is-a-bignum for smallest bignum value
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Using the method you're testing to generate expected
values can lead to bugs being masked.
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Fix an issue with JSON encoding of "Infinity" and "NaN" values
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- When `as_json` returns `Infinity` or `NaN` as the value of any of the key,
we don't used to call `as_json` on it as it was treated as primitive.
- This used to pass `Infinity` or `NaN` to `JSON.generate` and Ruby used
to throw an error for `Infinity/NaN not allowed in JSON.`
- This patch changes the code to call `as_json` on these primitives so
that they are converted to proper values before being passed to
`JSON.generate`.
- Fixes #26877.
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2.3: sprintf('%0.1f', 5.55) #=> "5.5"
2.4: sprintf('%0.1f', 5.55) #=> "5.6"
see: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/commit/6ed8c79ddb11ccfb580bb0a22b22cc1362250255 and
https://github.com/ruby/ruby/commit/295f60b94d5ff6551fab7c55e18d1ffa6a4cf7e3
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Previously `ActiveSupport::Duration.parse` used `Time.current` and
`Time#advance` to calculate the number of seconds in the duration
from an arbitrary collection of parts. However as `advance` tries to
be consistent across DST boundaries this meant that either the
duration was shorter or longer depending on the time of year.
This was fixed by using an absolute reference point in UTC which
isn't subject to DST transitions. An arbitrary date of Jan 1st, 2000
was chosen for no other reason that it seemed appropriate.
Additionally, duration parsing should now be marginally faster as we
are no longer creating instances of `ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone`
every time we parse a duration string.
Fixes #26941.
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Fix `ActiveSupport::TimeZone#strptime` cannot parse timestamps (%Q, %s)
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Fix copy_time_to: Copy nsec instead of usec
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`copy_time_to` is a helper function for date and time calculations.
It's being used by `prev_week`, `next_week` and `prev_weekday` to keep
the time fraction when jumping around between days.
Previously the nanoseconds part was lost during the operation. This
lead to problems in practice if you were using the `end_of_day`
calculation. Resulting in the time fraction of `end_of_day` not being
the same as next week's `end_of_day`.
With this fix `copy_time_to` doesn't forget the `nsec` digits.
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Mask forking filesystem event on JRuby.
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Wait for file events to propagated for slower Listen backends.
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https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12739
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Avoid bumping the class serial when invoking executor
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Turns out trying to cache on localtime with arguments is too hard
so we'll do it on DateAndTime::Compatibility#to_time instead.
This reverts commit 9ce2d1b1a43fc4ef3db59849b7412d30583a4074, reversing
changes made to 53ede1aff2025d4391d0e05ba471fdaf3110a99c.
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Fix `ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone#localtime`
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Previously memoization in `localtime` wasn't taking the `utc_offset`
parameter into account when returning a cached value. It now caches the
computed value depending on the `utc_offset` parameter, e.g:
Time.zone = "US/Eastern"
t = Time.zone.local(2016,5,2,11)
# => Mon, 02 May 2016 11:00:00 EDT -04:00
t.localtime(-7200)
# => 2016-05-02 13:00:00 -0200
t.localtime(-3600)
# => 2016-05-02 14:00:00 -0100
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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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Previously calls to `in` were being sent to the non-DST aware
method `Time#since` via `method_missing`. It is now aliased to
the DST aware `ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone#+` which handles
transitions across DST boundaries, e.g:
Time.zone = "US/Eastern"
t = Time.zone.local(2016,11,6,1)
# => Sun, 06 Nov 2016 01:00:00 EDT -05:00
t.in(1.hour)
# => Sun, 06 Nov 2016 01:00:00 EST -05:00
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`#fetch_multi` in case did not cache hit, to write a cache using the block value.
https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/master/activesupport/lib/active_support/cache.rb#L383..L384
Therefore, block is a need to pass always, I think should check first.
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assert [1, 3].includes?(2) fails with unhelpful "Asserting failed" message
assert_includes [1, 3], 2 fails with "Expected [1, 3] to include 2" which makes it easier to debug and more obvious what went wrong
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All indentation was normalized by rubocop auto-correct at 80e66cc4d90bf8c15d1a5f6e3152e90147f00772.
But comments was still kept absolute position. This commit aligns
comments with method definitions for consistency.
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key length
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Since keys are truncated, ruby 2.4 doesn't accept keys greater than their lenghts.
keys of same value but different lenght and greater than key size of cipher, produce the same results
as reproduced at https://gist.github.com/rhenium/b81355fe816dcfae459cc5eadfc4f6f9
Since our default cipher is 'aes-256-cbc', key length for which is 32 bytes, limit the length of key being passed to Encryptor to 32 bytes.
This continues to support backwards compat with any existing signed data, already encrupted and signed with 32+ byte keys.
Also fixes the passing of this value in multiple tests.
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If `from` is nil, in order to avoid the blank is showed.
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Remove duplicate test.
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We already test similar stuff in `test_really_long_keys` so removing
this extra and duplicated test.
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Style/SpaceBeforeBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideHashLiteralBraces
Fix all violations in the repository.
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Fix `thread_mattr_accessor` share variable superclass with subclass
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The current implementation of `thread_mattr_accessor` set variable
sharing superclass with subclass. So the method doesn't work as documented.
Precondition
class Account
thread_mattr_accessor :user
end
class Customer < Account
end
Account.user = "DHH"
Account.user #=> "DHH"
Customer.user = "Rafael"
Customer.user # => "Rafael"
Documented behavior
Account.user # => "DHH"
Actual behavior
Account.user # => "Rafael"
Current implementation set variable statically likes `Thread[:attr_Account_user]`,
and customer also use it.
Make variable name dynamic to use own thread-local variable.
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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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