| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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It includes via `require "abstract_unit"`.
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For parity with Ruby's Time::at
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Clearer error message in assert_changes
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When `to:` is passed to `assert_changes`, it now prints the well-known `"Expected: x\n Actual: y"` message.
Before, the message only contained the actual value.
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In the app I'm working on I've wished that index_by had a buddy that would
assign the hash value instead of the key multiple times.
Enter index_with. Useful when building a hash from a static list of
symbols. Before you'd do:
```ruby
POST_ATTRIBUTES.map { |attr_name| [ attr_name, public_send(attr_name) ] }.to_h
```
But now that's a little clearer and faster with:
````ruby
POST_ATTRIBUTES.index_with { |attr_name| public_send(attr_name) }
```
It's also useful when you have an enumerable that should be converted to a hash,
but you don't want to muddle the code up with the overhead that it takes to create
that hash. So before, that's:
```ruby
WEEKDAYS.each_with_object(Hash.new) do |day, intervals|
intervals[day] = [ Interval.all_day ]
end
```
And now it's just:
```ruby
WEEKDAYS.index_with([ Interval.all_day ])
```
It's also nice to quickly get a hash with either nil, [], or {} as the value.
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Fixes #32928.
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Follow up of #32605.
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Follow up of #32034.
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See #29632 for details. In short, it's possible to enter `LoadError#is_missing?` when `LoadError#path` returns `nil`, leading to `path.sub` throwing an none-to-helpful `NoMethodError`.
This tiniest of patch inserts `#to_s` before the `sub` call to make sure it succeeds. Affected surface area should be just as tiny since something has already gone wrong to get us into `#is_missing?` and the current behavior when `#path` returns `nil` seems clearly not intended.
[Gannon McGibbon + Neil Souza]
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when connection_pool is not installed.
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- In #32472 I introduced a fix in order for all `after_teardown` method provided by libraries and Rails to run, even if the application's `teardown` method raised an error (That's the default minitest behavior). However this change wasn't enough and doesn't take in consideration the ancestors chain.
If a library's module containing an `after_teardown` method get included after the `SetupAndTeardown` module (one example is the [ActiveRecord::TestFixtures module](https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/7d2400ab61c8e3ed95e14d03ba3844e8ba2e36e4/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb#L855-L856), then the ancestors of the test class would look something like
```ruby
class MyTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
end
puts MyTest.ancestors # [MyTest, ActiveSupport::TestCase, ActiveRecord::TestFixtures, ActiveSupport::Testing::SetupAndTeardown]
```
Any class/module in the ancestors chain that are **before** the `ActiveSupport::Testing::SetupAndTeardown` will behave incorrectly:
- Their `before_setup` method will get called **after** all regular setup method
- Their `after_teardown` method won't even get called in case an exception is raised inside a regular's test `teardown`
A simple reproduction script of the problem here https://gist.github.com/Edouard-chin/70705542a59a8593f619b02e1c0a188c
- One solution to this problem is to have the `AS::SetupAndTeardown` module be the very first in the ancestors chain. By doing that we ensure that no `before_setup` / `after_teardown` get executed prior to running the teardown callbacks
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Fix name of the test added by #32613
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This commit fix pattern of filenames for `CustomCops/AssertNot` and
`CustomCops/RefuteNot`.
rubocop should check every file under `test/`.
Related to #32441, #32605
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Add RuboCop for `assert_not` over `assert !`
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This autocorrects the violations after adding a custom cop in
3305c78dcd.
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Before this change missing timezone data for any of the time zones
defined in `ActiveSupport::Timezone::MAPPING` caused a `comparison of
NilClass with ActiveSupport::TimeZone failed` exception.
Attempting to get a timezone by passing a number/duration to `[]` or
calling `all` directly will try to sort sort the values of `zones_map`.
Those values are initialized by the return value of `create(zonename)`
which returns `nil` if `TZInfo` is unable to find the timezone
information.
In our case the exception was triggered by an outdated tzdata package
which did not include information for the "recently" added time zones.
Before 078421bacba178eac6a8e607b16f3f4511c5d72f `zones_map` only
returned the information that have been loaded into `@lazy_zone_map`
which ignored time zones for which the data could not be loaded, this
change restores the previous behaviour.
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Ruby 2.6.0 warns about this.
``` ruby -v
ruby 2.6.0dev (2018-04-04 trunk 63085) [x86_64-linux]
```
Before, see:
https://travis-ci.org/rails/rails/jobs/365740163#L1262-L1264
https://travis-ci.org/rails/rails/jobs/365944863#L2121-L2174
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Namespace not working in RedisCacheStore#clear method. Bacause
namespace = merged_options(options)[namespace]
is always nil, Correct is
namespace = merged_options(options)[:namespace]
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`SecureRandom.byes` was added in Ruby 2.4. So, 5-2-stable build is broken
because using `SecureRandom.bytes`.
https://travis-ci.org/rails/rails/jobs/365740667
Also, `SecureRandom.byes` seems to an undocumented method.
If need random binary strings, should use `SecureRandom.random_bytes`.
https://github.com/ruby/ruby/blob/trunk/lib/securerandom.rb
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Fix ActiveSupport::Cache compression
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(See previous commit for a description of the issue)
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On Rails 5.2, when compression is enabled (which it is by default),
the actual value being written to the underlying storage is actually
_bigger_ than the uncompressed raw value.
This is because the `@marshaled_value` instance variable (typically)
gets serialized with the entry object, which is then written to the
underlying storage, essentially double-storing every value (once
uncompressed, once possibly compressed).
This regression was introduced in #32254.
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Define callbacks on descendants.
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We set callbacks on all descendants, so we need to make sure that they are also defined on all descendants as well.
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Because this class includes not only `assert_difference` but also tests
of other assertion methods.
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If you have a regular test that have a teardown block, and for any reason an exception get raised, ActiveSupport will not run subsequent after_teardown method provided by other module or gems.
One of them being the ActiveRecord::TestFixtures which won't rollback the transation when the test ends making all subsequent test to be in a weird state.
The default implementation of minitest is to run all teardown methods from the user's test, rescue all exceptions, run all after_teardown methods provided by libraries and finally re-raise the exception that happened in the user's teardown method.
Rails should do the same.
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73e7aab behaved as expected on codeship, failing the build with
exactly these RuboCop violations. Hopefully `rubocop -a` will
have been enough to get a passing build!
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This prevents duplication of code.
Prevent duplication of tests by moving them to `DateAndTimeBehavior`.
Related to #32185.
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Add `before?` and `after?` methods to date and time classes
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Equality comparisons between dates and times can take some extra time to
comprehend. I tend to think of a date or time as "before" or "after"
another date or time, but I naturally read `<` and `>` as "less than"
and "greater than." This change seeks to make date/time comparisons more
human readable.
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Fix Cache `read_multi` with local_cache bug, should returns raw value, not `ActiveSupport::Cache::Entry` instance.
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It should returns raw value, not instance of `ActiveSupport::Cache::Entry`.
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Since `Redis#call` duck types as a Proc, we'd call `#call` on it,
thinking it's a Proc. Fixed by check for the Proc explicitly instead of
duck typing on `#call`.
References #32233
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Previously, URI.enscape could handle Unicode input (without any actual
escaped characters), or input with escaped characters (but no actual
Unicode characters) - not both.
URI.unescape("\xe3\x83\x90") # => "バ"
URI.unescape("%E3%83%90") # => "バ"
URI.unescape("\xe3\x83\x90%E3%83%90") # =>
# Encoding::CompatibilityError
We need to let `gsub` handle this for us, and then force back to the
original encoding of the input. The result String will be mangled if
the percent-encoded characters don't conform to the encoding of the
String itself, but that goes without saying.
Signed-off-by: Ashe Connor <ashe@kivikakk.ee>
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Numeric#positive? and Numeric#negative? was added to Ruby since 2.3,
see https://github.com/ruby/ruby/blob/ruby_2_3/NEWS
Rails 6 requires Ruby 2.4.1+ since https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/32034
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Ruby 2.4+ provides `Hash#compact` and `Hash#compact!` natively,
so `active_support/core_ext/hash/compact` is no longer necessary.
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Since Rails 6 requires Ruby 2.4.1+.
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https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12752
https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.4.0/String.html#method-i-unpack1
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correct value
Remove extra comments `# Asking for private method` in activesupport/test/core_ext/module_test.rb
Improve docs of using `delegate` with `:private`
Update changelog of #31944
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Fixes #31909.
Closes #31911.
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Some timezones like `Europe/London` have multiple mappings in
`ActiveSupport::TimeZone::MAPPING` so return all of them instead
of the first one found by using `Hash#value`. e.g:
# Before
ActiveSupport::TimeZone.country_zones("GB") # => ["Edinburgh"]
# After
ActiveSupport::TimeZone.country_zones("GB") # => ["Edinburgh", "London"]
Fixes #31668.
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This faithfully preserves grapheme clusters (characters composed of other
characters and combining marks) and other multibyte characters.
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```ruby
"foo".freeze.strip_heredoc.frozen? # => true
```
Fixes the case where frozen string literals would inadvertently become
unfrozen:
```ruby
foo = <<-MSG.strip_heredoc
la la la
MSG
foo.frozen? # => false !??
```
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Skipping over 2.4.0 to sidestep the `"symbol_from_string".to_sym.dup` bug.
References #32028
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