| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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everywhere(the default behaviour now) instead of mix of /bin/rake /bin/rails everywhere
[Ryo Hashimoto & Vipul A M]
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If running `bin/rails t test/models/bunny_test.rb:` we'd implicitly run all the
tests in the bunny test. I now highly doubt that people would ever put in a line
filter without a line *and* want that to mean run all tests in that file.
Instead, change regex to require a line digit after the colon, so runs without a
line at the end would fail to require the test file.
This also has the side benefit of breaking requiring a file with many colons:
`bin/rails t test/models/bunny_test.rb:::::::::::::4`
Think this means I've had enough colonoscopy to last me through the year :)
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Closes #23027.
This does not restore complete backwards compatibility. It simply passes
the contets of the `TEST` env to the new runner.
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This removes the following warnings.
```
test/application/rake_test.rb:33: warning: ambiguous first argument; put parentheses or a space even after `/' operator
test/application/rake_test.rb:43: warning: ambiguous first argument; put parentheses or a space even after `/' operator
```
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- Avoided truncating all files if no ENV['LOGS'] specified
- Updated task to accept LOGS=all for truncating all files from log/ i.e. log/*log
- If no LOGS specified will truncates standard environment log files i.e. 'development,test,production'
- CHANGELOG & guide update added
- bin/setup test cases fixed
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Prevent destructive action on production database
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This PR introduces a key/value type store to Active Record that can be used for storing internal values. It is an alternative implementation to #21237 cc @sgrif @matthewd.
It is possible to run your tests against your production database by accident right now. While infrequently, but as an anecdotal data point, Heroku receives a non-trivial number of requests for a database restore due to this happening. In these cases the loss can be large.
To prevent against running tests against production we can store the "environment" version that was used when migrating the database in a new internal table. Before executing tests we can see if the database is a listed in `protected_environments` and abort. There is a manual escape valve to force this check from happening with environment variable `DISABLE_DATABASE_ENVIRONMENT_CHECK=1`.
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In high volume applications it can be very difficult to figure out what is happening in logs because each request is not easily identified. For example 3 requests could look something like this:
```
Started GET "/" for 72.48.77.213 at 2016-01-06 20:30:21 +0000
Rendered welcome/index.html.erb within layouts/application (0.1ms)
Started GET "/" for 72.48.77.213 at 2016-01-06 20:30:22 +0000
Started GET "/" for 72.48.77.213 at 2016-01-06 20:30:23 +0000
Rendered welcome/index.html.erb within layouts/application (0.1ms)
Processing by WelcomeController#index as HTML
Completed 200 OK in 5ms (Views: 3.8ms | ActiveRecord: 0.0ms)
Processing by WelcomeController#index as HTML
Rendered welcome/index.html.erb within layouts/application (0.1ms)
Completed 200 OK in 5ms (Views: 3.8ms | ActiveRecord: 0.0ms)
Processing by WelcomeController#index as HTML
Completed 200 OK in 5ms (Views: 3.8ms | ActiveRecord: 0.0ms)
```
The `:request_id` log tag ensures that each request is tagged with a unique identifier. While they are still interleaved it is possible to figure out which lines belong to which requests. Like:
```
[c6034478-4026-4ded-9e3c-088c76d056f1] Started GET "/" for 72.48.77.213 at 2016-01-06 20:30:21 +0000
[c6034478-4026-4ded-9e3c-088c76d056f1] Rendered welcome/index.html.erb within layouts/application (0.1ms)
[abuqw781-5026-6ded-7e2v-788c7md0L6fQ] Started GET "/" for 72.48.77.213 at 2016-01-06 20:30:22 +0000
[acfab2a7-f1b7-4e15-8bf6-cdaa008d102c] Started GET "/" for 72.48.77.213 at 2016-01-06 20:30:23 +0000
[abuqw781-5026-6ded-7e2v-788c7md0L6fQ] Rendered welcome/index.html.erb within layouts/application (0.1ms)
[c6034478-4026-4ded-9e3c-088c76d056f1] Processing by WelcomeController#index as HTML
[c6034478-4026-4ded-9e3c-088c76d056f1] Completed 200 OK in 5ms (Views: 3.8ms | ActiveRecord: 0.0ms)
[abuqw781-5026-6ded-7e2v-788c7md0L6fQ] Processing by WelcomeController#index as HTML
[abuqw781-5026-6ded-7e2v-788c7md0L6fQ] Rendered welcome/index.html.erb within layouts/application (0.1ms)
[abuqw781-5026-6ded-7e2v-788c7md0L6fQ] Completed 200 OK in 5ms (Views: 3.8ms | ActiveRecord: 0.0ms)
[acfab2a7-f1b7-4e15-8bf6-cdaa008d102c] Processing by WelcomeController#index as HTML
[acfab2a7-f1b7-4e15-8bf6-cdaa008d102c] Completed 200 OK in 5ms (Views: 3.8ms | ActiveRecord: 0.0ms)
```
Now if you have the logs and you find this unique ID you can filter to only look at information from that request. So a filtered log output would be very clear:
```
[c6034478-4026-4ded-9e3c-088c76d056f1] Started GET "/" for 72.48.77.213 at 2016-01-06 20:30:21 +0000
[c6034478-4026-4ded-9e3c-088c76d056f1] Rendered welcome/index.html.erb within layouts/application (0.1ms)
[c6034478-4026-4ded-9e3c-088c76d056f1] Processing by WelcomeController#index as HTML
[c6034478-4026-4ded-9e3c-088c76d056f1] Completed 200 OK in 5ms (Views: 3.8ms | ActiveRecord: 0.0ms)
```
In addition to this benefit the `:request_id` can be set via the `X-Request-ID` header so that the same request could be traced between multiple components. For example a request comes in Nginx (or another load balancer) could assign a request id. As the load balancer processes the request I can log using that id, then when the request is passed on to Rails, the same id is used. That way if a problem is determined to be not caused in Rails it could be traced back to other components with the same ID. You can set a value in nginx for example using something like this:
```
location / {
proxy_pass http://upstream;
proxy_set_header X-Request-Id $pid-$msec-$remote_addr-$request_length;
}
# http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17748735/setting-a-trace-id-in-nginx-load-balancer
```
Heroku sets this header value so problems like timeouts that are logged by like router can be traced back to specific request within the application.
Whether you are using components that are setting request ID or not, all production applications can benefit from the additional debugging information of having a unique identifier for all requests. This change will only affect new applications, anyone can opt out by commenting or removing the line in `config/production.rb`.
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y-yagi/make_generated_controller_test_file_work_correctly
make generated controller test work correctly
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Since the `#file_name` that not consideration for the namespace, if generate a controller with a namespace,
not the correct url helper generation, it had become an error to run the test.
Modified to generate the correct url helper, even if it is produced a namespace with controller.
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Per-form CSRF tokens
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Add tests for detecting bad options for runner
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The errors message only was not displayed, as if it did not use the inline reporting,
modified to also information the method name and the like in error are displayed.
```
# before
Failed assertion, no message given.
bin/rails test test/models/user_test.rb:5
```
```
# after
Failure:
UserTest#test_the_truth:
Failed assertion, no message given.
bin/rails test test/models/user_test.rb:5
```
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Application* parent
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Introduce ApplicationRecord, an Active Record layer supertype
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It's pretty common for folks to monkey patch `ActiveRecord::Base` to
work around an issue or introduce extra functionality. Instead of
shoving even more stuff in `ActiveRecord::Base`, `ApplicationRecord` can
hold all those custom work the apps may need.
Now, we don't wanna encourage all of the application models to inherit
from `ActiveRecord::Base`, but we can encourage all the models that do,
to inherit from `ApplicationRecord`.
Newly generated applications have `app/models/application_record.rb`
present by default. The model generators are smart enough to recognize
that newly generated models have to inherit from `ApplicationRecord`,
but only if it's present.
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Running railties generated app tests in development env can cause unintended
consequences. The environments are different and tests aren't meant to be
run in development mode.
The changes to the generator exposed this issue where the random test
order in the generated apps could cause problems when those tests are
run in development mode.
Particularly we saw failures in `railties/test/application/rake_test.rb`
generated apps that used the scaffold to create applications and then
run the migration and immediately run the tests. The error we saw was
`ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound: Couldn't find User with 'id'=980190962`
and seemed to only occur if the destroy test ran first. I'm not entirely
sure _why_ this causes that error to be thrown but I believe it is
related to the environments being different.
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That would make possible to use it with action cable configuration.
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Apart from specific versioning support, our tests should focus on the
behaviour of whatever version they're accompanying, regardless of when
they were written.
Application code should *not* do this.
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LoadingTest#test_does_not_reload_constants_on_development_if_custom_file_watcher_always_returns_false in railties/test/application/loading_test.rb is failing with: `NoMethodError: undefined method 'execute' for #<#<Class:0x00000002465a30>:0x00000001f79698>`
The test creates an anonymous class to be used as a custom file watcher using `config.file_watcher=`. Per the Rails guides for Configuring, the class set to `config.file_watcher` “Must conform to ActiveSupport::FileUpdateChecker API”. Per the docs for ActiveSupport::FileUpdateChecker, the API depends on four methods: #initialize, #updated?, #execute, and #execute_if_updated. The custom file watcher in the failing test only implements the first two methods.
This pull request adds #execute and #execute_if_updated to the custom file_watcher, conforming it to the ActiveSupport::FileUpdateChecker API, and passing the test.
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Also call it `public_server.index_name` so it'll make more sense.
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When running tests, the Rails test runner would report the start of the test method as the test failure.
For this test:
```ruby
1 require 'test_helper
2
3 class BunnyTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
4 test "something failing" do
5 assert false, 'This failed'
6 end
7 end
```
The runner outputs 5 instead of 4:
```
............................................F
This failed
bin/rails test test/models/bunny_test.rb:5
........
```
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Forgot to do it in 748b2f9, when deprecating `serve_static_files`.
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As discussed in https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/19135#issuecomment-153385986.
Replaces `serve_static_files` to unify the static options under the `public_file_server` wing.
Deprecates `serve_static_files` accessors, but make them use the newer config internally.
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`1_valid_people_have_last_names.rb` and
`20150823202140_create_users.rb` are valid migration file name.
But `1_valid_people_have_last_names.rb` is rendered as
`********** NO FILE **********` when `rake db:migrate:status`.
Fix to this bug, this commit includes
* define some API private methdos and a Constant
`match_to_migration_filename?`, `parse_migration_filename`, and
`MigrationFilenameRegexp`
* use these methods in `db:migrate:status` task
Example:
These files are in `db/migrate`
* 1_valid_people_have_last_names.rb
* 20150819202140_irreversible_migration.rb
* 20150823202140_add_admin_flag_to_users.rb
* 20150823202141_migration_tests.rb
* 2_we_need_reminders.rb
* 3_innocent_jointable.rb
we can migrate all of them.
Before
```shell
$ bundle exec rake db:migrate:status
...
Status Migration ID Migration Name
--------------------------------------------------
up 001 ********** NO FILE **********
up 002 ********** NO FILE **********
up 003 ********** NO FILE **********
up 20150819202140 Irreversible migration
up 20150823202140 Add admin flag to users
up 20150823202141 Migration tests
```
After
```shell
$ bundle exec rake db:migrate:status
...
Status Migration ID Migration Name
--------------------------------------------------
up 001 Valid people have last names
up 002 We need reminders
up 003 Innocent jointable
up 20150819202140 Irreversible migration
up 20150823202140 Add admin flag to users
up 20150823202141 Migration tests
```
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If `SECRET_KEY_BASE` or other `secret` gets passed as other then string
we need to raise `ArgumentError` to know that it's a wrong argument.
Closes #22072
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Explicitly exit with status "1" for create and drop failures
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* If the drop task fails for a reason other than the database not
existing, processing should end. This is indicated by a non-zero
exit status.
* Since the backtrace is already printed to screen, we forgo
printing it again by using an explicit call to `exit`.
* :warning: This modifies the behavior of the db:create task slightly in
that the stack trace is no longer printed by default. If the `--trace`
option is used, it will print the trace _after_ the error message.
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* If the create task fails for a reason other than the database already
existing, processing should end. This is indicated by a non-zero exit
status.
* Since the backtrace is already printed to screen, we forgo printing it
again by using an explicit call to `exit`.
* :warning: This modifies the behavior of the db:create task slightly in
that the stack trace is no longer printed by default. If the `--trace`
option is used, it will print the trace _after_ the error message.
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* Previously the sqlite3 adapter could not "fail" on drop. Now an error
is raised when no file exists.
* Also updates purge to be resilient of drop failures. This is how purge
is expected to behave.
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* Running the db:create task when the database already exists isn't
really an error case. That is processing may proceed in this case
because the database exists as requested. So let's validate that
behavior with a test.
* Likewise, if the database doesn't exist when running the db:drop task
processing may continue as the requested condition is already met.
Thus a test.
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Add basic support for access control headers to ActionDispatch::Static
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Now ActionDispatch::Static can accept HTTP headers so that developers
will have control of returning arbitrary headers like
'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' when a response is delivered. They can
be configured through `#config.public_file_server.headers`:
config.public_file_server.headers = {
"Cache-Control" => "public, max-age=60",
"Access-Control-Allow-Origin" => "http://rubyonrails.org"
}
Also deprecate `config.static_cache_control` in favor of
`config.public_file_server.headers`.
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ActionMailer https on URL with force_ssl = true
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`config.force_ssl = true` will set
config.action_mailer.default_url_options = { protocol: 'https' }
If you have turned on force_ssl, and then gone to the effort of setting
config.action_mailer.default_url_options = {host: 'example.com'} then
you are probably pointing people back to your current app and want
https on that too.
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Lets us cut the verbose and straight up duplicated setup in 3 tests down to one line.
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