module ActiveRecord # = Active Record Errors # # Generic Active Record exception class. class ActiveRecordError < StandardError end # Raised when the single-table inheritance mechanism fails to locate the subclass # (for example due to improper usage of column that +inheritance_column+ points to). class SubclassNotFound < ActiveRecordError #:nodoc: end # Raised when an object assigned to an association has an incorrect type. # # class Ticket < ActiveRecord::Base # has_many :patches # end # # class Patch < ActiveRecord::Base # belongs_to :ticket # end # # # Comments are not patches, this assignment raises AssociationTypeMismatch. # @ticket.patches << Comment.new(:content => "Please attach tests to your patch.") class AssociationTypeMismatch < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when unserialized object's type mismatches one specified for serializable field. class SerializationTypeMismatch < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when adapter not specified on connection (or configuration file config/database.yml # misses adapter field). class AdapterNotSpecified < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when Active Record cannot find database adapter specified in config/database.yml or programmatically. class AdapterNotFound < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when connection to the database could not been established (for example when connection= # is given a nil object). class ConnectionNotEstablished < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when Active Record cannot find record by given id or set of ids. class RecordNotFound < ActiveRecordError end # Raised by ActiveRecord::Base.save! and ActiveRecord::Base.create! methods when record cannot be # saved because record is invalid. class RecordNotSaved < ActiveRecordError end # Raised by ActiveRecord::Base.destroy! when a call to destroy would return false. class RecordNotDestroyed < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when SQL statement cannot be executed by the database (for example, it's often the case for # MySQL when Ruby driver used is too old). class StatementInvalid < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when SQL statement is invalid and the application gets a blank result. class ThrowResult < ActiveRecordError end # Parent class for all specific exceptions which wrap database driver exceptions # provides access to the original exception also. class WrappedDatabaseException < StatementInvalid attr_reader :original_exception def initialize(message, original_exception) super(message) @original_exception = original_exception end end # Raised when a record cannot be inserted because it would violate a uniqueness constraint. class RecordNotUnique < WrappedDatabaseException end # Raised when a record cannot be inserted or updated because it references a non-existent record. class InvalidForeignKey < WrappedDatabaseException end # Raised when number of bind variables in statement given to :condition key (for example, # when using +find+ method) # does not match number of expected variables. # # For example, in # # Location.where("lat = ? AND lng = ?", 53.7362) # # two placeholders are given but only one variable to fill them. class PreparedStatementInvalid < ActiveRecordError end # Raised on attempt to save stale record. Record is stale when it's being saved in another query after # instantiation, for example, when two users edit the same wiki page and one starts editing and saves # the page before the other. # # Read more about optimistic locking in ActiveRecord::Locking module RDoc. class StaleObjectError < ActiveRecordError attr_reader :record, :attempted_action def initialize(record, attempted_action) super("Attempted to #{attempted_action} a stale object: #{record.class.name}") @record = record @attempted_action = attempted_action end end # Raised when association is being configured improperly or # user tries to use offset and limit together with has_many or has_and_belongs_to_many associations. class ConfigurationError < ActiveRecordError end # Raised on attempt to update record that is instantiated as read only. class ReadOnlyRecord < ActiveRecordError end # ActiveRecord::Transactions::ClassMethods.transaction uses this exception # to distinguish a deliberate rollback from other exceptional situations. # Normally, raising an exception will cause the +transaction+ method to rollback # the database transaction *and* pass on the exception. But if you raise an # ActiveRecord::Rollback exception, then the database transaction will be rolled back, # without passing on the exception. # # For example, you could do this in your controller to rollback a transaction: # # class BooksController < ActionController::Base # def create # Book.transaction do # book = Book.new(params[:book]) # book.save! # if today_is_friday? # # The system must fail on Friday so that our support department # # won't be out of job. We silently rollback this transaction # # without telling the user. # raise ActiveRecord::Rollback, "Call tech support!" # end # end # # ActiveRecord::Rollback is the only exception that won't be passed on # # by ActiveRecord::Base.transaction, so this line will still be reached # # even on Friday. # redirect_to root_url # end # end class Rollback < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when attribute has a name reserved by Active Record (when attribute has name of one of Active Record instance methods). class DangerousAttributeError < ActiveRecordError end # Raised when unknown attributes are supplied via mass assignment. class UnknownAttributeError < NoMethodError end # Raised when an error occurred while doing a mass assignment to an attribute through the # attributes= method. The exception has an +attribute+ property that is the name of the # offending attribute. class AttributeAssignmentError < ActiveRecordError attr_reader :exception, :attribute def initialize(message, exception, attribute) super(message) @exception = exception @attribute = attribute end end # Raised when there are multiple errors while doing a mass assignment through the +attributes+ # method. The exception has an +errors+ property that contains an array of AttributeAssignmentError # objects, each corresponding to the error while assigning to an attribute. class MultiparameterAssignmentErrors < ActiveRecordError attr_reader :errors def initialize(errors) @errors = errors end end # Raised when a primary key is needed, but there is not one specified in the schema or model. class UnknownPrimaryKey < ActiveRecordError attr_reader :model def initialize(model) super("Unknown primary key for table #{model.table_name} in model #{model}.") @model = model end end class ImmutableRelation < ActiveRecordError end class TransactionIsolationError < ActiveRecordError end end