# frozen_string_literal: true require "active_record" require "rails" require "active_model/railtie" # For now, action_controller must always be present with # Rails, so let's make sure that it gets required before # here. This is needed for correctly setting up the middleware. # In the future, this might become an optional require. require "action_controller/railtie" module ActiveRecord # = Active Record Railtie class Railtie < Rails::Railtie # :nodoc: config.active_record = ActiveSupport::OrderedOptions.new config.app_generators.orm :active_record, migration: true, timestamps: true config.action_dispatch.rescue_responses.merge!( "ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound" => :not_found, "ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError" => :conflict, "ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid" => :unprocessable_entity, "ActiveRecord::RecordNotSaved" => :unprocessable_entity ) config.active_record.use_schema_cache_dump = true config.active_record.maintain_test_schema = true config.active_record.sqlite3 = ActiveSupport::OrderedOptions.new config.active_record.sqlite3.represent_boolean_as_integer = nil config.eager_load_namespaces << ActiveRecord rake_tasks do namespace :db do task :load_config do ActiveRecord::Tasks::DatabaseTasks.database_configuration = Rails.application.config.database_configuration if defined?(ENGINE_ROOT) && engine = Rails::Engine.find(ENGINE_ROOT) if engine.paths["db/migrate"].existent ActiveRecord::Tasks::DatabaseTasks.migrations_paths += engine.paths["db/migrate"].to_a end end end end load "active_record/railties/databases.rake" end # When loading console, force ActiveRecord::Base to be loaded # to avoid cross references when loading a constant for the # first time. Also, make it output to STDERR. console do |app| require "active_record/railties/console_sandbox" if app.sandbox? require "active_record/base" unless ActiveSupport::Logger.logger_outputs_to?(Rails.logger, STDERR, STDOUT) console = ActiveSupport::Logger.new(STDERR) Rails.logger.extend ActiveSupport::Logger.broadcast console end end runner do require "active_record/base" end initializer "active_record.initialize_timezone" do ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do self.time_zone_aware_attributes = true self.default_timezone = :utc end end initializer "active_record.logger" do ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) { self.logger ||= ::Rails.logger } end initializer "active_record.migration_error" do if config.active_record.delete(:migration_error) == :page_load config.app_middleware.insert_after ::ActionDispatch::Callbacks, ActiveRecord::Migration::CheckPending end end initializer "active_record.check_schema_cache_dump" do if config.active_record.delete(:use_schema_cache_dump) config.after_initialize do |app| ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do filename = File.join(app.config.paths["db"].first, "schema_cache.yml") if File.file?(filename) current_version = ActiveRecord::Migrator.current_version next if current_version.nil? cache = YAML.load(File.read(filename)) if cache.version == current_version connection.schema_cache = cache connection_pool.schema_cache = cache.dup else warn "Ignoring db/schema_cache.yml because it has expired. The current schema version is #{current_version}, but the one in the cache is #{cache.version}." end end end end end end initializer "active_record.warn_on_records_fetched_greater_than" do if config.active_record.warn_on_records_fetched_greater_than ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do require "active_record/relation/record_fetch_warning" end end end initializer "active_record.set_configs" do |app| ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do configs = app.config.active_record.dup configs.delete(:sqlite3) configs.each do |k, v| send "#{k}=", v end end end # This sets the database configuration from Configuration#database_configuration # and then establishes the connection. initializer "active_record.initialize_database" do ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do self.configurations = Rails.application.config.database_configuration begin establish_connection rescue ActiveRecord::NoDatabaseError warn <<-end_warning Oops - You have a database configured, but it doesn't exist yet! Here's how to get started: 1. Configure your database in config/database.yml. 2. Run `bin/rails db:create` to create the database. 3. Run `bin/rails db:setup` to load your database schema. end_warning raise end end end # Expose database runtime to controller for logging. initializer "active_record.log_runtime" do require "active_record/railties/controller_runtime" ActiveSupport.on_load(:action_controller) do include ActiveRecord::Railties::ControllerRuntime end end initializer "active_record.set_reloader_hooks" do ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do ActiveSupport::Reloader.before_class_unload do if ActiveRecord::Base.connected? ActiveRecord::Base.clear_cache! ActiveRecord::Base.clear_reloadable_connections! end end end end initializer "active_record.set_executor_hooks" do ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do ActiveRecord::QueryCache.install_executor_hooks end end initializer "active_record.add_watchable_files" do |app| path = app.paths["db"].first config.watchable_files.concat ["#{path}/schema.rb", "#{path}/structure.sql"] end initializer "active_record.clear_active_connections" do config.after_initialize do ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do # Ideally the application doesn't connect to the database during boot, # but sometimes it does. In case it did, we want to empty out the # connection pools so that a non-database-using process (e.g. a master # process in a forking server model) doesn't retain a needless # connection. If it was needed, the incremental cost of reestablishing # this connection is trivial: the rest of the pool would need to be # populated anyway. clear_active_connections! flush_idle_connections! end end end initializer "active_record.check_represent_sqlite3_boolean_as_integer" do config.after_initialize do ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record_sqlite3adapter) do represent_boolean_as_integer = Rails.application.config.active_record.sqlite3.delete(:represent_boolean_as_integer) unless represent_boolean_as_integer.nil? ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLite3Adapter.represent_boolean_as_integer = represent_boolean_as_integer end unless ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLite3Adapter.represent_boolean_as_integer ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn <<-MSG Leaving `ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLite3Adapter.represent_boolean_as_integer` set to false is deprecated. SQLite databases have used 't' and 'f' to serialize boolean values and must have old data converted to 1 and 0 (its native boolean serialization) before setting this flag to true. Conversion can be accomplished by setting up a rake task which runs ExampleModel.where("boolean_column = 't'").update_all(boolean_column: 1) ExampleModel.where("boolean_column = 'f'").update_all(boolean_column: 0) for all models and all boolean columns, after which the flag must be set to true by adding the following to your application.rb file: Rails.application.config.active_record.sqlite3.represent_boolean_as_integer = true MSG end end end end end end