module ActiveRecord # = Active Record RecordInvalid # # Raised by save! and create! when the record is invalid. Use the # +record+ method to retrieve the record which did not validate. # # begin # complex_operation_that_calls_save!_internally # rescue ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid => invalid # puts invalid.record.errors # end class RecordInvalid < ActiveRecordError attr_reader :record def initialize(record) @record = record errors = @record.errors.full_messages.join(", ") super(I18n.t("activerecord.errors.messages.record_invalid", :errors => errors)) end end # = Active Record Validations # # Active Record includes the majority of its validations from ActiveModel::Validations # all of which accept the :on argument to define the context where the # validations are active. Active Record will always supply either the context of # :create or :update dependent on whether the model is a # new_record?. module Validations extend ActiveSupport::Concern include ActiveModel::Validations module ClassMethods # Creates an object just like Base.create but calls save! instead of save # so an exception is raised if the record is invalid. def create!(attributes = nil, &block) if attributes.is_a?(Array) attributes.collect { |attr| create!(attr, &block) } else object = new(attributes) yield(object) if block_given? object.save! object end end end # The validation process on save can be skipped by passing :validate => false. The regular Base#save method is # replaced with this when the validations module is mixed in, which it is by default. def save(options={}) perform_validations(options) ? super : false end # Attempts to save the record just like Base#save but will raise a RecordInvalid exception instead of returning false # if the record is not valid. def save!(options={}) perform_validations(options) ? super : raise(RecordInvalid.new(self)) end # Runs all the specified validations and returns true if no errors were added otherwise false. # # ==== Arguments # # * context - Context to scope the execution of the validations. Default is nil. # If nil then the response of new_record? will determine the context. If new_record? # returns true the context will be :create, otherwise :update. Validation contexts # for each validation can be defined using the :on option def valid?(context = nil) context ||= (new_record? ? :create : :update) output = super(context) errors.empty? && output end protected def perform_validations(options={}) perform_validation = options[:validate] != false perform_validation ? valid?(options[:context]) : true end end end require "active_record/validations/associated" require "active_record/validations/uniqueness"