For example:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
default_scope -> { where published: true }
end
class Comment
belongs_to :post
end
When calling `Comment.join(:post)`, we expect to receive only
comments on published posts, since that is the default scope for
posts.
Before this change, the default scope from `Post` was not applied,
so we'd get comments on unpublished posts.
fixes#10669
While joining_values special treatment is given to string values.
By flattening the array it ensures that string values are detected
as strings and not arrays.
currently `post.comments.find(Comment.first.id)` would load all
comments for the given post to set the inverse association.
This has a huge performance penalty. Because if post has 100k
records and all these 100k records would be loaded in memory
even though the comment id was supplied.
Fix is to use in-memory records only if loaded? is true. Otherwise
load the records using full sql.
Fixes#10509
This reverts commit 2b817a5e89ac0e7aeb894a40ae7151a0cf3cef16, reversing
changes made to 353a398bee68c5ea99d76ac7601de0a5fef6f4a5.
Conflicts:
activerecord/CHANGELOG.md
Reason: the build broke
If I have a query that produces sql
`WHERE "users"."name" = 'a b'` then in the log all the
whitespace is being squeezed. So the sql that is printed in the
log is `WHERE "users"."name" = 'a b'`.
This can be confusing. This commit fixes it by ensuring that
whitespace is not squeezed.
fixes#10982
currently `post.comments.find(Comment.first.id)` would load all
comments for the given post to set the inverse association.
This has a huge performance penalty. Because if post has 100k
records and all these 100k records would be loaded in memory
even though the comment id was supplied.
Fix is to use in-memory records only if loaded? is true. Otherwise
load the records using full sql.
Fixes#10509
As you can also configure your database connection using `ENV["DATABASE_URL"]`,
the fixture setup can't reply on the `.configurations` Hash.
As the fixtures are only loaded when ActiveRecord is actually used
(`rails/test_help.rb`) it should be safe to drop the check for an existing configuration.
For example, you need to change this:
class Author < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :posts
has_many :taggings, :through => :posts
end
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one :tagging
has_many :taggings
end
class Tagging < ActiveRecord::Base
end
To this:
class Author < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :posts
has_many :taggings, :through => :posts, :source => :tagging
end
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one :tagging
has_many :taggings
end
class Tagging < ActiveRecord::Base
end
When then PostgreSQL visitor was [added](6b7fdf3bf3)
`add_column` was no longer receiving the column options directly. This
caused the options to be lost along the way.
When removing records from a `has_many` association it used
the `primary_key` defined on the association.
Our test suite didn't fail because on all occurences of `:primary_key`,
the specified column was available in both tables. This prevented the
code from raising an exception but it still behaved badly.
I added a test-case to prevent regressions that failed with:
```
1) Error:
HasManyAssociationsTest#test_has_many_assignment_with_custom_primary_key:
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid: SQLite3::SQLException: no such column: essays.first_name: UPDATE "essays" SET "writer_id" = NULL WHERE "essays"."writer_id" = ? AND "essays"."first_name" IS NULL
```
Call assume_migrated_upto_version on connection to prevent it from first
being picked up in method_missing. In the base class, Migration,
method_missing expects the argument to be a table name, and calls
proper_table_name on the arguments before sending to connection. If
table_name_prefix or table_name_suffix is used, the schema version changes
to prefix_version_suffix, breaking `rake test:prepare`.
Fixes#10411.
counter cache
At present, calling destroy multiple times on the same record results
in the belongs_to counter cache being decremented multiple times. With
this change the record is checked for whether it is already destroyed
prior to decrementing the counter cache.
fixes#10419
Following code should raise IrreversibleMigration. But the code was
failing since options is an array and not a hash.
def change
change_table :users do |t|
t.remove_index [:name, :email]
end
end
Fix was to check if the options is a Hash before operating on it.
For one-to-one nested associations, if you build the new (in-memory)
child object yourself before assignment, then the NestedAttributes
module will not overwrite it, e.g.:
class Member < ActiveRecord::Base
has_one :avatar
accepts_nested_attributes_for :avatar
def avatar
super || build_avatar(width: 200)
end
end
member = Member.new
member.avatar_attributes = {icon: 'sad'}
member.avatar.width # => 200