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rails--rails/activerecord/CHANGELOG.md

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2020-11-02 16:12:47 -05:00
## Rails 6.1.0.rc1 (November 02, 2020) ##
* Add `connected_to_many` API.
This API allows applications to connect to multiple databases at once without switching all of them or implementing a deeply nested stack.
Before:
AnimalsRecord.connected_to(role: :reading) do
MealsRecord.connected_to(role: :reading) do
Dog.first # read from animals replica
Dinner.first # read from meals replica
Person.first # read from primary writer
end
end
After:
ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to_many([AnimalsRecord, MealsRecord], role: :reading) do
Dog.first # read from animals replica
Dinner.first # read from meals replica
Person.first # read from primary writer
end
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Add option to raise or log for `ActiveRecord::StrictLoadingViolationError`.
Some applications may not want to raise an error in production if using `strict_loading`. This would allow an application to set strict loading to log for the production environment while still raising in development and test environments.
Set `config.active_record.action_on_strict_loading_violation` to `:log` errors instead of raising.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
* Allow the inverse of a `has_one` association that was previously autosaved to be loaded.
Fixes #34255.
*Steven Weber*
* Optimise the length of index names for polymorphic references by using the reference name rather than the type and id column names.
Because the default behaviour when adding an index with multiple columns is to use all column names in the index name, this could frequently lead to overly long index names for polymorphic references which would fail the migration if it exceeded the database limit.
This change reduces the chance of that happening by using the reference name, e.g. `index_my_table_on_my_reference`.
Fixes #38655.
*Luke Redpath*
* MySQL: Uniqueness validator now respects default database collation,
no longer enforce case sensitive comparison by default.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Remove deprecated methods from `ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::DatabaseLimits`.
`column_name_length`
`table_name_length`
`columns_per_table`
`indexes_per_table`
`columns_per_multicolumn_index`
`sql_query_length`
`joins_per_query`
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Remove deprecated `ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::AbstractAdapter#supports_multi_insert?`.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Remove deprecated `ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::AbstractAdapter#supports_foreign_keys_in_create?`.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Remove deprecated `ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::PostgreSQLAdapter#supports_ranges?`.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Remove deprecated `ActiveRecord::Base#update_attributes` and `ActiveRecord::Base#update_attributes!`.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Remove deprecated `migrations_path` argument in `ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapter::SchemaStatements#assume_migrated_upto_version`.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Remove deprecated `config.active_record.sqlite3.represent_boolean_as_integer`.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* `relation.create` does no longer leak scope to class level querying methods
in initialization block and callbacks.
Before:
User.where(name: "John").create do |john|
User.find_by(name: "David") # => nil
end
After:
User.where(name: "John").create do |john|
User.find_by(name: "David") # => #<User name: "David", ...>
end
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Named scope chain does no longer leak scope to class level querying methods.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
scope :david, -> { User.where(name: "David") }
end
Before:
User.where(name: "John").david
# SELECT * FROM users WHERE name = 'John' AND name = 'David'
After:
User.where(name: "John").david
# SELECT * FROM users WHERE name = 'David'
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Remove deprecated methods from `ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations`.
`fetch`
`each`
`first`
`values`
`[]=`
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* `where.not` now generates NAND predicates instead of NOR.
Before:
User.where.not(name: "Jon", role: "admin")
# SELECT * FROM users WHERE name != 'Jon' AND role != 'admin'
After:
User.where.not(name: "Jon", role: "admin")
# SELECT * FROM users WHERE NOT (name == 'Jon' AND role == 'admin')
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Remove deprecated `ActiveRecord::Result#to_hash` method.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Deprecate `ActiveRecord::Base.allow_unsafe_raw_sql`.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Remove deprecated support for using unsafe raw SQL in `ActiveRecord::Relation` methods.
*Rafael Mendonça França*
* Allow users to silence the "Rails couldn't infer whether you are using multiple databases..."
message using `config.active_record.suppress_multiple_database_warning`.
*Omri Gabay*
Implement granular role and shard swapping This change allows for a connection to be swapped on role or shard for a class. Previously calling `connected_to` would swap all the connections to a particular role or shard. Granular connection swapping is useful for swapping one connection to reading while leaving all other connection classes on writing. The public methods on connection handler have been updated to behave the same as they did previously on the different handlers. The difference however is instead of calling `ActiveRecord::Base.connection_handlers[:reading].clear_all_connections!` you now call `ActiveRecord::Base.connection_handler.clear_all_connections!` which will clear based on current role set by a `connected_to` block. Outside the context of a `connected_to` block, `clear_all_connections!` can take an optional parameter to clear specific connections by role. The major changes in this PR are: * We introduced a `legacy_connection_handling` configuration option that is set to true by default. It will be set to `false` for all new applications. * In the new connection handling there will be one only connection handler. Previously there was a connection handler for each role. Now the role is stored in the `PoolManager`. In order to maintain backwards compatibility we introduced a `LegacyPoolManager` to avoid duplicate conditionals. See diagram in PR body for changes to connection management. * `connected_to` will now use a stacked concurrent map to keep track of the connection for each class. For each opened block the `class`, `role`, and `shard` will be added to the stack, when the block is exited the `class`, `role`, `shard` array will be removed from the stack. * With these changes `ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to` will remain global. If called all connections in the block will use the `role` and `shard` that was switched to. If called with a parent class like `AnimalsRecord.connected_to` only models under `AnimalsRecord` will be switched and everything else will remain the same. Examples: Given an application we have a `User` model that inherits from `ApplicationRecord` and a `Dog` model that inherits from `AnimalsRecord`. `AnimalsRecord` and `ApplicationRecord` have writing and reading connections as well as shard `default`, `one`, and `two`. ```ruby ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to(role: :reading) do User.first # reads from default replica Dog.first # reads from default replica AnimalsRecord.connected_to(role: :writing, shard: :one) do User.first # reads from default replica Dog.first # reads from shard one primary end User.first # reads from default replica Dog.first # reads from default replica ApplicationRecord.connected_to(role: :writing, shard: :two) do User.first # reads from shard two primary Dog.first # reads from default replica end end ``` Things this PR does not solve: * Currently there is no API for swapping more than one but not all connections. Apps with many primaries may want to swap 3 but not all 10 connections. We plan to build an API for that in a followup PR. * The middleware remains the same and is using the global switching methods. Therefore at this time to use this new feature applications must manually switch connections. We will also address this in a followup PR. * The `schema_cache` is currently on the `PoolConfig`. We plan on trying to move this up to the `PoolManager` or elsewhere later on so each `PoolConfig` doesn't need to hold a reference to the `schema_cache`. Co-authored-by: John Crepezzi <john.crepezzi@gmail.com>
2020-09-11 16:06:25 -04:00
* Connections can be granularly switched for abstract classes when `connected_to` is called.
This change allows `connected_to` to switch a `role` and/or `shard` for a single abstract class instead of all classes globally. Applications that want to use the new feature need to set `config.active_record.legacy_connection_handling` to `false` in their application configuration.
Example usage:
Given an application we have a `User` model that inherits from `ApplicationRecord` and a `Dog` model that inherits from `AnimalsRecord`. `AnimalsRecord` and `ApplicationRecord` have writing and reading connections as well as shard `default`, `one`, and `two`.
```ruby
ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to(role: :reading) do
User.first # reads from default replica
Dog.first # reads from default replica
AnimalsRecord.connected_to(role: :writing, shard: :one) do
User.first # reads from default replica
Dog.first # reads from shard one primary
end
User.first # reads from default replica
Dog.first # reads from default replica
ApplicationRecord.connected_to(role: :writing, shard: :two) do
User.first # reads from shard two primary
Dog.first # reads from default replica
end
end
```
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Allow double-dash comment syntax when querying read-only databases
*James Adam*
* Add `values_at` method.
Returns an array containing the values associated with the given methods.
```ruby
topic = Topic.first
topic.values_at(:title, :author_name)
# => ["Budget", "Jason"]
```
Similar to `Hash#values_at` but on an Active Record instance.
*Guillaume Briday*
* Fix `read_attribute_before_type_cast` to consider attribute aliases.
*Marcelo Lauxen*
* Support passing record to uniqueness validator `:conditions` callable:
```ruby
class Article < ApplicationRecord
validates_uniqueness_of :title, conditions: ->(article) {
published_at = article.published_at
where(published_at: published_at.beginning_of_year..published_at.end_of_year)
}
end
```
*Eliot Sykes*
* `BatchEnumerator#update_all` and `BatchEnumerator#delete_all` now return the
total number of rows affected, just like their non-batched counterparts.
```ruby
Person.in_batches.update_all("first_name = 'Eugene'") # => 42
Person.in_batches.delete_all # => 42
```
Fixes #40287.
*Eugene Kenny*
* Add support for PostgreSQL `interval` data type with conversion to
`ActiveSupport::Duration` when loading records from database and
serialization to ISO 8601 formatted duration string on save.
Add support to define a column in migrations and get it in a schema dump.
Optional column precision is supported.
To use this in 6.1, you need to place the next string to your model file:
attribute :duration, :interval
To keep old behavior until 6.2 is released:
attribute :duration, :string
Example:
create_table :events do |t|
t.string :name
t.interval :duration
end
class Event < ApplicationRecord
attribute :duration, :interval
end
Event.create!(name: 'Rock Fest', duration: 2.days)
Event.last.duration # => 2 days
Event.last.duration.iso8601 # => "P2D"
Event.new(duration: 'P1DT12H3S').duration # => 1 day, 12 hours, and 3 seconds
Event.new(duration: '1 day') # Unknown value will be ignored and NULL will be written to database
*Andrey Novikov*
* Allow associations supporting the `dependent:` key to take `dependent: :destroy_async`.
```ruby
class Account < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :supplier, dependent: :destroy_async
end
```
`:destroy_async` will enqueue a job to destroy associated records in the background.
*DHH*, *George Claghorn*, *Cory Gwin*, *Rafael Mendonça França*, *Adrianna Chang*
* Add `SKIP_TEST_DATABASE` environment variable to disable modifying the test database when `rails db:create` and `rails db:drop` are called.
*Jason Schweier*
* `connects_to` can only be called on `ActiveRecord::Base` or abstract classes.
Ensure that `connects_to` can only be called from `ActiveRecord::Base` or abstract classes. This protects the application from opening duplicate or too many connections.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* All connection adapters `execute` now raises `ActiveRecord::ConnectionNotEstablished` rather than
`ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid` when they encounter a connection error.
*Jean Boussier*
* `Mysql2Adapter#quote_string` now raises `ActiveRecord::ConnectionNotEstablished` rather than
`ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid` when it can't connect to the MySQL server.
*Jean Boussier*
* Add support for check constraints that are `NOT VALID` via `validate: false` (PostgreSQL-only).
*Alex Robbin*
Default db_config should be primary or first The handling for single database applications has always set a schema.rb or structure.sql files for loading the database schema. When we first implemented multiple database support we intended to keep this for the original, default database. Afterall Rails _has_ to connect to something on boot. In development only one connection is connected on boot since we don't eager load the app. Originally we had thought that all applications should be required to add a `primary` entry in the database configurations file. However, this hasn't worked in practice and we have some code now that does not assume there's a primary. The schema dumping/loading code however, still assumed there was a "primary" in the configurations file. We want the "default" database in any application to use the original files even when converted to a multiple database application as this reduces the need to make changes when implementing this functionality on an existing application. The changes here update Rails to ensure that we treat either "primary" or the first database configuration for an environment as "default". If there is a "primary" that will be used as the default configuration. If there is no primary the configuration that is first for an environment will be used as the default. For schema dump/load this means that the default configuration (primary or first) will use `schema.rb` as the filename and other configurations will use `[CONFIGURATION_NAME]_schema.rb`. This should also help us finish the pull request to infer migrations paths since now we can say the first configuration is the default. This is a natural assumption for application developers. Followup to #39536
2020-09-02 14:15:20 -04:00
* Ensure the default configuration is considered primary or first for an environment
If a multiple database application provides a configuration named primary, that will be treated as default. In applications that do not have a primary entry, the default database configuration will be the first configuration for an environment.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
* Allow `where` references association names as joined table name aliases.
```ruby
class Comment < ActiveRecord::Base
enum label: [:default, :child]
has_many :children, class_name: "Comment", foreign_key: :parent_id
end
# ... FROM comments LEFT OUTER JOIN comments children ON ... WHERE children.label = 1
Comment.includes(:children).where("children.label": "child")
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Support storing demodulized class name for polymorphic type.
Before Rails 6.1, storing demodulized class name is supported only for STI type
by `store_full_sti_class` class attribute.
Now `store_full_class_name` class attribute can handle both STI and polymorphic types.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Deprecate `rails db:structure:{load, dump}` tasks and extend
`rails db:schema:{load, dump}` tasks to work with either `:ruby` or `:sql` format,
depending on `config.active_record.schema_format` configuration value.
*fatkodima*
* Respect the `select` values for eager loading.
```ruby
post = Post.select("UPPER(title) AS title").first
post.title # => "WELCOME TO THE WEBLOG"
post.body # => ActiveModel::MissingAttributeError
# Rails 6.0 (ignore the `select` values)
post = Post.select("UPPER(title) AS title").eager_load(:comments).first
post.title # => "Welcome to the weblog"
post.body # => "Such a lovely day"
# Rails 6.1 (respect the `select` values)
post = Post.select("UPPER(title) AS title").eager_load(:comments).first
post.title # => "WELCOME TO THE WEBLOG"
post.body # => ActiveModel::MissingAttributeError
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Allow attribute's default to be configured but keeping its own type.
```ruby
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
attribute :written_at, default: -> { Time.now.utc }
end
# Rails 6.0
Post.type_for_attribute(:written_at) # => #<Type::Value ... precision: nil, ...>
# Rails 6.1
Post.type_for_attribute(:written_at) # => #<Type::DateTime ... precision: 6, ...>
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Allow default to be configured for Enum.
```ruby
class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
enum status: [:proposed, :written, :published], _default: :published
end
Book.new.status # => "published"
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Deprecate YAML loading from legacy format older than Rails 5.0.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Added the setting `ActiveRecord::Base.immutable_strings_by_default`, which
allows you to specify that all string columns should be frozen unless
otherwise specified. This will reduce memory pressure for applications which
do not generally mutate string properties of Active Record objects.
2020-10-29 21:14:30 -04:00
*Sean Griffin*, *Ryuta Kamizono*
* Deprecate `map!` and `collect!` on `ActiveRecord::Result`.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Support `relation.and` for intersection as Set theory.
```ruby
david_and_mary = Author.where(id: [david, mary])
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mary_and_bob = Author.where(id: [mary, bob])
david_and_mary.merge(mary_and_bob) # => [mary, bob]
david_and_mary.and(mary_and_bob) # => [mary]
david_and_mary.or(mary_and_bob) # => [david, mary, bob]
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
Deprecate inconsistent behavior that merging conditions on the same column Related to #39250 and #39236. The purpose of the change here is to unify inconsistent behavior on the merging. For now, mergee side condition is replaced by merger side condition only if both arel nodes are Equality or In clauses. In other words, if mergee side condition is not Equality or In clauses (e.g. `between`, `or`, `gt`, `lt`, etc), those conditions will be kept even on the same column. This behavior is harder to predict unless people are familiar with the merging behavior. Originally I suppose this behavior is just an implementation issue rather than an intended one, since `unscope` and `rewhere`, which were introduced later than `merge`, works more consistently. Since most of the conditions are usually Equality and In clauses, I don't suppose most people have encountered this merging issue, but I'd like to deprecate the inconsistent behavior and will completely unify that to improve a future UX. ```ruby # Rails 6.1 (IN clause is replaced by merger side equality condition) Author.where(id: [david.id, mary.id]).merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => [bob] # Rails 6.1 (both conflict conditions exists, deprecated) Author.where(id: david.id..mary.id).merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => [] # Rails 6.1 with rewhere to migrate to Rails 6.2's behavior Author.where(id: david.id..mary.id).merge(Author.where(id: bob), rewhere: true) # => [bob] # Rails 6.2 (same behavior with IN clause, mergee side condition is consistently replaced) Author.where(id: [david.id, mary.id]).merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => [bob] Author.where(id: david.id..mary.id).merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => [bob] ```
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* Merging conditions on the same column no longer maintain both conditions,
and will be consistently replaced by the latter condition in Rails 6.2.
To migrate to Rails 6.2's behavior, use `relation.merge(other, rewhere: true)`.
```ruby
# Rails 6.1 (IN clause is replaced by merger side equality condition)
Author.where(id: [david.id, mary.id]).merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => [bob]
# Rails 6.1 (both conflict conditions exists, deprecated)
Author.where(id: david.id..mary.id).merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => []
# Rails 6.1 with rewhere to migrate to Rails 6.2's behavior
Author.where(id: david.id..mary.id).merge(Author.where(id: bob), rewhere: true) # => [bob]
# Rails 6.2 (same behavior with IN clause, mergee side condition is consistently replaced)
Author.where(id: [david.id, mary.id]).merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => [bob]
Author.where(id: david.id..mary.id).merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => [bob]
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Do not mark Postgresql MAC address and UUID attributes as changed when the assigned value only varies by case.
*Peter Fry*
* Resolve issue with insert_all unique_by option when used with expression index.
When the `:unique_by` option of `ActiveRecord::Persistence.insert_all` and
`ActiveRecord::Persistence.upsert_all` was used with the name of an expression index, an error
was raised. Adding a guard around the formatting behavior for the `:unique_by` corrects this.
Usage:
```ruby
create_table :books, id: :integer, force: true do |t|
t.column :name, :string
t.index "lower(name)", unique: true
end
Book.insert_all [{ name: "MyTest" }], unique_by: :index_books_on_lower_name
```
Fixes #39516.
*Austen Madden*
* Add basic support for CHECK constraints to database migrations.
Usage:
```ruby
add_check_constraint :products, "price > 0", name: "price_check"
remove_check_constraint :products, name: "price_check"
```
*fatkodima*
* Add `ActiveRecord::Base.strict_loading_by_default` and `ActiveRecord::Base.strict_loading_by_default=`
to enable/disable strict_loading mode by default for a model. The configuration's value is
inheritable by subclasses, but they can override that value and it will not impact parent class.
Usage:
```ruby
class Developer < ApplicationRecord
self.strict_loading_by_default = true
has_many :projects
end
dev = Developer.first
dev.projects.first
# => ActiveRecord::StrictLoadingViolationError Exception: Developer is marked as strict_loading and Project cannot be lazily loaded.
```
*bogdanvlviv*
* Deprecate passing an Active Record object to `quote`/`type_cast` directly.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Default engine `ENGINE=InnoDB` is no longer dumped to make schema more agnostic.
Before:
```ruby
create_table "accounts", options: "ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8mb4 COLLATE=utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci", force: :cascade do |t|
end
```
After:
```ruby
create_table "accounts", charset: "utf8mb4", collation: "utf8mb4_0900_ai_ci", force: :cascade do |t|
end
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Added delegated type as an alternative to single-table inheritance for representing class hierarchies.
See ActiveRecord::DelegatedType for the full description.
*DHH*
* Deprecate aggregations with group by duplicated fields.
To migrate to Rails 6.2's behavior, use `uniq!(:group)` to deduplicate group fields.
```ruby
accounts = Account.group(:firm_id)
# duplicated group fields, deprecated.
accounts.merge(accounts.where.not(credit_limit: nil)).sum(:credit_limit)
# => {
# [1, 1] => 50,
# [2, 2] => 60
# }
# use `uniq!(:group)` to deduplicate group fields.
accounts.merge(accounts.where.not(credit_limit: nil)).uniq!(:group).sum(:credit_limit)
# => {
# 1 => 50,
# 2 => 60
# }
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Deprecate duplicated query annotations.
To migrate to Rails 6.2's behavior, use `uniq!(:annotate)` to deduplicate query annotations.
```ruby
accounts = Account.where(id: [1, 2]).annotate("david and mary")
# duplicated annotations, deprecated.
accounts.merge(accounts.rewhere(id: 3))
# SELECT accounts.* FROM accounts WHERE accounts.id = 3 /* david and mary */ /* david and mary */
# use `uniq!(:annotate)` to deduplicate annotations.
accounts.merge(accounts.rewhere(id: 3)).uniq!(:annotate)
# SELECT accounts.* FROM accounts WHERE accounts.id = 3 /* david and mary */
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Resolve conflict between counter cache and optimistic locking.
Bump an Active Record instance's lock version after updating its counter
cache. This avoids raising an unnecessary `ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError`
upon subsequent transactions by maintaining parity with the corresponding
database record's `lock_version` column.
Fixes #16449.
*Aaron Lipman*
* Support merging option `:rewhere` to allow mergee side condition to be replaced exactly.
```ruby
david_and_mary = Author.where(id: david.id..mary.id)
# both conflict conditions exists
david_and_mary.merge(Author.where(id: bob)) # => []
# mergee side condition is replaced by rewhere
david_and_mary.merge(Author.rewhere(id: bob)) # => [bob]
# mergee side condition is replaced by rewhere option
david_and_mary.merge(Author.where(id: bob), rewhere: true) # => [bob]
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Add support for finding records based on signed ids, which are tamper-proof, verified ids that can be
2020-05-17 18:12:11 -04:00
set to expire and scoped with a purpose. This is particularly useful for things like password reset
or email verification, where you want the bearer of the signed id to be able to interact with the
underlying record, but usually only within a certain time period.
2020-05-17 18:12:11 -04:00
```ruby
signed_id = User.first.signed_id expires_in: 15.minutes, purpose: :password_reset
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User.find_signed signed_id # => nil, since the purpose does not match
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travel 16.minutes
User.find_signed signed_id, purpose: :password_reset # => nil, since the signed id has expired
2020-05-17 18:12:11 -04:00
travel_back
User.find_signed signed_id, purpose: :password_reset # => User.first
User.find_signed! "bad data" # => ActiveSupport::MessageVerifier::InvalidSignature
```
2020-05-17 18:12:11 -04:00
*DHH*
* Support `ALGORITHM = INSTANT` DDL option for index operations on MySQL.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Fix index creation to preserve index comment in bulk change table on MySQL.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Allow `unscope` to be aware of table name qualified values.
It is possible to unscope only the column in the specified table.
```ruby
posts = Post.joins(:comments).group(:"posts.hidden")
posts = posts.where("posts.hidden": false, "comments.hidden": false)
posts.count
# => { false => 10 }
# unscope both hidden columns
posts.unscope(where: :hidden).count
# => { false => 11, true => 1 }
# unscope only comments.hidden column
posts.unscope(where: :"comments.hidden").count
# => { false => 11 }
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*, *Slava Korolev*
* Fix `rewhere` to truly overwrite collided where clause by new where clause.
```ruby
steve = Person.find_by(name: "Steve")
david = Author.find_by(name: "David")
relation = Essay.where(writer: steve)
# Before
relation.rewhere(writer: david).to_a # => []
# After
relation.rewhere(writer: david).to_a # => [david]
```
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Inspect time attributes with subsec and time zone offset.
```ruby
p Knot.create
=> #<Knot id: 1, created_at: "2016-05-05 01:29:47.116928000 +0000">
```
*akinomaeni*, *Jonathan Hefner*
* Deprecate passing a column to `type_cast`.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Deprecate `in_clause_length` and `allowed_index_name_length` in `DatabaseLimits`.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Support bulk insert/upsert on relation to preserve scope values.
*Josef Šimánek*, *Ryuta Kamizono*
* Preserve column comment value on changing column name on MySQL.
*Islam Taha*
* Add support for `if_exists` option for removing an index.
The `remove_index` method can take an `if_exists` option. If this is set to true an error won't be raised if the index doesn't exist.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
* Remove ibm_db, informix, mssql, oracle, and oracle12 Arel visitors which are not used in the code base.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Prevent `build_association` from `touching` a parent record if the record isn't persisted for `has_one` associations.
2020-04-15 08:23:24 -04:00
Fixes #38219.
*Josh Brody*
* Add support for `if_not_exists` option for adding index.
The `add_index` method respects `if_not_exists` option. If it is set to true
index won't be added.
Usage:
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```ruby
add_index :users, :account_id, if_not_exists: true
```
2020-04-15 08:23:24 -04:00
The `if_not_exists` option passed to `create_table` also gets propagated to indexes
created within that migration so that if table and its indexes exist then there is no
attempt to create them again.
*Prathamesh Sonpatki*
* Add `ActiveRecord::Base#previously_new_record?` to show if a record was new before the last save.
*Tom Ward*
2020-04-15 08:23:24 -04:00
* Support descending order for `find_each`, `find_in_batches`, and `in_batches`.
Batch processing methods allow you to work with the records in batches, greatly reducing memory consumption, but records are always batched from oldest id to newest.
This change allows reversing the order, batching from newest to oldest. This is useful when you need to process newer batches of records first.
Pass `order: :desc` to yield batches in descending order. The default remains `order: :asc`.
```ruby
Person.find_each(order: :desc) do |person|
person.party_all_night!
end
```
*Alexey Vasiliev*
2020-04-15 08:23:24 -04:00
* Fix `insert_all` with enum values.
Fixes #38716.
*Joel Blum*
* Add support for `db:rollback:name` for multiple database applications.
Multiple database applications will now raise if `db:rollback` is call and recommend using the `db:rollback:[NAME]` to rollback migrations.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
* `Relation#pick` now uses already loaded results instead of making another query.
*Eugene Kenny*
* Deprecate using `return`, `break` or `throw` to exit a transaction block after writes.
*Dylan Thacker-Smith*
* Dump the schema or structure of a database when calling `db:migrate:name`.
In previous versions of Rails, `rails db:migrate` would dump the schema of the database. In Rails 6, that holds true (`rails db:migrate` dumps all databases' schemas), but `rails db:migrate:name` does not share that behavior.
Going forward, calls to `rails db:migrate:name` will dump the schema (or structure) of the database being migrated.
*Kyle Thompson*
* Reset the `ActiveRecord::Base` connection after `rails db:migrate:name`.
When `rails db:migrate` has finished, it ensures the `ActiveRecord::Base` connection is reset to its original configuration. Going forward, `rails db:migrate:name` will have the same behavior.
*Kyle Thompson*
* Disallow calling `connected_to` on subclasses of `ActiveRecord::Base`.
Behavior has not changed here but the previous API could be misleading to people who thought it would switch connections for only that class. `connected_to` switches the context from which we are getting connections, not the connections themselves.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Add support for horizontal sharding to `connects_to` and `connected_to`.
Applications can now connect to multiple shards and switch between their shards in an application. Note that the shard swapping is still a manual process as this change does not include an API for automatic shard swapping.
Usage:
Given the following configuration:
```yaml
# config/database.yml
production:
primary:
database: my_database
primary_shard_one:
database: my_database_shard_one
```
Connect to multiple shards:
```ruby
class ApplicationRecord < ActiveRecord::Base
self.abstract_class = true
connects_to shards: {
default: { writing: :primary },
shard_one: { writing: :primary_shard_one }
}
```
Swap between shards in your controller / model code:
```ruby
ActiveRecord::Base.connected_to(shard: :shard_one) do
# Read from shard one
end
```
The horizontal sharding API also supports read replicas. See guides for more details.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
2020-02-25 00:14:54 -05:00
* Deprecate `spec_name` in favor of `name` on database configurations.
Deprecate `spec_name` and use `name` for configurations I have so. many. regrets. about using `spec_name` for database configurations and now I'm finally putting this mistake to an end. Back when I started multi-db work I assumed that eventually `connection_specification_name` (sometimes called `spec_name`) and `spec_name` for configurations would one day be the same thing. After 2 years I no longer believe they will ever be the same thing. This PR deprecates `spec_name` on database configurations in favor of `name`. It's the same behavior, just a better name, or at least a less confusing name. `connection_specification_name` refers to the parent class name (ie ActiveRecord::Base, AnimalsBase, etc) that holds the connection for it's models. In some places like ConnectionHandler it shortens this to `spec_name`, hence the major confusion. Recently I've been working with some new folks on database stuff and connection management and realize how confusing it was to explain that `db_config.spec_name` was not `spec_name` and `connection_specification_name`. Worse than that one is a symbole while the other is a class name. This was made even more complicated by the fact that `ActiveRecord::Base` used `primary` as the `connection_specification_name` until #38190. After spending 2 years with connection management I don't believe that we can ever use the symbols from the database configs as a way to connect the database without the class name being _somewhere_ because a db_config does not know who it's owner class is until it's been connected and a model has no idea what db_config belongs to it until it's connected. The model is the only way to tie a primary/writer config to a replica/reader config. This could change in the future but I don't see value in adding a class name to the db_configs before connection or telling a model what config belongs to it before connection. That would probably break a lot of application assumptions. If we do ever end up in that world, we can use name, because tbh `spec_name` and `connection_specification_name` were always confusing to me.
2020-02-20 14:06:17 -05:00
The accessors for `spec_name` on `configs_for` and `DatabaseConfig` are deprecated. Please use `name` instead.
Deprecated behavior:
```ruby
db_config = ActiveRecord::Base.configs_for(env_name: "development", spec_name: "primary")
db_config.spec_name
```
New behavior:
```ruby
db_config = ActiveRecord::Base.configs_for(env_name: "development", name: "primary")
db_config.name
```
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
2020-02-25 00:14:54 -05:00
* Add additional database-specific rake tasks for multi-database users.
Previously, `rails db:create`, `rails db:drop`, and `rails db:migrate` were the only rails tasks that could operate on a single
database. For example:
```
rails db:create
rails db:create:primary
rails db:create:animals
rails db:drop
rails db:drop:primary
rails db:drop:animals
rails db:migrate
rails db:migrate:primary
rails db:migrate:animals
```
With these changes, `rails db:schema:dump`, `rails db:schema:load`, `rails db:structure:dump`, `rails db:structure:load` and
`rails db:test:prepare` can additionally operate on a single database. For example:
```
rails db:schema:dump
rails db:schema:dump:primary
rails db:schema:dump:animals
rails db:schema:load
rails db:schema:load:primary
rails db:schema:load:animals
rails db:structure:dump
rails db:structure:dump:primary
rails db:structure:dump:animals
rails db:structure:load
rails db:structure:load:primary
rails db:structure:load:animals
rails db:test:prepare
rails db:test:prepare:primary
rails db:test:prepare:animals
```
*Kyle Thompson*
* Add support for `strict_loading` mode on association declarations.
Raise an error if attempting to load a record from an association that has been marked as `strict_loading` unless it was explicitly eager loaded.
Usage:
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```ruby
class Developer < ApplicationRecord
has_many :projects, strict_loading: true
end
dev = Developer.first
dev.projects.first
# => ActiveRecord::StrictLoadingViolationError: The projects association is marked as strict_loading and cannot be lazily loaded.
```
*Kevin Deisz*
* Add support for `strict_loading` mode to prevent lazy loading of records.
Raise an error if a parent record is marked as `strict_loading` and attempts to lazily load its associations. This is useful for finding places you may want to preload an association and avoid additional queries.
Usage:
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```ruby
dev = Developer.strict_loading.first
dev.audit_logs.to_a
# => ActiveRecord::StrictLoadingViolationError: Developer is marked as strict_loading and AuditLog cannot be lazily loaded.
```
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *Aaron Patterson*
* Add support for PostgreSQL 11+ partitioned indexes when using `upsert_all`.
*Sebastián Palma*
* Adds support for `if_not_exists` to `add_column` and `if_exists` to `remove_column`.
Applications can set their migrations to ignore exceptions raised when adding a column that already exists or when removing a column that does not exist.
Example Usage:
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```ruby
class AddColumnTitle < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.1]
def change
add_column :posts, :title, :string, if_not_exists: true
end
end
```
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```ruby
class RemoveColumnTitle < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.1]
def change
remove_column :posts, :title, if_exists: true
end
end
```
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
2020-02-25 00:14:54 -05:00
* Regexp-escape table name for MS SQL Server.
2020-01-27 10:49:59 -05:00
Add `Regexp.escape` to one method in ActiveRecord, so that table names with regular expression characters in them work as expected. Since MS SQL Server uses "[" and "]" to quote table and column names, and those characters are regular expression characters, methods like `pluck` and `select` fail in certain cases when used with the MS SQL Server adapter.
*Larry Reid*
Move advisory lock to it's own connection This PR moves advisory lock to it's own connection instead of `ActiveRecord::Base` to fix #37748. As a note the issue is present on both mysql and postgres. We don't see it on sqlite3 because sqlite3 doesn't support advisory locks. The underlying problem only appears if: 1) the app is using multiple databases, and therefore establishing a new connetion in the abstract models 2) the app has a migration that loads a model (ex `Post.update_all`) which causes that new connection to get established. This is because when Rails runs migrations the default connections are established, the lock is taken out on the `ActiveRecord::Base` connection. When the migration that calls a model is loaded, a new connection will be established and the lock will automatically be released. When Rails goes to release the lock in the ensure block it will find that the connection has been closed. Even if the connection wasn't closed the lock would no longer exist on that connection. We originally considered checking if the connection was active, but ultimately that would hide that the advisory locks weren't working correctly because there'd be no lock to release. We also considered making the lock more granular - that it only blocked on each migration individually instead of all the migrations for that connection. This might be the right move going forward, but right now multi-db migrations that load models are very broken in Rails 6.0 and master. John and I don't love this fix, it requires a bit too much knowledge of internals and how Rails picks up connections. However, it does fix the issue, makes the lock more global, and makes the lock more resilient to changing connections. Co-authored-by: John Crepezzi <john.crepezzi@gmail.com>
2020-01-14 12:41:38 -05:00
* Store advisory locks on their own named connection.
Previously advisory locks were taken out against a connection when a migration started. This works fine in single database applications but doesn't work well when migrations need to open new connections which results in the lock getting dropped.
In order to fix this we are storing the advisory lock on a new connection with the connection specification name `AdvisoryLockBase`. The caveat is that we need to maintain at least 2 connections to a database while migrations are running in order to do this.
Move advisory lock to it's own connection This PR moves advisory lock to it's own connection instead of `ActiveRecord::Base` to fix #37748. As a note the issue is present on both mysql and postgres. We don't see it on sqlite3 because sqlite3 doesn't support advisory locks. The underlying problem only appears if: 1) the app is using multiple databases, and therefore establishing a new connetion in the abstract models 2) the app has a migration that loads a model (ex `Post.update_all`) which causes that new connection to get established. This is because when Rails runs migrations the default connections are established, the lock is taken out on the `ActiveRecord::Base` connection. When the migration that calls a model is loaded, a new connection will be established and the lock will automatically be released. When Rails goes to release the lock in the ensure block it will find that the connection has been closed. Even if the connection wasn't closed the lock would no longer exist on that connection. We originally considered checking if the connection was active, but ultimately that would hide that the advisory locks weren't working correctly because there'd be no lock to release. We also considered making the lock more granular - that it only blocked on each migration individually instead of all the migrations for that connection. This might be the right move going forward, but right now multi-db migrations that load models are very broken in Rails 6.0 and master. John and I don't love this fix, it requires a bit too much knowledge of internals and how Rails picks up connections. However, it does fix the issue, makes the lock more global, and makes the lock more resilient to changing connections. Co-authored-by: John Crepezzi <john.crepezzi@gmail.com>
2020-01-14 12:41:38 -05:00
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Allow schema cache path to be defined in the database configuration file.
For example:
2020-02-25 00:14:54 -05:00
```yaml
development:
adapter: postgresql
database: blog_development
pool: 5
schema_cache_path: tmp/schema/main.yml
```
*Katrina Owen*
* Deprecate `#remove_connection` in favor of `#remove_connection_pool` when called on the handler.
`#remove_connection` is deprecated in order to support returning a `DatabaseConfig` object instead of a `Hash`. Use `#remove_connection_pool`, `#remove_connection` will be removed in 6.2.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
2020-02-25 00:14:54 -05:00
* Deprecate `#default_hash` and it's alias `#[]` on database configurations.
Applications should use `configs_for`. `#default_hash` and `#[]` will be removed in 6.2.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Add scale support to `ActiveRecord::Validations::NumericalityValidator`.
*Gannon McGibbon*
* Find orphans by looking for missing relations through chaining `where.missing`:
Before:
```ruby
Post.left_joins(:author).where(authors: { id: nil })
```
After:
```ruby
Post.where.missing(:author)
```
*Tom Rossi*
* Ensure `:reading` connections always raise if a write is attempted.
Now Rails will raise an `ActiveRecord::ReadOnlyError` if any connection on the reading handler attempts to make a write. If your reading role needs to write you should name the role something other than `:reading`.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
2020-04-15 08:23:24 -04:00
* Deprecate `"primary"` as the `connection_specification_name` for `ActiveRecord::Base`.
Deprecate "primary" as a connection_specification_name for ActiveRecord::Base As multiple databases have evolved it's becoming more and more confusing that we have a `connection_specification_name` that defaults to "primary" and a `spec_name` on the database objects that defaults to "primary" (my bad). Even more confusing is that we use the class name for all non-ActiveRecord::Base abstract classes that establish connections. For example connections established on `class MyOtherDatabaseModel < ApplicationRecord` will use `"MyOtherDatabaseModel"` as it's connection specification name while `ActiveRecord::Base` uses `"primary"`. This PR deprecates the use of the name `"primary"` as the `connection_specification_name` for `ActiveRecord::Base` in favor of using `"ActiveRecord::Base"`. In this PR the following is true: * If `handler.establish_connection(:primary)` is called, `"primary"` will not throw a deprecation warning and can still be used for the `connection_specification_name`. This also fixes a bug where using this method to establish a connection could accidentally overwrite the actual `ActiveRecord::Base` connection IF that connection was not using a configuration named `:primary`. * Calling `handler.retrieve_connection "primary"` when `handler.establish_connection :primary` has never been called will return the connection for `ActiveRecord::Base` and throw a deprecation warning. * Calling `handler.remove_connection "primary"` when `handler.establish_connection :primary` has never been called will remove the connection for `ActiveRecord::Base` and throw a deprecation warning. See #38179 for details on more motivations for this change. Co-authored-by: John Crepezzi <john.crepezzi@gmail.com>
2020-01-07 16:40:15 -05:00
`"primary"` has been deprecated as the `connection_specification_name` for `ActiveRecord::Base` in favor of using `"ActiveRecord::Base"`. This change affects calls to `ActiveRecord::Base.connection_handler.retrieve_connection` and `ActiveRecord::Base.connection_handler.remove_connection`. If you're calling these methods with `"primary"`, please switch to `"ActiveRecord::Base"`.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Add `ActiveRecord::Validations::NumericalityValidator` with
support for casting floats using a database columns' precision value.
*Gannon McGibbon*
* Enforce fresh ETag header after a collection's contents change by adding
ActiveRecord::Relation#cache_key_with_version. This method will be used by
ActionController::ConditionalGet to ensure that when collection cache versioning
is enabled, requests using ConditionalGet don't return the same ETag header
2020-02-25 00:14:54 -05:00
after a collection is modified.
Fixes #38078.
*Aaron Lipman*
* Skip test database when running `db:create` or `db:drop` in development
with `DATABASE_URL` set.
*Brian Buchalter*
* Don't allow mutations on the database configurations hash.
2019-12-19 12:25:39 -05:00
Freeze the configurations hash to disallow directly changing it. If applications need to change the hash, for example to create databases for parallelization, they should use the `DatabaseConfig` object directly.
2019-12-19 12:25:39 -05:00
Before:
```ruby
@db_config = ActiveRecord::Base.configurations.configs_for(env_name: "test", spec_name: "primary")
@db_config.configuration_hash.merge!(idle_timeout: "0.02")
```
After:
```ruby
@db_config = ActiveRecord::Base.configurations.configs_for(env_name: "test", spec_name: "primary")
config = @db_config.configuration_hash.merge(idle_timeout: "0.02")
db_config = ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations::HashConfig.new(@db_config.env_name, @db_config.spec_name, config)
```
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Remove `:connection_id` from the `sql.active_record` notification.
*Aaron Patterson*, *Rafael Mendonça França*
* The `:name` key will no longer be returned as part of `DatabaseConfig#configuration_hash`. Please use `DatabaseConfig#owner_name` instead.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* ActiveRecord's `belongs_to_required_by_default` flag can now be set per model.
You can now opt-out/opt-in specific models from having their associations required
by default.
This change is meant to ease the process of migrating all your models to have
their association required.
*Edouard Chin*
* The `connection_config` method has been deprecated, please use `connection_db_config` instead which will return a `DatabaseConfigurations::DatabaseConfig` instead of a `Hash`.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Retain explicit selections on the base model after applying `includes` and `joins`.
Resolves #34889.
*Patrick Rebsch*
* The `database` kwarg is deprecated without replacement because it can't be used for sharding and creates an issue if it's used during a request. Applications that need to create new connections should use `connects_to` instead.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
2019-11-13 17:35:28 -05:00
* Allow attributes to be fetched from Arel node groupings.
*Jeff Emminger*, *Gannon McGibbon*
2019-12-18 02:46:48 -05:00
* A database URL can now contain a querystring value that contains an equal sign. This is needed to support passing PostgreSQL `options`.
*Joshua Flanagan*
* Calling methods like `establish_connection` with a `Hash` which is invalid (eg: no `adapter`) will now raise an error the same way as connections defined in `config/database.yml`.
*John Crepezzi*
* Specifying `implicit_order_column` now subsorts the records by primary key if available to ensure deterministic results.
*Paweł Urbanek*
* `where(attr => [])` now loads an empty result without making a query.
*John Hawthorn*
* Fixed the performance regression for `primary_keys` introduced MySQL 8.0.
*Hiroyuki Ishii*
* Add support for `belongs_to` to `has_many` inversing.
*Gannon McGibbon*
* Allow length configuration for `has_secure_token` method. The minimum length
is set at 24 characters.
Before:
```ruby
has_secure_token :auth_token
```
After:
```ruby
has_secure_token :default_token # 24 characters
has_secure_token :auth_token, length: 36 # 36 characters
has_secure_token :invalid_token, length: 12 # => ActiveRecord::SecureToken::MinimumLengthError
```
*Bernardo de Araujo*
* Deprecate `DatabaseConfigurations#to_h`. These connection hashes are still available via `ActiveRecord::Base.configurations.configs_for`.
*Eileen Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Add `DatabaseConfig#configuration_hash` to return database configuration hashes with symbol keys, and use all symbol-key configuration hashes internally. Deprecate `DatabaseConfig#config` which returns a String-keyed `Hash` with the same values.
*John Crepezzi*, *Eileen Uchitelle*
* Allow column names to be passed to `remove_index` positionally along with other options.
Passing other options can be necessary to make `remove_index` correctly reversible.
Before:
add_index :reports, :report_id # => works
add_index :reports, :report_id, unique: true # => works
remove_index :reports, :report_id # => works
remove_index :reports, :report_id, unique: true # => ArgumentError
After:
remove_index :reports, :report_id, unique: true # => works
*Eugene Kenny*
* Allow bulk `ALTER` statements to drop and recreate indexes with the same name.
*Eugene Kenny*
* `insert`, `insert_all`, `upsert`, and `upsert_all` now clear the query cache.
*Eugene Kenny*
* Call `while_preventing_writes` directly from `connected_to`.
In some cases application authors want to use the database switching middleware and make explicit calls with `connected_to`. It's possible for an app to turn off writes and not turn them back on by the time we call `connected_to(role: :writing)`.
This change allows apps to fix this by assuming if a role is writing we want to allow writes, except in the case it's explicitly turned off.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
* Improve detection of ActiveRecord::StatementTimeout with mysql2 adapter in the edge case when the query is terminated during filesort.
*Kir Shatrov*
* Stop trying to read yaml file fixtures when loading Active Record fixtures.
*Gannon McGibbon*
* Deprecate `.reorder(nil)` with `.first` / `.first!` taking non-deterministic result.
To continue taking non-deterministic result, use `.take` / `.take!` instead.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Preserve user supplied joins order as much as possible.
Fixes #36761, #34328, #24281, #12953.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
2019-07-29 13:48:57 -04:00
* Allow `matches_regex` and `does_not_match_regexp` on the MySQL Arel visitor.
*James Pearson*
2019-07-29 13:48:57 -04:00
* Allow specifying fixtures to be ignored by setting `ignore` in YAML file's '_fixture' section.
*Tongfei Gao*
* Make the DATABASE_URL env variable only affect the primary connection. Add new env variables for multiple databases.
*John Crepezzi*, *Eileen Uchitelle*
* Add a warning for enum elements with 'not_' prefix.
class Foo
enum status: [:sent, :not_sent]
end
*Edu Depetris*
2019-11-23 19:20:00 -05:00
* Make currency symbols optional for money column type in PostgreSQL.
*Joel Schneider*
* Add support for beginless ranges, introduced in Ruby 2.7.
*Josh Goodall*
2020-04-15 08:23:24 -04:00
* Add `database_exists?` method to connection adapters to check if a database exists.
*Guilherme Mansur*
* Loading the schema for a model that has no `table_name` raises a `TableNotSpecified` error.
*Guilherme Mansur*, *Eugene Kenny*
* PostgreSQL: Fix GROUP BY with ORDER BY virtual count attribute.
Fixes #36022.
*Ryuta Kamizono*
* Make ActiveRecord `ConnectionPool.connections` method thread-safe.
Fixes #36465.
*Jeff Doering*
* Add support for multiple databases to `rails db:abort_if_pending_migrations`.
*Mark Lee*
* Fix sqlite3 collation parsing when using decimal columns.
*Martin R. Schuster*
* Fix invalid schema when primary key column has a comment.
Fixes #29966.
*Guilherme Goettems Schneider*
* Fix table comment also being applied to the primary key column.
*Guilherme Goettems Schneider*
* Allow generated `create_table` migrations to include or skip timestamps.
*Michael Duchemin*
2019-04-24 15:57:14 -04:00
Please check [6-0-stable](https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/6-0-stable/activerecord/CHANGELOG.md) for previous changes.