If a custom validation context is used, the validations on dependent
association records should fire regardless of whether those record have
`changed_for_autosave?` or not as the use of a custom validation context
increases the chance that validations for the context will be different
to those from when the record was first saved.
6ea80b6 changed the autosave behaviour for single associations such that
validations would only fire on an associated record if the record was
`changed_for_autosave?`. This brought the behaviour inline with that for
collection associations, but introduce a regression in that validations
would no longer fire on dependent associations, even when using a custom
validation context.
This change updates the behaviour for both single and collection
associations.
This commit also updates another related regression test that became a
potential false-positive when 6ea80b6 was merged. The original test was
written to protect against non-custom validations firing on associations
(see #14106). At the time validations on autosaving singular
associations would always fire, even when the association was not dirty,
whereas after 6ea80b6 the validations only fire if the association is
dirty. This update to the test makes the association record dirty to
ensure the validations will fire so that the code responsible for
excluding non-custom contexts is correctly exercised.
The delegation methods to named scope are defined when `method_missing`
is invoked on the relation.
Since #29301, the receiver in the named scope is changed to the relation
like others (e.g. `default_scope`, etc) for consistency.
Most named scopes would be delegated from relation by `method_missing`,
since we don't allow scopes to be defined which conflict with instance
methods on `Relation` (#31179). But if a named scope is defined with the
same name as any method on the `superclass` (e.g. `Kernel.open`), the
`method_missing` on the relation is not invoked.
To address the issue, make the delegation methods to named scope is
generated in the definition time.
Fixes#34098.