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rails--rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb
Jon Leighton 64b9e93bb5 Fix ActiveRecord::Relation#unscope
I'm pretty confused about the addition of this method. The documentation
says that it was intended to allow the removal of values from the
default scope (in contrast to #except). However it behaves exactly the
same as except: https://gist.github.com/jonleighton/7537008 (other than
having a slightly enhanced syntax).

The removal of the default scope is allowed by
94924dc32b, which was not a change we
could make until 4.1 due to the need to deprecate things. However after
that change #unscope still gives us nothing that #except doesn't already
give us.

However there *is* a desire to be able to unscope stuff in a way that
persists across merges, which would allow associations to be defined
which unscope stuff from the default scope of the associated model. E.g.

  has_many :comments, -> { unscope where: :trashed }

So that's what this change implements. I've also corrected the
documentation. I removed the guide references to #except as I think
unscope really supercedes #except now.

While we're here, there's also a potential desire to be able to write
this:

  has_many :comments, -> { unscoped }

However, it doesn't make sense and would not be straightforward to
implement. While with #unscope we're specifying exactly what we want to
be removed from the relation, with "unscoped" we're just saying that we
want it to not have some things which were added earlier on by the
default scope. However in the case of an association, we surely don't
want *all* conditions to be removed, otherwise the above would just
become "SELECT * FROM comments" with no foreign key constraint.

To make the above work, we'd have to somehow tag the relation values
which get added when evaluating the default scope in order to
differentiate them from other relation values. Which is way too much
complexity and therefore not worth it when most use cases can be
satisfied with unscope.

Closes #10643, #11061.
2013-11-20 22:23:16 +00:00

632 lines
21 KiB
Ruby

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
module ActiveRecord
# = Active Record Relation
class Relation
JoinOperation = Struct.new(:relation, :join_class, :on)
MULTI_VALUE_METHODS = [:includes, :eager_load, :preload, :select, :group,
:order, :joins, :where, :having, :bind, :references,
:extending, :unscope]
SINGLE_VALUE_METHODS = [:limit, :offset, :lock, :readonly, :from, :reordering,
:reverse_order, :distinct, :create_with, :uniq]
VALUE_METHODS = MULTI_VALUE_METHODS + SINGLE_VALUE_METHODS
include FinderMethods, Calculations, SpawnMethods, QueryMethods, Batches, Explain, Delegation
attr_reader :table, :klass, :loaded
alias :model :klass
alias :loaded? :loaded
def initialize(klass, table, values = {})
@klass = klass
@table = table
@values = values
@loaded = false
end
def initialize_copy(other)
# This method is a hot spot, so for now, use Hash[] to dup the hash.
# https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/7166
@values = Hash[@values]
@values[:bind] = @values[:bind].dup if @values.key? :bind
reset
end
def insert(values) # :nodoc:
primary_key_value = nil
if primary_key && Hash === values
primary_key_value = values[values.keys.find { |k|
k.name == primary_key
}]
if !primary_key_value && connection.prefetch_primary_key?(klass.table_name)
primary_key_value = connection.next_sequence_value(klass.sequence_name)
values[klass.arel_table[klass.primary_key]] = primary_key_value
end
end
im = arel.create_insert
im.into @table
substitutes, binds = substitute_values values
if values.empty? # empty insert
im.values = Arel.sql(connection.empty_insert_statement_value)
else
im.insert substitutes
end
@klass.connection.insert(
im,
'SQL',
primary_key,
primary_key_value,
nil,
binds)
end
def update_record(values, id, id_was) # :nodoc:
substitutes, binds = substitute_values values
um = @klass.unscoped.where(@klass.arel_table[@klass.primary_key].eq(id_was || id)).arel.compile_update(substitutes, @klass.primary_key)
@klass.connection.update(
um,
'SQL',
binds)
end
def substitute_values(values) # :nodoc:
substitutes = values.sort_by { |arel_attr,_| arel_attr.name }
binds = substitutes.map do |arel_attr, value|
[@klass.columns_hash[arel_attr.name], value]
end
substitutes.each_with_index do |tuple, i|
tuple[1] = @klass.connection.substitute_at(binds[i][0], i)
end
[substitutes, binds]
end
# Initializes new record from relation while maintaining the current
# scope.
#
# Expects arguments in the same format as +Base.new+.
#
# users = User.where(name: 'DHH')
# user = users.new # => #<User id: nil, name: "DHH", created_at: nil, updated_at: nil>
#
# You can also pass a block to new with the new record as argument:
#
# user = users.new { |user| user.name = 'Oscar' }
# user.name # => Oscar
def new(*args, &block)
scoping { @klass.new(*args, &block) }
end
alias build new
# Tries to create a new record with the same scoped attributes
# defined in the relation. Returns the initialized object if validation fails.
#
# Expects arguments in the same format as +Base.create+.
#
# ==== Examples
# users = User.where(name: 'Oscar')
# users.create # #<User id: 3, name: "oscar", ...>
#
# users.create(name: 'fxn')
# users.create # #<User id: 4, name: "fxn", ...>
#
# users.create { |user| user.name = 'tenderlove' }
# # #<User id: 5, name: "tenderlove", ...>
#
# users.create(name: nil) # validation on name
# # #<User id: nil, name: nil, ...>
def create(*args, &block)
scoping { @klass.create(*args, &block) }
end
# Similar to #create, but calls +create!+ on the base class. Raises
# an exception if a validation error occurs.
#
# Expects arguments in the same format as <tt>Base.create!</tt>.
def create!(*args, &block)
scoping { @klass.create!(*args, &block) }
end
def first_or_create(attributes = nil, &block) # :nodoc:
first || create(attributes, &block)
end
def first_or_create!(attributes = nil, &block) # :nodoc:
first || create!(attributes, &block)
end
def first_or_initialize(attributes = nil, &block) # :nodoc:
first || new(attributes, &block)
end
# Finds the first record with the given attributes, or creates a record
# with the attributes if one is not found:
#
# # Find the first user named "Penélope" or create a new one.
# User.find_or_create_by(first_name: 'Penélope')
# # => #<User id: 1, first_name: "Penélope", last_name: nil>
#
# # Find the first user named "Penélope" or create a new one.
# # We already have one so the existing record will be returned.
# User.find_or_create_by(first_name: 'Penélope')
# # => #<User id: 1, first_name: "Penélope", last_name: nil>
#
# # Find the first user named "Scarlett" or create a new one with
# # a particular last name.
# User.create_with(last_name: 'Johansson').find_or_create_by(first_name: 'Scarlett')
# # => #<User id: 2, first_name: "Scarlett", last_name: "Johansson">
#
# This method accepts a block, which is passed down to +create+. The last example
# above can be alternatively written this way:
#
# # Find the first user named "Scarlett" or create a new one with a
# # different last name.
# User.find_or_create_by(first_name: 'Scarlett') do |user|
# user.last_name = 'Johansson'
# end
# # => #<User id: 2, first_name: "Scarlett", last_name: "Johansson">
#
# This method always returns a record, but if creation was attempted and
# failed due to validation errors it won't be persisted, you get what
# +create+ returns in such situation.
#
# Please note *this method is not atomic*, it runs first a SELECT, and if
# there are no results an INSERT is attempted. If there are other threads
# or processes there is a race condition between both calls and it could
# be the case that you end up with two similar records.
#
# Whether that is a problem or not depends on the logic of the
# application, but in the particular case in which rows have a UNIQUE
# constraint an exception may be raised, just retry:
#
# begin
# CreditAccount.find_or_create_by(user_id: user.id)
# rescue ActiveRecord::RecordNotUnique
# retry
# end
#
def find_or_create_by(attributes, &block)
find_by(attributes) || create(attributes, &block)
end
# Like <tt>find_or_create_by</tt>, but calls <tt>create!</tt> so an exception
# is raised if the created record is invalid.
def find_or_create_by!(attributes, &block)
find_by(attributes) || create!(attributes, &block)
end
# Like <tt>find_or_create_by</tt>, but calls <tt>new</tt> instead of <tt>create</tt>.
def find_or_initialize_by(attributes, &block)
find_by(attributes) || new(attributes, &block)
end
# Runs EXPLAIN on the query or queries triggered by this relation and
# returns the result as a string. The string is formatted imitating the
# ones printed by the database shell.
#
# Note that this method actually runs the queries, since the results of some
# are needed by the next ones when eager loading is going on.
#
# Please see further details in the
# {Active Record Query Interface guide}[http://guides.rubyonrails.org/active_record_querying.html#running-explain].
def explain
exec_explain(collecting_queries_for_explain { exec_queries })
end
# Converts relation objects to Array.
def to_a
load
@records
end
def as_json(options = nil) #:nodoc:
to_a.as_json(options)
end
# Returns size of the records.
def size
loaded? ? @records.length : count
end
# Returns true if there are no records.
def empty?
return @records.empty? if loaded?
if limit_value == 0
true
else
# FIXME: This count is not compatible with #select('authors.*') or other select narrows
c = count
c.respond_to?(:zero?) ? c.zero? : c.empty?
end
end
# Returns true if there are any records.
def any?
if block_given?
to_a.any? { |*block_args| yield(*block_args) }
else
!empty?
end
end
# Returns true if there is more than one record.
def many?
if block_given?
to_a.many? { |*block_args| yield(*block_args) }
else
limit_value ? to_a.many? : size > 1
end
end
# Scope all queries to the current scope.
#
# Comment.where(post_id: 1).scoping do
# Comment.first
# end
# # => SELECT "comments".* FROM "comments" WHERE "comments"."post_id" = 1 ORDER BY "comments"."id" ASC LIMIT 1
#
# Please check unscoped if you want to remove all previous scopes (including
# the default_scope) during the execution of a block.
def scoping
previous, klass.current_scope = klass.current_scope, self
yield
ensure
klass.current_scope = previous
end
# Updates all records with details given if they match a set of conditions supplied, limits and order can
# also be supplied. This method constructs a single SQL UPDATE statement and sends it straight to the
# database. It does not instantiate the involved models and it does not trigger Active Record callbacks
# or validations.
#
# ==== Parameters
#
# * +updates+ - A string, array, or hash representing the SET part of an SQL statement.
#
# ==== Examples
#
# # Update all customers with the given attributes
# Customer.update_all wants_email: true
#
# # Update all books with 'Rails' in their title
# Book.where('title LIKE ?', '%Rails%').update_all(author: 'David')
#
# # Update all books that match conditions, but limit it to 5 ordered by date
# Book.where('title LIKE ?', '%Rails%').order(:created_at).limit(5).update_all(author: 'David')
def update_all(updates)
raise ArgumentError, "Empty list of attributes to change" if updates.blank?
stmt = Arel::UpdateManager.new(arel.engine)
stmt.set Arel.sql(@klass.send(:sanitize_sql_for_assignment, updates))
stmt.table(table)
stmt.key = table[primary_key]
if joins_values.any?
@klass.connection.join_to_update(stmt, arel)
else
stmt.take(arel.limit)
stmt.order(*arel.orders)
stmt.wheres = arel.constraints
end
@klass.connection.update stmt, 'SQL', bind_values
end
# Updates an object (or multiple objects) and saves it to the database, if validations pass.
# The resulting object is returned whether the object was saved successfully to the database or not.
#
# ==== Parameters
#
# * +id+ - This should be the id or an array of ids to be updated.
# * +attributes+ - This should be a hash of attributes or an array of hashes.
#
# ==== Examples
#
# # Updates one record
# Person.update(15, user_name: 'Samuel', group: 'expert')
#
# # Updates multiple records
# people = { 1 => { "first_name" => "David" }, 2 => { "first_name" => "Jeremy" } }
# Person.update(people.keys, people.values)
def update(id, attributes)
if id.is_a?(Array)
id.map.with_index { |one_id, idx| update(one_id, attributes[idx]) }
else
object = find(id)
object.update(attributes)
object
end
end
# Destroys the records matching +conditions+ by instantiating each
# record and calling its +destroy+ method. Each object's callbacks are
# executed (including <tt>:dependent</tt> association options). Returns the
# collection of objects that were destroyed; each will be frozen, to
# reflect that no changes should be made (since they can't be persisted).
#
# Note: Instantiation, callback execution, and deletion of each
# record can be time consuming when you're removing many records at
# once. It generates at least one SQL +DELETE+ query per record (or
# possibly more, to enforce your callbacks). If you want to delete many
# rows quickly, without concern for their associations or callbacks, use
# +delete_all+ instead.
#
# ==== Parameters
#
# * +conditions+ - A string, array, or hash that specifies which records
# to destroy. If omitted, all records are destroyed. See the
# Conditions section in the introduction to ActiveRecord::Base for
# more information.
#
# ==== Examples
#
# Person.destroy_all("last_login < '2004-04-04'")
# Person.destroy_all(status: "inactive")
# Person.where(age: 0..18).destroy_all
def destroy_all(conditions = nil)
if conditions
where(conditions).destroy_all
else
to_a.each {|object| object.destroy }.tap { reset }
end
end
# Destroy an object (or multiple objects) that has the given id. The object is instantiated first,
# therefore all callbacks and filters are fired off before the object is deleted. This method is
# less efficient than ActiveRecord#delete but allows cleanup methods and other actions to be run.
#
# This essentially finds the object (or multiple objects) with the given id, creates a new object
# from the attributes, and then calls destroy on it.
#
# ==== Parameters
#
# * +id+ - Can be either an Integer or an Array of Integers.
#
# ==== Examples
#
# # Destroy a single object
# Todo.destroy(1)
#
# # Destroy multiple objects
# todos = [1,2,3]
# Todo.destroy(todos)
def destroy(id)
if id.is_a?(Array)
id.map { |one_id| destroy(one_id) }
else
find(id).destroy
end
end
# Deletes the records matching +conditions+ without instantiating the records
# first, and hence not calling the +destroy+ method nor invoking callbacks. This
# is a single SQL DELETE statement that goes straight to the database, much more
# efficient than +destroy_all+. Be careful with relations though, in particular
# <tt>:dependent</tt> rules defined on associations are not honored. Returns the
# number of rows affected.
#
# Post.delete_all("person_id = 5 AND (category = 'Something' OR category = 'Else')")
# Post.delete_all(["person_id = ? AND (category = ? OR category = ?)", 5, 'Something', 'Else'])
# Post.where(person_id: 5).where(category: ['Something', 'Else']).delete_all
#
# Both calls delete the affected posts all at once with a single DELETE statement.
# If you need to destroy dependent associations or call your <tt>before_*</tt> or
# +after_destroy+ callbacks, use the +destroy_all+ method instead.
#
# If a limit scope is supplied, +delete_all+ raises an ActiveRecord error:
#
# Post.limit(100).delete_all
# # => ActiveRecord::ActiveRecordError: delete_all doesn't support limit scope
def delete_all(conditions = nil)
raise ActiveRecordError.new("delete_all doesn't support limit scope") if self.limit_value
if conditions
where(conditions).delete_all
else
stmt = Arel::DeleteManager.new(arel.engine)
stmt.from(table)
if joins_values.any?
@klass.connection.join_to_delete(stmt, arel, table[primary_key])
else
stmt.wheres = arel.constraints
end
affected = @klass.connection.delete(stmt, 'SQL', bind_values)
reset
affected
end
end
# Deletes the row with a primary key matching the +id+ argument, using a
# SQL +DELETE+ statement, and returns the number of rows deleted. Active
# Record objects are not instantiated, so the object's callbacks are not
# executed, including any <tt>:dependent</tt> association options.
#
# You can delete multiple rows at once by passing an Array of <tt>id</tt>s.
#
# Note: Although it is often much faster than the alternative,
# <tt>#destroy</tt>, skipping callbacks might bypass business logic in
# your application that ensures referential integrity or performs other
# essential jobs.
#
# ==== Examples
#
# # Delete a single row
# Todo.delete(1)
#
# # Delete multiple rows
# Todo.delete([2,3,4])
def delete(id_or_array)
where(primary_key => id_or_array).delete_all
end
# Causes the records to be loaded from the database if they have not
# been loaded already. You can use this if for some reason you need
# to explicitly load some records before actually using them. The
# return value is the relation itself, not the records.
#
# Post.where(published: true).load # => #<ActiveRecord::Relation>
def load
exec_queries unless loaded?
self
end
# Forces reloading of relation.
def reload
reset
load
end
def reset
@first = @last = @to_sql = @order_clause = @scope_for_create = @arel = @loaded = nil
@should_eager_load = @join_dependency = nil
@records = []
self
end
# Returns sql statement for the relation.
#
# User.where(name: 'Oscar').to_sql
# # => SELECT "users".* FROM "users" WHERE "users"."name" = 'Oscar'
def to_sql
@to_sql ||= begin
relation = self
connection = klass.connection
visitor = connection.visitor
if eager_loading?
find_with_associations { |rel| relation = rel }
end
ast = relation.arel.ast
binds = relation.bind_values.dup
visitor.accept(ast) do
connection.quote(*binds.shift.reverse)
end
end
end
# Returns a hash of where conditions.
#
# User.where(name: 'Oscar').where_values_hash
# # => {name: "Oscar"}
def where_values_hash
equalities = where_values.grep(Arel::Nodes::Equality).find_all { |node|
node.left.relation.name == table_name
}
binds = Hash[bind_values.find_all(&:first).map { |column, v| [column.name, v] }]
binds.merge!(Hash[bind_values.find_all(&:first).map { |column, v| [column.name, v] }])
Hash[equalities.map { |where|
name = where.left.name
[name, binds.fetch(name.to_s) { where.right }]
}]
end
def scope_for_create
@scope_for_create ||= where_values_hash.merge(create_with_value)
end
# Returns true if relation needs eager loading.
def eager_loading?
@should_eager_load ||=
eager_load_values.any? ||
includes_values.any? && (joined_includes_values.any? || references_eager_loaded_tables?)
end
# Joins that are also marked for preloading. In which case we should just eager load them.
# Note that this is a naive implementation because we could have strings and symbols which
# represent the same association, but that aren't matched by this. Also, we could have
# nested hashes which partially match, e.g. { a: :b } & { a: [:b, :c] }
def joined_includes_values
includes_values & joins_values
end
# +uniq+ and +uniq!+ are silently deprecated. +uniq_value+ delegates to +distinct_value+
# to maintain backwards compatibility. Use +distinct_value+ instead.
def uniq_value
distinct_value
end
# Compares two relations for equality.
def ==(other)
case other
when Relation
other.to_sql == to_sql
when Array
to_a == other
end
end
def pretty_print(q)
q.pp(self.to_a)
end
# Returns true if relation is blank.
def blank?
to_a.blank?
end
def values
Hash[@values]
end
def inspect
entries = to_a.take([limit_value, 11].compact.min).map!(&:inspect)
entries[10] = '...' if entries.size == 11
"#<#{self.class.name} [#{entries.join(', ')}]>"
end
private
def exec_queries
@records = eager_loading? ? find_with_associations : @klass.find_by_sql(arel, bind_values)
preload = preload_values
preload += includes_values unless eager_loading?
preloader = ActiveRecord::Associations::Preloader.new
preload.each do |associations|
preloader.preload @records, associations
end
@records.each { |record| record.readonly! } if readonly_value
@loaded = true
@records
end
def references_eager_loaded_tables?
joined_tables = arel.join_sources.map do |join|
unless join.is_a?(Arel::Nodes::StringJoin)
[join.left.table_name, join.left.table_alias]
end
end
joined_tables += [table.name, table.table_alias]
# always convert table names to downcase as in Oracle quoted table names are in uppercase
joined_tables = joined_tables.flatten.compact.map { |t| t.downcase }.uniq
(references_values - joined_tables).any?
end
end
end