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rails--rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/transactions.rb
Rafael Mendonça França 18707ab17f
Standardize nodoc comments
2021-07-29 21:18:07 +00:00

441 lines
18 KiB
Ruby

# frozen_string_literal: true
module ActiveRecord
# See ActiveRecord::Transactions::ClassMethods for documentation.
module Transactions
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
# :nodoc:
ACTIONS = [:create, :destroy, :update]
included do
define_callbacks :commit, :rollback,
:before_commit,
scope: [:kind, :name]
end
# = Active Record Transactions
#
# \Transactions are protective blocks where SQL statements are only permanent
# if they can all succeed as one atomic action. The classic example is a
# transfer between two accounts where you can only have a deposit if the
# withdrawal succeeded and vice versa. \Transactions enforce the integrity of
# the database and guard the data against program errors or database
# break-downs. So basically you should use transaction blocks whenever you
# have a number of statements that must be executed together or not at all.
#
# For example:
#
# ActiveRecord::Base.transaction do
# david.withdrawal(100)
# mary.deposit(100)
# end
#
# This example will only take money from David and give it to Mary if neither
# +withdrawal+ nor +deposit+ raise an exception. Exceptions will force a
# ROLLBACK that returns the database to the state before the transaction
# began. Be aware, though, that the objects will _not_ have their instance
# data returned to their pre-transactional state.
#
# == Different Active Record classes in a single transaction
#
# Though the #transaction class method is called on some Active Record class,
# the objects within the transaction block need not all be instances of
# that class. This is because transactions are per-database connection, not
# per-model.
#
# In this example a +balance+ record is transactionally saved even
# though #transaction is called on the +Account+ class:
#
# Account.transaction do
# balance.save!
# account.save!
# end
#
# The #transaction method is also available as a model instance method.
# For example, you can also do this:
#
# balance.transaction do
# balance.save!
# account.save!
# end
#
# == Transactions are not distributed across database connections
#
# A transaction acts on a single database connection. If you have
# multiple class-specific databases, the transaction will not protect
# interaction among them. One workaround is to begin a transaction
# on each class whose models you alter:
#
# Student.transaction do
# Course.transaction do
# course.enroll(student)
# student.units += course.units
# end
# end
#
# This is a poor solution, but fully distributed transactions are beyond
# the scope of Active Record.
#
# == +save+ and +destroy+ are automatically wrapped in a transaction
#
# Both {#save}[rdoc-ref:Persistence#save] and
# {#destroy}[rdoc-ref:Persistence#destroy] come wrapped in a transaction that ensures
# that whatever you do in validations or callbacks will happen under its
# protected cover. So you can use validations to check for values that
# the transaction depends on or you can raise exceptions in the callbacks
# to rollback, including <tt>after_*</tt> callbacks.
#
# As a consequence changes to the database are not seen outside your connection
# until the operation is complete. For example, if you try to update the index
# of a search engine in +after_save+ the indexer won't see the updated record.
# The #after_commit callback is the only one that is triggered once the update
# is committed. See below.
#
# == Exception handling and rolling back
#
# Also have in mind that exceptions thrown within a transaction block will
# be propagated (after triggering the ROLLBACK), so you should be ready to
# catch those in your application code.
#
# One exception is the ActiveRecord::Rollback exception, which will trigger
# a ROLLBACK when raised, but not be re-raised by the transaction block.
#
# *Warning*: one should not catch ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid exceptions
# inside a transaction block. ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid exceptions indicate that an
# error occurred at the database level, for example when a unique constraint
# is violated. On some database systems, such as PostgreSQL, database errors
# inside a transaction cause the entire transaction to become unusable
# until it's restarted from the beginning. Here is an example which
# demonstrates the problem:
#
# # Suppose that we have a Number model with a unique column called 'i'.
# Number.transaction do
# Number.create(i: 0)
# begin
# # This will raise a unique constraint error...
# Number.create(i: 0)
# rescue ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid
# # ...which we ignore.
# end
#
# # On PostgreSQL, the transaction is now unusable. The following
# # statement will cause a PostgreSQL error, even though the unique
# # constraint is no longer violated:
# Number.create(i: 1)
# # => "PG::Error: ERROR: current transaction is aborted, commands
# # ignored until end of transaction block"
# end
#
# One should restart the entire transaction if an
# ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid occurred.
#
# == Nested transactions
#
# #transaction calls can be nested. By default, this makes all database
# statements in the nested transaction block become part of the parent
# transaction. For example, the following behavior may be surprising:
#
# User.transaction do
# User.create(username: 'Kotori')
# User.transaction do
# User.create(username: 'Nemu')
# raise ActiveRecord::Rollback
# end
# end
#
# creates both "Kotori" and "Nemu". Reason is the ActiveRecord::Rollback
# exception in the nested block does not issue a ROLLBACK. Since these exceptions
# are captured in transaction blocks, the parent block does not see it and the
# real transaction is committed.
#
# In order to get a ROLLBACK for the nested transaction you may ask for a real
# sub-transaction by passing <tt>requires_new: true</tt>. If anything goes wrong,
# the database rolls back to the beginning of the sub-transaction without rolling
# back the parent transaction. If we add it to the previous example:
#
# User.transaction do
# User.create(username: 'Kotori')
# User.transaction(requires_new: true) do
# User.create(username: 'Nemu')
# raise ActiveRecord::Rollback
# end
# end
#
# only "Kotori" is created.
#
# Most databases don't support true nested transactions. At the time of
# writing, the only database that we're aware of that supports true nested
# transactions, is MS-SQL. Because of this, Active Record emulates nested
# transactions by using savepoints. See
# https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/en/savepoint.html
# for more information about savepoints.
#
# === \Callbacks
#
# There are two types of callbacks associated with committing and rolling back transactions:
# #after_commit and #after_rollback.
#
# #after_commit callbacks are called on every record saved or destroyed within a
# transaction immediately after the transaction is committed. #after_rollback callbacks
# are called on every record saved or destroyed within a transaction immediately after the
# transaction or savepoint is rolled back.
#
# These callbacks are useful for interacting with other systems since you will be guaranteed
# that the callback is only executed when the database is in a permanent state. For example,
# #after_commit is a good spot to put in a hook to clearing a cache since clearing it from
# within a transaction could trigger the cache to be regenerated before the database is updated.
#
# === Caveats
#
# If you're on MySQL, then do not use Data Definition Language (DDL) operations in nested
# transactions blocks that are emulated with savepoints. That is, do not execute statements
# like 'CREATE TABLE' inside such blocks. This is because MySQL automatically
# releases all savepoints upon executing a DDL operation. When +transaction+
# is finished and tries to release the savepoint it created earlier, a
# database error will occur because the savepoint has already been
# automatically released. The following example demonstrates the problem:
#
# Model.connection.transaction do # BEGIN
# Model.connection.transaction(requires_new: true) do # CREATE SAVEPOINT active_record_1
# Model.connection.create_table(...) # active_record_1 now automatically released
# end # RELEASE SAVEPOINT active_record_1
# # ^^^^ BOOM! database error!
# end
#
# Note that "TRUNCATE" is also a MySQL DDL statement!
module ClassMethods
# See the ConnectionAdapters::DatabaseStatements#transaction API docs.
def transaction(**options, &block)
connection.transaction(**options, &block)
end
def before_commit(*args, &block) # :nodoc:
set_options_for_callbacks!(args)
set_callback(:before_commit, :before, *args, &block)
end
# This callback is called after a record has been created, updated, or destroyed.
#
# You can specify that the callback should only be fired by a certain action with
# the +:on+ option:
#
# after_commit :do_foo, on: :create
# after_commit :do_bar, on: :update
# after_commit :do_baz, on: :destroy
#
# after_commit :do_foo_bar, on: [:create, :update]
# after_commit :do_bar_baz, on: [:update, :destroy]
#
def after_commit(*args, &block)
set_options_for_callbacks!(args)
set_callback(:commit, :after, *args, &block)
end
# Shortcut for <tt>after_commit :hook, on: [ :create, :update ]</tt>.
def after_save_commit(*args, &block)
set_options_for_callbacks!(args, on: [ :create, :update ])
set_callback(:commit, :after, *args, &block)
end
# Shortcut for <tt>after_commit :hook, on: :create</tt>.
def after_create_commit(*args, &block)
set_options_for_callbacks!(args, on: :create)
set_callback(:commit, :after, *args, &block)
end
# Shortcut for <tt>after_commit :hook, on: :update</tt>.
def after_update_commit(*args, &block)
set_options_for_callbacks!(args, on: :update)
set_callback(:commit, :after, *args, &block)
end
# Shortcut for <tt>after_commit :hook, on: :destroy</tt>.
def after_destroy_commit(*args, &block)
set_options_for_callbacks!(args, on: :destroy)
set_callback(:commit, :after, *args, &block)
end
# This callback is called after a create, update, or destroy are rolled back.
#
# Please check the documentation of #after_commit for options.
def after_rollback(*args, &block)
set_options_for_callbacks!(args)
set_callback(:rollback, :after, *args, &block)
end
private
def set_options_for_callbacks!(args, enforced_options = {})
options = args.extract_options!.merge!(enforced_options)
args << options
if options[:on]
fire_on = Array(options[:on])
assert_valid_transaction_action(fire_on)
options[:if] = [
-> { transaction_include_any_action?(fire_on) },
*options[:if]
]
end
end
def assert_valid_transaction_action(actions)
if (actions - ACTIONS).any?
raise ArgumentError, ":on conditions for after_commit and after_rollback callbacks have to be one of #{ACTIONS}"
end
end
end
# See ActiveRecord::Transactions::ClassMethods for detailed documentation.
def transaction(**options, &block)
self.class.transaction(**options, &block)
end
def destroy # :nodoc:
with_transaction_returning_status { super }
end
def save(**) # :nodoc:
with_transaction_returning_status { super }
end
def save!(**) # :nodoc:
with_transaction_returning_status { super }
end
def touch(*, **) # :nodoc:
with_transaction_returning_status { super }
end
def before_committed! # :nodoc:
_run_before_commit_callbacks
end
# Call the #after_commit callbacks.
#
# Ensure that it is not called if the object was never persisted (failed create),
# but call it after the commit of a destroyed object.
def committed!(should_run_callbacks: true) # :nodoc:
@_start_transaction_state = nil
if should_run_callbacks
@_committed_already_called = true
_run_commit_callbacks
end
ensure
@_committed_already_called = @_trigger_update_callback = @_trigger_destroy_callback = false
end
# Call the #after_rollback callbacks. The +force_restore_state+ argument indicates if the record
# state should be rolled back to the beginning or just to the last savepoint.
def rolledback!(force_restore_state: false, should_run_callbacks: true) # :nodoc:
if should_run_callbacks
_run_rollback_callbacks
end
ensure
restore_transaction_record_state(force_restore_state)
clear_transaction_record_state
@_trigger_update_callback = @_trigger_destroy_callback = false if force_restore_state
end
# Executes +method+ within a transaction and captures its return value as a
# status flag. If the status is true the transaction is committed, otherwise
# a ROLLBACK is issued. In any case the status flag is returned.
#
# This method is available within the context of an ActiveRecord::Base
# instance.
def with_transaction_returning_status
status = nil
connection = self.class.connection
ensure_finalize = !connection.transaction_open?
connection.transaction do
add_to_transaction(ensure_finalize || has_transactional_callbacks?)
remember_transaction_record_state
status = yield
raise ActiveRecord::Rollback unless status
end
status
end
def trigger_transactional_callbacks? # :nodoc:
(@_new_record_before_last_commit || _trigger_update_callback) && persisted? ||
_trigger_destroy_callback && destroyed?
end
private
attr_reader :_committed_already_called, :_trigger_update_callback, :_trigger_destroy_callback
# Save the new record state and id of a record so it can be restored later if a transaction fails.
def remember_transaction_record_state
@_start_transaction_state ||= {
id: id,
new_record: @new_record,
previously_new_record: @previously_new_record,
destroyed: @destroyed,
attributes: @attributes,
frozen?: frozen?,
level: 0
}
@_start_transaction_state[:level] += 1
if _committed_already_called
@_new_record_before_last_commit = false
else
@_new_record_before_last_commit = @_start_transaction_state[:new_record]
end
end
# Clear the new record state and id of a record.
def clear_transaction_record_state
return unless @_start_transaction_state
@_start_transaction_state[:level] -= 1
@_start_transaction_state = nil if @_start_transaction_state[:level] < 1
end
# Restore the new record state and id of a record that was previously saved by a call to save_record_state.
def restore_transaction_record_state(force_restore_state = false)
if restore_state = @_start_transaction_state
if force_restore_state || restore_state[:level] <= 1
@new_record = restore_state[:new_record]
@previously_new_record = restore_state[:previously_new_record]
@destroyed = restore_state[:destroyed]
@attributes = restore_state[:attributes].map do |attr|
value = @attributes.fetch_value(attr.name)
attr = attr.with_value_from_user(value) if attr.value != value
attr
end
@mutations_from_database = nil
@mutations_before_last_save = nil
if @attributes.fetch_value(@primary_key) != restore_state[:id]
@attributes.write_from_user(@primary_key, restore_state[:id])
end
freeze if restore_state[:frozen?]
end
end
end
# Determine if a transaction included an action for :create, :update, or :destroy. Used in filtering callbacks.
def transaction_include_any_action?(actions)
actions.any? do |action|
case action
when :create
persisted? && @_new_record_before_last_commit
when :update
!(@_new_record_before_last_commit || destroyed?) && _trigger_update_callback
when :destroy
_trigger_destroy_callback
end
end
end
# Add the record to the current transaction so that the #after_rollback and #after_commit
# callbacks can be called.
def add_to_transaction(ensure_finalize = true)
self.class.connection.add_transaction_record(self, ensure_finalize)
end
def has_transactional_callbacks?
!_rollback_callbacks.empty? || !_commit_callbacks.empty? || !_before_commit_callbacks.empty?
end
end
end