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rails--rails/activerecord/lib/active_record/migration.rb
Hartley McGuire 43f756778f Move comment after newline in installed migrations
When an engine's migration is installed in a rails application, a
comment is inserted after any magic comments indicating the migration's
source. However, the current implementation does not take into
account whether there is an empty line after magic comments, and the
generated migration will not pass rubocop's
Layout/EmptyLineAfterMagicComment even if the engine's migration did.
This commit changes the implementation to insert the new comment after
a newline occuring after magic comments, if it exists.

Example Engine Migration:
```ruby
# frozen_string_literal: true
# coding: ISO-8859-15

class CurrenciesHaveSymbols < ActiveRecord::Migration::Current
end
```

Before change:
```ruby
# frozen_string_literal: true
# coding: ISO-8859-15
# This migration comes from bukkits (originally 1)

class CurrenciesHaveSymbols < ActiveRecord::Migration::Current
end
```

After change:
```ruby
# frozen_string_literal: true
# coding: ISO-8859-15

# This migration comes from bukkits (originally 1)
class CurrenciesHaveSymbols < ActiveRecord::Migration::Current
end
```
2021-08-04 00:52:53 -04:00

1457 lines
48 KiB
Ruby

# frozen_string_literal: true
require "benchmark"
require "set"
require "zlib"
require "active_support/core_ext/array/access"
require "active_support/core_ext/enumerable"
require "active_support/core_ext/module/attribute_accessors"
require "active_support/actionable_error"
module ActiveRecord
class MigrationError < ActiveRecordError # :nodoc:
def initialize(message = nil)
message = "\n\n#{message}\n\n" if message
super
end
end
# Exception that can be raised to stop migrations from being rolled back.
# For example the following migration is not reversible.
# Rolling back this migration will raise an ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration error.
#
# class IrreversibleMigrationExample < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def change
# create_table :distributors do |t|
# t.string :zipcode
# end
#
# execute <<~SQL
# ALTER TABLE distributors
# ADD CONSTRAINT zipchk
# CHECK (char_length(zipcode) = 5) NO INHERIT;
# SQL
# end
# end
#
# There are two ways to mitigate this problem.
#
# 1. Define <tt>#up</tt> and <tt>#down</tt> methods instead of <tt>#change</tt>:
#
# class ReversibleMigrationExample < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def up
# create_table :distributors do |t|
# t.string :zipcode
# end
#
# execute <<~SQL
# ALTER TABLE distributors
# ADD CONSTRAINT zipchk
# CHECK (char_length(zipcode) = 5) NO INHERIT;
# SQL
# end
#
# def down
# execute <<~SQL
# ALTER TABLE distributors
# DROP CONSTRAINT zipchk
# SQL
#
# drop_table :distributors
# end
# end
#
# 2. Use the #reversible method in <tt>#change</tt> method:
#
# class ReversibleMigrationExample < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def change
# create_table :distributors do |t|
# t.string :zipcode
# end
#
# reversible do |dir|
# dir.up do
# execute <<~SQL
# ALTER TABLE distributors
# ADD CONSTRAINT zipchk
# CHECK (char_length(zipcode) = 5) NO INHERIT;
# SQL
# end
#
# dir.down do
# execute <<~SQL
# ALTER TABLE distributors
# DROP CONSTRAINT zipchk
# SQL
# end
# end
# end
# end
class IrreversibleMigration < MigrationError
end
class DuplicateMigrationVersionError < MigrationError # :nodoc:
def initialize(version = nil)
if version
super("Multiple migrations have the version number #{version}.")
else
super("Duplicate migration version error.")
end
end
end
class DuplicateMigrationNameError < MigrationError # :nodoc:
def initialize(name = nil)
if name
super("Multiple migrations have the name #{name}.")
else
super("Duplicate migration name.")
end
end
end
class UnknownMigrationVersionError < MigrationError # :nodoc:
def initialize(version = nil)
if version
super("No migration with version number #{version}.")
else
super("Unknown migration version.")
end
end
end
class IllegalMigrationNameError < MigrationError # :nodoc:
def initialize(name = nil)
if name
super("Illegal name for migration file: #{name}\n\t(only lower case letters, numbers, and '_' allowed).")
else
super("Illegal name for migration.")
end
end
end
class PendingMigrationError < MigrationError # :nodoc:
include ActiveSupport::ActionableError
action "Run pending migrations" do
ActiveRecord::Tasks::DatabaseTasks.migrate
if ActiveRecord.dump_schema_after_migration
ActiveRecord::Tasks::DatabaseTasks.dump_schema(
ActiveRecord::Base.connection_db_config
)
end
end
def initialize(message = nil)
super(message || detailed_migration_message)
end
private
def detailed_migration_message
message = "Migrations are pending. To resolve this issue, run:\n\n bin/rails db:migrate"
message += " RAILS_ENV=#{::Rails.env}" if defined?(Rails.env)
message += "\n\n"
pending_migrations = ActiveRecord::Base.connection.migration_context.open.pending_migrations
message += "You have #{pending_migrations.size} pending #{pending_migrations.size > 1 ? 'migrations:' : 'migration:'}\n\n"
pending_migrations.each do |pending_migration|
message += "#{pending_migration.basename}\n"
end
message
end
end
class ConcurrentMigrationError < MigrationError # :nodoc:
DEFAULT_MESSAGE = "Cannot run migrations because another migration process is currently running."
RELEASE_LOCK_FAILED_MESSAGE = "Failed to release advisory lock"
def initialize(message = DEFAULT_MESSAGE)
super
end
end
class NoEnvironmentInSchemaError < MigrationError # :nodoc:
def initialize
msg = "Environment data not found in the schema. To resolve this issue, run: \n\n bin/rails db:environment:set"
if defined?(Rails.env)
super("#{msg} RAILS_ENV=#{::Rails.env}")
else
super(msg)
end
end
end
class ProtectedEnvironmentError < ActiveRecordError # :nodoc:
def initialize(env = "production")
msg = +"You are attempting to run a destructive action against your '#{env}' database.\n"
msg << "If you are sure you want to continue, run the same command with the environment variable:\n"
msg << "DISABLE_DATABASE_ENVIRONMENT_CHECK=1"
super(msg)
end
end
class EnvironmentMismatchError < ActiveRecordError
def initialize(current: nil, stored: nil)
msg = +"You are attempting to modify a database that was last run in `#{ stored }` environment.\n"
msg << "You are running in `#{ current }` environment. "
msg << "If you are sure you want to continue, first set the environment using:\n\n"
msg << " bin/rails db:environment:set"
if defined?(Rails.env)
super("#{msg} RAILS_ENV=#{::Rails.env}\n\n")
else
super("#{msg}\n\n")
end
end
end
class EnvironmentStorageError < ActiveRecordError # :nodoc:
def initialize
msg = +"You are attempting to store the environment in a database where metadata is disabled.\n"
msg << "Check your database configuration to see if this is intended."
super(msg)
end
end
# = Active Record Migrations
#
# Migrations can manage the evolution of a schema used by several physical
# databases. It's a solution to the common problem of adding a field to make
# a new feature work in your local database, but being unsure of how to
# push that change to other developers and to the production server. With
# migrations, you can describe the transformations in self-contained classes
# that can be checked into version control systems and executed against
# another database that might be one, two, or five versions behind.
#
# Example of a simple migration:
#
# class AddSsl < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def up
# add_column :accounts, :ssl_enabled, :boolean, default: true
# end
#
# def down
# remove_column :accounts, :ssl_enabled
# end
# end
#
# This migration will add a boolean flag to the accounts table and remove it
# if you're backing out of the migration. It shows how all migrations have
# two methods +up+ and +down+ that describes the transformations
# required to implement or remove the migration. These methods can consist
# of both the migration specific methods like +add_column+ and +remove_column+,
# but may also contain regular Ruby code for generating data needed for the
# transformations.
#
# Example of a more complex migration that also needs to initialize data:
#
# class AddSystemSettings < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def up
# create_table :system_settings do |t|
# t.string :name
# t.string :label
# t.text :value
# t.string :type
# t.integer :position
# end
#
# SystemSetting.create name: 'notice',
# label: 'Use notice?',
# value: 1
# end
#
# def down
# drop_table :system_settings
# end
# end
#
# This migration first adds the +system_settings+ table, then creates the very
# first row in it using the Active Record model that relies on the table. It
# also uses the more advanced +create_table+ syntax where you can specify a
# complete table schema in one block call.
#
# == Available transformations
#
# === Creation
#
# * <tt>create_join_table(table_1, table_2, options)</tt>: Creates a join
# table having its name as the lexical order of the first two
# arguments. See
# ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SchemaStatements#create_join_table for
# details.
# * <tt>create_table(name, options)</tt>: Creates a table called +name+ and
# makes the table object available to a block that can then add columns to it,
# following the same format as +add_column+. See example above. The options hash
# is for fragments like "DEFAULT CHARSET=UTF-8" that are appended to the create
# table definition.
# * <tt>add_column(table_name, column_name, type, options)</tt>: Adds a new column
# to the table called +table_name+
# named +column_name+ specified to be one of the following types:
# <tt>:string</tt>, <tt>:text</tt>, <tt>:integer</tt>, <tt>:float</tt>,
# <tt>:decimal</tt>, <tt>:datetime</tt>, <tt>:timestamp</tt>, <tt>:time</tt>,
# <tt>:date</tt>, <tt>:binary</tt>, <tt>:boolean</tt>. A default value can be
# specified by passing an +options+ hash like <tt>{ default: 11 }</tt>.
# Other options include <tt>:limit</tt> and <tt>:null</tt> (e.g.
# <tt>{ limit: 50, null: false }</tt>) -- see
# ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::TableDefinition#column for details.
# * <tt>add_foreign_key(from_table, to_table, options)</tt>: Adds a new
# foreign key. +from_table+ is the table with the key column, +to_table+ contains
# the referenced primary key.
# * <tt>add_index(table_name, column_names, options)</tt>: Adds a new index
# with the name of the column. Other options include
# <tt>:name</tt>, <tt>:unique</tt> (e.g.
# <tt>{ name: 'users_name_index', unique: true }</tt>) and <tt>:order</tt>
# (e.g. <tt>{ order: { name: :desc } }</tt>).
# * <tt>add_reference(:table_name, :reference_name)</tt>: Adds a new column
# +reference_name_id+ by default an integer. See
# ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SchemaStatements#add_reference for details.
# * <tt>add_timestamps(table_name, options)</tt>: Adds timestamps (+created_at+
# and +updated_at+) columns to +table_name+.
#
# === Modification
#
# * <tt>change_column(table_name, column_name, type, options)</tt>: Changes
# the column to a different type using the same parameters as add_column.
# * <tt>change_column_default(table_name, column_name, default_or_changes)</tt>:
# Sets a default value for +column_name+ defined by +default_or_changes+ on
# +table_name+. Passing a hash containing <tt>:from</tt> and <tt>:to</tt>
# as +default_or_changes+ will make this change reversible in the migration.
# * <tt>change_column_null(table_name, column_name, null, default = nil)</tt>:
# Sets or removes a <tt>NOT NULL</tt> constraint on +column_name+. The +null+ flag
# indicates whether the value can be +NULL+. See
# ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SchemaStatements#change_column_null for
# details.
# * <tt>change_table(name, options)</tt>: Allows to make column alterations to
# the table called +name+. It makes the table object available to a block that
# can then add/remove columns, indexes or foreign keys to it.
# * <tt>rename_column(table_name, column_name, new_column_name)</tt>: Renames
# a column but keeps the type and content.
# * <tt>rename_index(table_name, old_name, new_name)</tt>: Renames an index.
# * <tt>rename_table(old_name, new_name)</tt>: Renames the table called +old_name+
# to +new_name+.
#
# === Deletion
#
# * <tt>drop_table(name)</tt>: Drops the table called +name+.
# * <tt>drop_join_table(table_1, table_2, options)</tt>: Drops the join table
# specified by the given arguments.
# * <tt>remove_column(table_name, column_name, type, options)</tt>: Removes the column
# named +column_name+ from the table called +table_name+.
# * <tt>remove_columns(table_name, *column_names)</tt>: Removes the given
# columns from the table definition.
# * <tt>remove_foreign_key(from_table, to_table = nil, **options)</tt>: Removes the
# given foreign key from the table called +table_name+.
# * <tt>remove_index(table_name, column: column_names)</tt>: Removes the index
# specified by +column_names+.
# * <tt>remove_index(table_name, name: index_name)</tt>: Removes the index
# specified by +index_name+.
# * <tt>remove_reference(table_name, ref_name, options)</tt>: Removes the
# reference(s) on +table_name+ specified by +ref_name+.
# * <tt>remove_timestamps(table_name, options)</tt>: Removes the timestamp
# columns (+created_at+ and +updated_at+) from the table definition.
#
# == Irreversible transformations
#
# Some transformations are destructive in a manner that cannot be reversed.
# Migrations of that kind should raise an <tt>ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration</tt>
# exception in their +down+ method.
#
# == Running migrations from within Rails
#
# The Rails package has several tools to help create and apply migrations.
#
# To generate a new migration, you can use
# bin/rails generate migration MyNewMigration
#
# where MyNewMigration is the name of your migration. The generator will
# create an empty migration file <tt>timestamp_my_new_migration.rb</tt>
# in the <tt>db/migrate/</tt> directory where <tt>timestamp</tt> is the
# UTC formatted date and time that the migration was generated.
#
# There is a special syntactic shortcut to generate migrations that add fields to a table.
#
# bin/rails generate migration add_fieldname_to_tablename fieldname:string
#
# This will generate the file <tt>timestamp_add_fieldname_to_tablename.rb</tt>, which will look like this:
# class AddFieldnameToTablename < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def change
# add_column :tablenames, :fieldname, :string
# end
# end
#
# To run migrations against the currently configured database, use
# <tt>bin/rails db:migrate</tt>. This will update the database by running all of the
# pending migrations, creating the <tt>schema_migrations</tt> table
# (see "About the schema_migrations table" section below) if missing. It will also
# invoke the db:schema:dump command, which will update your db/schema.rb file
# to match the structure of your database.
#
# To roll the database back to a previous migration version, use
# <tt>bin/rails db:rollback VERSION=X</tt> where <tt>X</tt> is the version to which
# you wish to downgrade. Alternatively, you can also use the STEP option if you
# wish to rollback last few migrations. <tt>bin/rails db:rollback STEP=2</tt> will rollback
# the latest two migrations.
#
# If any of the migrations throw an <tt>ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration</tt> exception,
# that step will fail and you'll have some manual work to do.
#
# == More examples
#
# Not all migrations change the schema. Some just fix the data:
#
# class RemoveEmptyTags < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def up
# Tag.all.each { |tag| tag.destroy if tag.pages.empty? }
# end
#
# def down
# # not much we can do to restore deleted data
# raise ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration, "Can't recover the deleted tags"
# end
# end
#
# Others remove columns when they migrate up instead of down:
#
# class RemoveUnnecessaryItemAttributes < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def up
# remove_column :items, :incomplete_items_count
# remove_column :items, :completed_items_count
# end
#
# def down
# add_column :items, :incomplete_items_count
# add_column :items, :completed_items_count
# end
# end
#
# And sometimes you need to do something in SQL not abstracted directly by migrations:
#
# class MakeJoinUnique < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def up
# execute "ALTER TABLE `pages_linked_pages` ADD UNIQUE `page_id_linked_page_id` (`page_id`,`linked_page_id`)"
# end
#
# def down
# execute "ALTER TABLE `pages_linked_pages` DROP INDEX `page_id_linked_page_id`"
# end
# end
#
# == Using a model after changing its table
#
# Sometimes you'll want to add a column in a migration and populate it
# immediately after. In that case, you'll need to make a call to
# <tt>Base#reset_column_information</tt> in order to ensure that the model has the
# latest column data from after the new column was added. Example:
#
# class AddPeopleSalary < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def up
# add_column :people, :salary, :integer
# Person.reset_column_information
# Person.all.each do |p|
# p.update_attribute :salary, SalaryCalculator.compute(p)
# end
# end
# end
#
# == Controlling verbosity
#
# By default, migrations will describe the actions they are taking, writing
# them to the console as they happen, along with benchmarks describing how
# long each step took.
#
# You can quiet them down by setting ActiveRecord::Migration.verbose = false.
#
# You can also insert your own messages and benchmarks by using the +say_with_time+
# method:
#
# def up
# ...
# say_with_time "Updating salaries..." do
# Person.all.each do |p|
# p.update_attribute :salary, SalaryCalculator.compute(p)
# end
# end
# ...
# end
#
# The phrase "Updating salaries..." would then be printed, along with the
# benchmark for the block when the block completes.
#
# == Timestamped Migrations
#
# By default, Rails generates migrations that look like:
#
# 20080717013526_your_migration_name.rb
#
# The prefix is a generation timestamp (in UTC).
#
# If you'd prefer to use numeric prefixes, you can turn timestamped migrations
# off by setting:
#
# config.active_record.timestamped_migrations = false
#
# In application.rb.
#
# == Reversible Migrations
#
# Reversible migrations are migrations that know how to go +down+ for you.
# You simply supply the +up+ logic, and the Migration system figures out
# how to execute the down commands for you.
#
# To define a reversible migration, define the +change+ method in your
# migration like this:
#
# class TenderloveMigration < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def change
# create_table(:horses) do |t|
# t.column :content, :text
# t.column :remind_at, :datetime
# end
# end
# end
#
# This migration will create the horses table for you on the way up, and
# automatically figure out how to drop the table on the way down.
#
# Some commands cannot be reversed. If you care to define how to move up
# and down in these cases, you should define the +up+ and +down+ methods
# as before.
#
# If a command cannot be reversed, an
# <tt>ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration</tt> exception will be raised when
# the migration is moving down.
#
# For a list of commands that are reversible, please see
# <tt>ActiveRecord::Migration::CommandRecorder</tt>.
#
# == Transactional Migrations
#
# If the database adapter supports DDL transactions, all migrations will
# automatically be wrapped in a transaction. There are queries that you
# can't execute inside a transaction though, and for these situations
# you can turn the automatic transactions off.
#
# class ChangeEnum < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# disable_ddl_transaction!
#
# def up
# execute "ALTER TYPE model_size ADD VALUE 'new_value'"
# end
# end
#
# Remember that you can still open your own transactions, even if you
# are in a Migration with <tt>self.disable_ddl_transaction!</tt>.
class Migration
autoload :CommandRecorder, "active_record/migration/command_recorder"
autoload :Compatibility, "active_record/migration/compatibility"
autoload :JoinTable, "active_record/migration/join_table"
# This must be defined before the inherited hook, below
class Current < Migration # :nodoc:
end
def self.inherited(subclass) # :nodoc:
super
if subclass.superclass == Migration
major = ActiveRecord::VERSION::MAJOR
minor = ActiveRecord::VERSION::MINOR
raise StandardError, "Directly inheriting from ActiveRecord::Migration is not supported. " \
"Please specify the Active Record release the migration was written for:\n" \
"\n" \
" class #{subclass} < ActiveRecord::Migration[#{major}.#{minor}]"
end
end
def self.[](version)
Compatibility.find(version)
end
def self.current_version
ActiveRecord::VERSION::STRING.to_f
end
MigrationFilenameRegexp = /\A([0-9]+)_([_a-z0-9]*)\.?([_a-z0-9]*)?\.rb\z/ # :nodoc:
# This class is used to verify that all migrations have been run before
# loading a web page if <tt>config.active_record.migration_error</tt> is set to :page_load
class CheckPending
def initialize(app, file_watcher: ActiveSupport::FileUpdateChecker)
@app = app
@needs_check = true
@mutex = Mutex.new
@file_watcher = file_watcher
end
def call(env)
@mutex.synchronize do
@watcher ||= build_watcher do
@needs_check = true
ActiveRecord::Migration.check_pending!(connection)
@needs_check = false
end
if @needs_check
@watcher.execute
else
@watcher.execute_if_updated
end
end
@app.call(env)
end
private
def build_watcher(&block)
paths = Array(connection.migration_context.migrations_paths)
@file_watcher.new([], paths.index_with(["rb"]), &block)
end
def connection
ActiveRecord::Base.connection
end
end
class << self
attr_accessor :delegate # :nodoc:
attr_accessor :disable_ddl_transaction # :nodoc:
def nearest_delegate # :nodoc:
delegate || superclass.nearest_delegate
end
# Raises <tt>ActiveRecord::PendingMigrationError</tt> error if any migrations are pending.
def check_pending!(connection = Base.connection)
raise ActiveRecord::PendingMigrationError if connection.migration_context.needs_migration?
end
def load_schema_if_pending!
current_db_config = Base.connection_db_config
all_configs = ActiveRecord::Base.configurations.configs_for(env_name: Rails.env)
needs_update = !all_configs.all? do |db_config|
Tasks::DatabaseTasks.schema_up_to_date?(db_config, ActiveRecord.schema_format)
end
if needs_update
# Roundtrip to Rake to allow plugins to hook into database initialization.
root = defined?(ENGINE_ROOT) ? ENGINE_ROOT : Rails.root
FileUtils.cd(root) do
Base.clear_all_connections!
system("bin/rails db:test:prepare")
end
end
# Establish a new connection, the old database may be gone (db:test:prepare uses purge)
Base.establish_connection(current_db_config)
check_pending!
end
def maintain_test_schema! # :nodoc:
if ActiveRecord.maintain_test_schema
suppress_messages { load_schema_if_pending! }
end
end
def method_missing(name, *args, &block) # :nodoc:
nearest_delegate.send(name, *args, &block)
end
ruby2_keywords(:method_missing)
def migrate(direction)
new.migrate direction
end
# Disable the transaction wrapping this migration.
# You can still create your own transactions even after calling #disable_ddl_transaction!
#
# For more details read the {"Transactional Migrations" section above}[rdoc-ref:Migration].
def disable_ddl_transaction!
@disable_ddl_transaction = true
end
end
def disable_ddl_transaction # :nodoc:
self.class.disable_ddl_transaction
end
cattr_accessor :verbose
attr_accessor :name, :version
def initialize(name = self.class.name, version = nil)
@name = name
@version = version
@connection = nil
end
self.verbose = true
# instantiate the delegate object after initialize is defined
self.delegate = new
# Reverses the migration commands for the given block and
# the given migrations.
#
# The following migration will remove the table 'horses'
# and create the table 'apples' on the way up, and the reverse
# on the way down.
#
# class FixTLMigration < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def change
# revert do
# create_table(:horses) do |t|
# t.text :content
# t.datetime :remind_at
# end
# end
# create_table(:apples) do |t|
# t.string :variety
# end
# end
# end
#
# Or equivalently, if +TenderloveMigration+ is defined as in the
# documentation for Migration:
#
# require_relative "20121212123456_tenderlove_migration"
#
# class FixupTLMigration < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def change
# revert TenderloveMigration
#
# create_table(:apples) do |t|
# t.string :variety
# end
# end
# end
#
# This command can be nested.
def revert(*migration_classes)
run(*migration_classes.reverse, revert: true) unless migration_classes.empty?
if block_given?
if connection.respond_to? :revert
connection.revert { yield }
else
recorder = command_recorder
@connection = recorder
suppress_messages do
connection.revert { yield }
end
@connection = recorder.delegate
recorder.replay(self)
end
end
end
def reverting?
connection.respond_to?(:reverting) && connection.reverting
end
ReversibleBlockHelper = Struct.new(:reverting) do # :nodoc:
def up
yield unless reverting
end
def down
yield if reverting
end
end
# Used to specify an operation that can be run in one direction or another.
# Call the methods +up+ and +down+ of the yielded object to run a block
# only in one given direction.
# The whole block will be called in the right order within the migration.
#
# In the following example, the looping on users will always be done
# when the three columns 'first_name', 'last_name' and 'full_name' exist,
# even when migrating down:
#
# class SplitNameMigration < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def change
# add_column :users, :first_name, :string
# add_column :users, :last_name, :string
#
# reversible do |dir|
# User.reset_column_information
# User.all.each do |u|
# dir.up { u.first_name, u.last_name = u.full_name.split(' ') }
# dir.down { u.full_name = "#{u.first_name} #{u.last_name}" }
# u.save
# end
# end
#
# revert { add_column :users, :full_name, :string }
# end
# end
def reversible
helper = ReversibleBlockHelper.new(reverting?)
execute_block { yield helper }
end
# Used to specify an operation that is only run when migrating up
# (for example, populating a new column with its initial values).
#
# In the following example, the new column +published+ will be given
# the value +true+ for all existing records.
#
# class AddPublishedToPosts < ActiveRecord::Migration[7.0]
# def change
# add_column :posts, :published, :boolean, default: false
# up_only do
# execute "update posts set published = 'true'"
# end
# end
# end
def up_only
execute_block { yield } unless reverting?
end
# Runs the given migration classes.
# Last argument can specify options:
# - :direction (default is :up)
# - :revert (default is false)
def run(*migration_classes)
opts = migration_classes.extract_options!
dir = opts[:direction] || :up
dir = (dir == :down ? :up : :down) if opts[:revert]
if reverting?
# If in revert and going :up, say, we want to execute :down without reverting, so
revert { run(*migration_classes, direction: dir, revert: true) }
else
migration_classes.each do |migration_class|
migration_class.new.exec_migration(connection, dir)
end
end
end
def up
self.class.delegate = self
return unless self.class.respond_to?(:up)
self.class.up
end
def down
self.class.delegate = self
return unless self.class.respond_to?(:down)
self.class.down
end
# Execute this migration in the named direction
def migrate(direction)
return unless respond_to?(direction)
case direction
when :up then announce "migrating"
when :down then announce "reverting"
end
time = nil
ActiveRecord::Base.connection_pool.with_connection do |conn|
time = Benchmark.measure do
exec_migration(conn, direction)
end
end
case direction
when :up then announce "migrated (%.4fs)" % time.real; write
when :down then announce "reverted (%.4fs)" % time.real; write
end
end
def exec_migration(conn, direction)
@connection = conn
if respond_to?(:change)
if direction == :down
revert { change }
else
change
end
else
public_send(direction)
end
ensure
@connection = nil
end
def write(text = "")
puts(text) if verbose
end
def announce(message)
text = "#{version} #{name}: #{message}"
length = [0, 75 - text.length].max
write "== %s %s" % [text, "=" * length]
end
# Takes a message argument and outputs it as is.
# A second boolean argument can be passed to specify whether to indent or not.
def say(message, subitem = false)
write "#{subitem ? " ->" : "--"} #{message}"
end
# Outputs text along with how long it took to run its block.
# If the block returns an integer it assumes it is the number of rows affected.
def say_with_time(message)
say(message)
result = nil
time = Benchmark.measure { result = yield }
say "%.4fs" % time.real, :subitem
say("#{result} rows", :subitem) if result.is_a?(Integer)
result
end
# Takes a block as an argument and suppresses any output generated by the block.
def suppress_messages
save, self.verbose = verbose, false
yield
ensure
self.verbose = save
end
def connection
@connection || ActiveRecord::Base.connection
end
def method_missing(method, *arguments, &block)
arg_list = arguments.map(&:inspect) * ", "
say_with_time "#{method}(#{arg_list})" do
unless connection.respond_to? :revert
unless arguments.empty? || [:execute, :enable_extension, :disable_extension].include?(method)
arguments[0] = proper_table_name(arguments.first, table_name_options)
if method == :rename_table ||
(method == :remove_foreign_key && !arguments.second.is_a?(Hash))
arguments[1] = proper_table_name(arguments.second, table_name_options)
end
end
end
return super unless connection.respond_to?(method)
connection.send(method, *arguments, &block)
end
end
ruby2_keywords(:method_missing)
def copy(destination, sources, options = {})
copied = []
schema_migration = options[:schema_migration] || ActiveRecord::SchemaMigration
FileUtils.mkdir_p(destination) unless File.exist?(destination)
destination_migrations = ActiveRecord::MigrationContext.new(destination, schema_migration).migrations
last = destination_migrations.last
sources.each do |scope, path|
source_migrations = ActiveRecord::MigrationContext.new(path, schema_migration).migrations
source_migrations.each do |migration|
source = File.binread(migration.filename)
inserted_comment = "# This migration comes from #{scope} (originally #{migration.version})\n"
magic_comments = +""
loop do
# If we have a magic comment in the original migration,
# insert our comment after the first newline(end of the magic comment line)
# so the magic keep working.
# Note that magic comments must be at the first line(except sh-bang).
source.sub!(/\A(?:#.*\b(?:en)?coding:\s*\S+|#\s*frozen_string_literal:\s*(?:true|false)).*\n/) do |magic_comment|
magic_comments << magic_comment; ""
end || break
end
if !magic_comments.empty? && source.start_with?("\n")
magic_comments << "\n"
source = source[1..-1]
end
source = "#{magic_comments}#{inserted_comment}#{source}"
if duplicate = destination_migrations.detect { |m| m.name == migration.name }
if options[:on_skip] && duplicate.scope != scope.to_s
options[:on_skip].call(scope, migration)
end
next
end
migration.version = next_migration_number(last ? last.version + 1 : 0).to_i
new_path = File.join(destination, "#{migration.version}_#{migration.name.underscore}.#{scope}.rb")
old_path, migration.filename = migration.filename, new_path
last = migration
File.binwrite(migration.filename, source)
copied << migration
options[:on_copy].call(scope, migration, old_path) if options[:on_copy]
destination_migrations << migration
end
end
copied
end
# Finds the correct table name given an Active Record object.
# Uses the Active Record object's own table_name, or pre/suffix from the
# options passed in.
def proper_table_name(name, options = {})
if name.respond_to? :table_name
name.table_name
else
"#{options[:table_name_prefix]}#{name}#{options[:table_name_suffix]}"
end
end
# Determines the version number of the next migration.
def next_migration_number(number)
if ActiveRecord.timestamped_migrations
[Time.now.utc.strftime("%Y%m%d%H%M%S"), "%.14d" % number].max
else
SchemaMigration.normalize_migration_number(number)
end
end
# Builds a hash for use in ActiveRecord::Migration#proper_table_name using
# the Active Record object's table_name prefix and suffix
def table_name_options(config = ActiveRecord::Base) # :nodoc:
{
table_name_prefix: config.table_name_prefix,
table_name_suffix: config.table_name_suffix
}
end
private
def execute_block
if connection.respond_to? :execute_block
super # use normal delegation to record the block
else
yield
end
end
def command_recorder
CommandRecorder.new(connection)
end
end
# MigrationProxy is used to defer loading of the actual migration classes
# until they are needed
MigrationProxy = Struct.new(:name, :version, :filename, :scope) do
def initialize(name, version, filename, scope)
super
@migration = nil
end
def basename
File.basename(filename)
end
delegate :migrate, :announce, :write, :disable_ddl_transaction, to: :migration
private
def migration
@migration ||= load_migration
end
def load_migration
Object.send(:remove_const, name) rescue nil
load(File.expand_path(filename))
name.constantize.new(name, version)
end
end
# MigrationContext sets the context in which a migration is run.
#
# A migration context requires the path to the migrations is set
# in the +migrations_paths+ parameter. Optionally a +schema_migration+
# class can be provided. For most applications, +SchemaMigration+ is
# sufficient. Multiple database applications need a +SchemaMigration+
# per primary database.
class MigrationContext
attr_reader :migrations_paths, :schema_migration
def initialize(migrations_paths, schema_migration = SchemaMigration)
@migrations_paths = migrations_paths
@schema_migration = schema_migration
end
# Runs the migrations in the +migrations_path+.
#
# If +target_version+ is +nil+, +migrate+ will run +up+.
#
# If the +current_version+ and +target_version+ are both
# 0 then an empty array will be returned and no migrations
# will be run.
#
# If the +current_version+ in the schema is less than
# the +target_version+, then +down+ will be run.
#
# If none of the conditions are met, +up+ will be run with
# the +target_version+.
def migrate(target_version = nil, &block)
case
when target_version.nil?
up(target_version, &block)
when current_version == 0 && target_version == 0
[]
when current_version > target_version
down(target_version, &block)
else
up(target_version, &block)
end
end
def rollback(steps = 1) # :nodoc:
move(:down, steps)
end
def forward(steps = 1) # :nodoc:
move(:up, steps)
end
def up(target_version = nil) # :nodoc:
selected_migrations = if block_given?
migrations.select { |m| yield m }
else
migrations
end
Migrator.new(:up, selected_migrations, schema_migration, target_version).migrate
end
def down(target_version = nil) # :nodoc:
selected_migrations = if block_given?
migrations.select { |m| yield m }
else
migrations
end
Migrator.new(:down, selected_migrations, schema_migration, target_version).migrate
end
def run(direction, target_version) # :nodoc:
Migrator.new(direction, migrations, schema_migration, target_version).run
end
def open # :nodoc:
Migrator.new(:up, migrations, schema_migration)
end
def get_all_versions # :nodoc:
if schema_migration.table_exists?
schema_migration.all_versions.map(&:to_i)
else
[]
end
end
def current_version # :nodoc:
get_all_versions.max || 0
rescue ActiveRecord::NoDatabaseError
end
def needs_migration? # :nodoc:
pending_migration_versions.size > 0
end
def pending_migration_versions # :nodoc:
migrations.collect(&:version) - get_all_versions
end
def migrations # :nodoc:
migrations = migration_files.map do |file|
version, name, scope = parse_migration_filename(file)
raise IllegalMigrationNameError.new(file) unless version
version = version.to_i
name = name.camelize
MigrationProxy.new(name, version, file, scope)
end
migrations.sort_by(&:version)
end
def migrations_status # :nodoc:
db_list = schema_migration.normalized_versions
file_list = migration_files.filter_map do |file|
version, name, scope = parse_migration_filename(file)
raise IllegalMigrationNameError.new(file) unless version
version = schema_migration.normalize_migration_number(version)
status = db_list.delete(version) ? "up" : "down"
[status, version, (name + scope).humanize]
end
db_list.map! do |version|
["up", version, "********** NO FILE **********"]
end
(db_list + file_list).sort_by { |_, version, _| version.to_i }
end
def current_environment # :nodoc:
ActiveRecord::ConnectionHandling::DEFAULT_ENV.call
end
def protected_environment? # :nodoc:
ActiveRecord::Base.protected_environments.include?(last_stored_environment) if last_stored_environment
end
def last_stored_environment # :nodoc:
return nil unless ActiveRecord::InternalMetadata.enabled?
return nil if current_version == 0
raise NoEnvironmentInSchemaError unless ActiveRecord::InternalMetadata.table_exists?
environment = ActiveRecord::InternalMetadata[:environment]
raise NoEnvironmentInSchemaError unless environment
environment
end
private
def migration_files
paths = Array(migrations_paths)
Dir[*paths.flat_map { |path| "#{path}/**/[0-9]*_*.rb" }]
end
def parse_migration_filename(filename)
File.basename(filename).scan(Migration::MigrationFilenameRegexp).first
end
def move(direction, steps)
migrator = Migrator.new(direction, migrations, schema_migration)
if current_version != 0 && !migrator.current_migration
raise UnknownMigrationVersionError.new(current_version)
end
start_index =
if current_version == 0
0
else
migrator.migrations.index(migrator.current_migration)
end
finish = migrator.migrations[start_index + steps]
version = finish ? finish.version : 0
public_send(direction, version)
end
end
class Migrator # :nodoc:
class << self
attr_accessor :migrations_paths
# For cases where a table doesn't exist like loading from schema cache
def current_version
MigrationContext.new(migrations_paths, SchemaMigration).current_version
end
end
self.migrations_paths = ["db/migrate"]
def initialize(direction, migrations, schema_migration, target_version = nil)
@direction = direction
@target_version = target_version
@migrated_versions = nil
@migrations = migrations
@schema_migration = schema_migration
validate(@migrations)
@schema_migration.create_table
ActiveRecord::InternalMetadata.create_table
end
def current_version
migrated.max || 0
end
def current_migration
migrations.detect { |m| m.version == current_version }
end
alias :current :current_migration
def run
if use_advisory_lock?
with_advisory_lock { run_without_lock }
else
run_without_lock
end
end
def migrate
if use_advisory_lock?
with_advisory_lock { migrate_without_lock }
else
migrate_without_lock
end
end
def runnable
runnable = migrations[start..finish]
if up?
runnable.reject { |m| ran?(m) }
else
# skip the last migration if we're headed down, but not ALL the way down
runnable.pop if target
runnable.find_all { |m| ran?(m) }
end
end
def migrations
down? ? @migrations.reverse : @migrations.sort_by(&:version)
end
def pending_migrations
already_migrated = migrated
migrations.reject { |m| already_migrated.include?(m.version) }
end
def migrated
@migrated_versions || load_migrated
end
def load_migrated
@migrated_versions = Set.new(@schema_migration.all_versions.map(&:to_i))
end
private
# Used for running a specific migration.
def run_without_lock
migration = migrations.detect { |m| m.version == @target_version }
raise UnknownMigrationVersionError.new(@target_version) if migration.nil?
result = execute_migration_in_transaction(migration)
record_environment
result
end
# Used for running multiple migrations up to or down to a certain value.
def migrate_without_lock
if invalid_target?
raise UnknownMigrationVersionError.new(@target_version)
end
result = runnable.each(&method(:execute_migration_in_transaction))
record_environment
result
end
# Stores the current environment in the database.
def record_environment
return if down?
ActiveRecord::InternalMetadata[:environment] = ActiveRecord::Base.connection.migration_context.current_environment
end
def ran?(migration)
migrated.include?(migration.version.to_i)
end
# Return true if a valid version is not provided.
def invalid_target?
@target_version && @target_version != 0 && !target
end
def execute_migration_in_transaction(migration)
return if down? && !migrated.include?(migration.version.to_i)
return if up? && migrated.include?(migration.version.to_i)
Base.logger.info "Migrating to #{migration.name} (#{migration.version})" if Base.logger
ddl_transaction(migration) do
migration.migrate(@direction)
record_version_state_after_migrating(migration.version)
end
rescue => e
msg = +"An error has occurred, "
msg << "this and " if use_transaction?(migration)
msg << "all later migrations canceled:\n\n#{e}"
raise StandardError, msg, e.backtrace
end
def target
migrations.detect { |m| m.version == @target_version }
end
def finish
migrations.index(target) || migrations.size - 1
end
def start
up? ? 0 : (migrations.index(current) || 0)
end
def validate(migrations)
name, = migrations.group_by(&:name).find { |_, v| v.length > 1 }
raise DuplicateMigrationNameError.new(name) if name
version, = migrations.group_by(&:version).find { |_, v| v.length > 1 }
raise DuplicateMigrationVersionError.new(version) if version
end
def record_version_state_after_migrating(version)
if down?
migrated.delete(version)
@schema_migration.delete_by(version: version.to_s)
else
migrated << version
@schema_migration.create!(version: version.to_s)
end
end
def up?
@direction == :up
end
def down?
@direction == :down
end
# Wrap the migration in a transaction only if supported by the adapter.
def ddl_transaction(migration)
if use_transaction?(migration)
Base.transaction { yield }
else
yield
end
end
def use_transaction?(migration)
!migration.disable_ddl_transaction && Base.connection.supports_ddl_transactions?
end
def use_advisory_lock?
Base.connection.advisory_locks_enabled?
end
def with_advisory_lock
lock_id = generate_migrator_advisory_lock_id
with_advisory_lock_connection do |connection|
got_lock = connection.get_advisory_lock(lock_id)
raise ConcurrentMigrationError unless got_lock
load_migrated # reload schema_migrations to be sure it wasn't changed by another process before we got the lock
yield
ensure
if got_lock && !connection.release_advisory_lock(lock_id)
raise ConcurrentMigrationError.new(
ConcurrentMigrationError::RELEASE_LOCK_FAILED_MESSAGE
)
end
end
end
def with_advisory_lock_connection
pool = ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::ConnectionHandler.new.establish_connection(
ActiveRecord::Base.connection_db_config
)
pool.with_connection { |connection| yield(connection) }
ensure
pool&.disconnect!
end
MIGRATOR_SALT = 2053462845
def generate_migrator_advisory_lock_id
db_name_hash = Zlib.crc32(Base.connection.current_database)
MIGRATOR_SALT * db_name_hash
end
end
end