/usr/lib/ruby/vendor_ruby/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_definitions.rb is in ruby-activerecord-3.2 3.2.16-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 | require 'active_support/core_ext/object/blank'
require 'date'
require 'set'
require 'bigdecimal'
require 'bigdecimal/util'
module ActiveRecord
module ConnectionAdapters #:nodoc:
class IndexDefinition < Struct.new(:table, :name, :unique, :columns, :lengths, :orders) #:nodoc:
end
# Abstract representation of a column definition. Instances of this type
# are typically created by methods in TableDefinition, and added to the
# +columns+ attribute of said TableDefinition object, in order to be used
# for generating a number of table creation or table changing SQL statements.
class ColumnDefinition < Struct.new(:base, :name, :type, :limit, :precision, :scale, :default, :null) #:nodoc:
def string_to_binary(value)
value
end
def sql_type
base.type_to_sql(type.to_sym, limit, precision, scale) rescue type
end
def to_sql
column_sql = "#{base.quote_column_name(name)} #{sql_type}"
column_options = {}
column_options[:null] = null unless null.nil?
column_options[:default] = default unless default.nil?
add_column_options!(column_sql, column_options) unless type.to_sym == :primary_key
column_sql
end
private
def add_column_options!(sql, options)
base.add_column_options!(sql, options.merge(:column => self))
end
end
# Represents the schema of an SQL table in an abstract way. This class
# provides methods for manipulating the schema representation.
#
# Inside migration files, the +t+ object in +create_table+
# is actually of this type:
#
# class SomeMigration < ActiveRecord::Migration
# def up
# create_table :foo do |t|
# puts t.class # => "ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::TableDefinition"
# end
# end
#
# def down
# ...
# end
# end
#
# The table definitions
# The Columns are stored as a ColumnDefinition in the +columns+ attribute.
class TableDefinition
# An array of ColumnDefinition objects, representing the column changes
# that have been defined.
attr_accessor :columns
def initialize(base)
@columns = []
@columns_hash = {}
@base = base
end
def xml(*args)
raise NotImplementedError unless %w{
sqlite mysql mysql2
}.include? @base.adapter_name.downcase
options = args.extract_options!
column(args[0], :text, options)
end
# Appends a primary key definition to the table definition.
# Can be called multiple times, but this is probably not a good idea.
def primary_key(name)
column(name, :primary_key)
end
# Returns a ColumnDefinition for the column with name +name+.
def [](name)
@columns_hash[name.to_s]
end
# Instantiates a new column for the table.
# The +type+ parameter is normally one of the migrations native types,
# which is one of the following:
# <tt>:primary_key</tt>, <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>.
#
# You may use a type not in this list as long as it is supported by your
# database (for example, "polygon" in MySQL), but this will not be database
# agnostic and should usually be avoided.
#
# Available options are (none of these exists by default):
# * <tt>:limit</tt> -
# Requests a maximum column length. This is number of characters for <tt>:string</tt> and
# <tt>:text</tt> columns and number of bytes for <tt>:binary</tt> and <tt>:integer</tt> columns.
# * <tt>:default</tt> -
# The column's default value. Use nil for NULL.
# * <tt>:null</tt> -
# Allows or disallows +NULL+ values in the column. This option could
# have been named <tt>:null_allowed</tt>.
# * <tt>:precision</tt> -
# Specifies the precision for a <tt>:decimal</tt> column.
# * <tt>:scale</tt> -
# Specifies the scale for a <tt>:decimal</tt> column.
#
# For clarity's sake: the precision is the number of significant digits,
# while the scale is the number of digits that can be stored following
# the decimal point. For example, the number 123.45 has a precision of 5
# and a scale of 2. A decimal with a precision of 5 and a scale of 2 can
# range from -999.99 to 999.99.
#
# Please be aware of different RDBMS implementations behavior with
# <tt>:decimal</tt> columns:
# * The SQL standard says the default scale should be 0, <tt>:scale</tt> <=
# <tt>:precision</tt>, and makes no comments about the requirements of
# <tt>:precision</tt>.
# * MySQL: <tt>:precision</tt> [1..63], <tt>:scale</tt> [0..30].
# Default is (10,0).
# * PostgreSQL: <tt>:precision</tt> [1..infinity],
# <tt>:scale</tt> [0..infinity]. No default.
# * SQLite2: Any <tt>:precision</tt> and <tt>:scale</tt> may be used.
# Internal storage as strings. No default.
# * SQLite3: No restrictions on <tt>:precision</tt> and <tt>:scale</tt>,
# but the maximum supported <tt>:precision</tt> is 16. No default.
# * Oracle: <tt>:precision</tt> [1..38], <tt>:scale</tt> [-84..127].
# Default is (38,0).
# * DB2: <tt>:precision</tt> [1..63], <tt>:scale</tt> [0..62].
# Default unknown.
# * Firebird: <tt>:precision</tt> [1..18], <tt>:scale</tt> [0..18].
# Default (9,0). Internal types NUMERIC and DECIMAL have different
# storage rules, decimal being better.
# * FrontBase?: <tt>:precision</tt> [1..38], <tt>:scale</tt> [0..38].
# Default (38,0). WARNING Max <tt>:precision</tt>/<tt>:scale</tt> for
# NUMERIC is 19, and DECIMAL is 38.
# * SqlServer?: <tt>:precision</tt> [1..38], <tt>:scale</tt> [0..38].
# Default (38,0).
# * Sybase: <tt>:precision</tt> [1..38], <tt>:scale</tt> [0..38].
# Default (38,0).
# * OpenBase?: Documentation unclear. Claims storage in <tt>double</tt>.
#
# This method returns <tt>self</tt>.
#
# == Examples
# # Assuming +td+ is an instance of TableDefinition
# td.column(:granted, :boolean)
# # granted BOOLEAN
#
# td.column(:picture, :binary, :limit => 2.megabytes)
# # => picture BLOB(2097152)
#
# td.column(:sales_stage, :string, :limit => 20, :default => 'new', :null => false)
# # => sales_stage VARCHAR(20) DEFAULT 'new' NOT NULL
#
# td.column(:bill_gates_money, :decimal, :precision => 15, :scale => 2)
# # => bill_gates_money DECIMAL(15,2)
#
# td.column(:sensor_reading, :decimal, :precision => 30, :scale => 20)
# # => sensor_reading DECIMAL(30,20)
#
# # While <tt>:scale</tt> defaults to zero on most databases, it
# # probably wouldn't hurt to include it.
# td.column(:huge_integer, :decimal, :precision => 30)
# # => huge_integer DECIMAL(30)
#
# # Defines a column with a database-specific type.
# td.column(:foo, 'polygon')
# # => foo polygon
#
# == Short-hand examples
#
# Instead of calling +column+ directly, you can also work with the short-hand definitions for the default types.
# They use the type as the method name instead of as a parameter and allow for multiple columns to be defined
# in a single statement.
#
# What can be written like this with the regular calls to column:
#
# create_table "products", :force => true do |t|
# t.column "shop_id", :integer
# t.column "creator_id", :integer
# t.column "name", :string, :default => "Untitled"
# t.column "value", :string, :default => "Untitled"
# t.column "created_at", :datetime
# t.column "updated_at", :datetime
# end
#
# Can also be written as follows using the short-hand:
#
# create_table :products do |t|
# t.integer :shop_id, :creator_id
# t.string :name, :value, :default => "Untitled"
# t.timestamps
# end
#
# There's a short-hand method for each of the type values declared at the top. And then there's
# TableDefinition#timestamps that'll add +created_at+ and +updated_at+ as datetimes.
#
# TableDefinition#references will add an appropriately-named _id column, plus a corresponding _type
# column if the <tt>:polymorphic</tt> option is supplied. If <tt>:polymorphic</tt> is a hash of
# options, these will be used when creating the <tt>_type</tt> column. So what can be written like this:
#
# create_table :taggings do |t|
# t.integer :tag_id, :tagger_id, :taggable_id
# t.string :tagger_type
# t.string :taggable_type, :default => 'Photo'
# end
#
# Can also be written as follows using references:
#
# create_table :taggings do |t|
# t.references :tag
# t.references :tagger, :polymorphic => true
# t.references :taggable, :polymorphic => { :default => 'Photo' }
# end
def column(name, type, options = {})
name = name.to_s
type = type.to_sym
column = self[name] || new_column_definition(@base, name, type)
limit = options.fetch(:limit) do
native[type][:limit] if native[type].is_a?(Hash)
end
column.limit = limit
column.precision = options[:precision]
column.scale = options[:scale]
column.default = options[:default]
column.null = options[:null]
self
end
%w( string text integer float decimal datetime timestamp time date binary boolean ).each do |column_type|
class_eval <<-EOV, __FILE__, __LINE__ + 1
def #{column_type}(*args) # def string(*args)
options = args.extract_options! # options = args.extract_options!
column_names = args # column_names = args
type = :'#{column_type}' # type = :string
column_names.each { |name| column(name, type, options) } # column_names.each { |name| column(name, type, options) }
end # end
EOV
end
# Appends <tt>:datetime</tt> columns <tt>:created_at</tt> and
# <tt>:updated_at</tt> to the table.
def timestamps(*args)
options = { :null => false }.merge(args.extract_options!)
column(:created_at, :datetime, options)
column(:updated_at, :datetime, options)
end
def references(*args)
options = args.extract_options!
polymorphic = options.delete(:polymorphic)
args.each do |col|
column("#{col}_id", :integer, options)
column("#{col}_type", :string, polymorphic.is_a?(Hash) ? polymorphic : options) unless polymorphic.nil?
end
end
alias :belongs_to :references
# Returns a String whose contents are the column definitions
# concatenated together. This string can then be prepended and appended to
# to generate the final SQL to create the table.
def to_sql
@columns.map { |c| c.to_sql } * ', '
end
private
def new_column_definition(base, name, type)
definition = ColumnDefinition.new base, name, type
@columns << definition
@columns_hash[name] = definition
definition
end
def native
@base.native_database_types
end
end
# Represents an SQL table in an abstract way for updating a table.
# Also see TableDefinition and SchemaStatements#create_table
#
# Available transformations are:
#
# change_table :table do |t|
# t.column
# t.index
# t.timestamps
# t.change
# t.change_default
# t.rename
# t.references
# t.belongs_to
# t.string
# t.text
# t.integer
# t.float
# t.decimal
# t.datetime
# t.timestamp
# t.time
# t.date
# t.binary
# t.boolean
# t.remove
# t.remove_references
# t.remove_belongs_to
# t.remove_index
# t.remove_timestamps
# end
#
class Table
def initialize(table_name, base)
@table_name = table_name
@base = base
end
# Adds a new column to the named table.
# See TableDefinition#column for details of the options you can use.
# ===== Example
# ====== Creating a simple column
# t.column(:name, :string)
def column(column_name, type, options = {})
@base.add_column(@table_name, column_name, type, options)
end
# Checks to see if a column exists. See SchemaStatements#column_exists?
def column_exists?(column_name, type = nil, options = {})
@base.column_exists?(@table_name, column_name, type, options)
end
# Adds a new index to the table. +column_name+ can be a single Symbol, or
# an Array of Symbols. See SchemaStatements#add_index
#
# ===== Examples
# ====== Creating a simple index
# t.index(:name)
# ====== Creating a unique index
# t.index([:branch_id, :party_id], :unique => true)
# ====== Creating a named index
# t.index([:branch_id, :party_id], :unique => true, :name => 'by_branch_party')
def index(column_name, options = {})
@base.add_index(@table_name, column_name, options)
end
# Checks to see if an index exists. See SchemaStatements#index_exists?
def index_exists?(column_name, options = {})
@base.index_exists?(@table_name, column_name, options)
end
# Adds timestamps (+created_at+ and +updated_at+) columns to the table. See SchemaStatements#add_timestamps
# ===== Example
# t.timestamps
def timestamps
@base.add_timestamps(@table_name)
end
# Changes the column's definition according to the new options.
# See TableDefinition#column for details of the options you can use.
# ===== Examples
# t.change(:name, :string, :limit => 80)
# t.change(:description, :text)
def change(column_name, type, options = {})
@base.change_column(@table_name, column_name, type, options)
end
# Sets a new default value for a column. See SchemaStatements#change_column_default
# ===== Examples
# t.change_default(:qualification, 'new')
# t.change_default(:authorized, 1)
def change_default(column_name, default)
@base.change_column_default(@table_name, column_name, default)
end
# Removes the column(s) from the table definition.
# ===== Examples
# t.remove(:qualification)
# t.remove(:qualification, :experience)
def remove(*column_names)
@base.remove_column(@table_name, *column_names)
end
# Removes the given index from the table.
#
# ===== Examples
# ====== Remove the index_table_name_on_column in the table_name table
# t.remove_index :column
# ====== Remove the index named index_table_name_on_branch_id in the table_name table
# t.remove_index :column => :branch_id
# ====== Remove the index named index_table_name_on_branch_id_and_party_id in the table_name table
# t.remove_index :column => [:branch_id, :party_id]
# ====== Remove the index named by_branch_party in the table_name table
# t.remove_index :name => :by_branch_party
def remove_index(options = {})
@base.remove_index(@table_name, options)
end
# Removes the timestamp columns (+created_at+ and +updated_at+) from the table.
# ===== Example
# t.remove_timestamps
def remove_timestamps
@base.remove_timestamps(@table_name)
end
# Renames a column.
# ===== Example
# t.rename(:description, :name)
def rename(column_name, new_column_name)
@base.rename_column(@table_name, column_name, new_column_name)
end
# Adds a reference. Optionally adds a +type+ column, if <tt>:polymorphic</tt> option is provided.
# <tt>references</tt> and <tt>belongs_to</tt> are acceptable.
# ===== Examples
# t.references(:goat)
# t.references(:goat, :polymorphic => true)
# t.belongs_to(:goat)
def references(*args)
options = args.extract_options!
polymorphic = options.delete(:polymorphic)
args.each do |col|
@base.add_column(@table_name, "#{col}_id", :integer, options)
@base.add_column(@table_name, "#{col}_type", :string, polymorphic.is_a?(Hash) ? polymorphic : options) unless polymorphic.nil?
end
end
alias :belongs_to :references
# Removes a reference. Optionally removes a +type+ column.
# <tt>remove_references</tt> and <tt>remove_belongs_to</tt> are acceptable.
# ===== Examples
# t.remove_references(:goat)
# t.remove_references(:goat, :polymorphic => true)
# t.remove_belongs_to(:goat)
def remove_references(*args)
options = args.extract_options!
polymorphic = options.delete(:polymorphic)
args.each do |col|
@base.remove_column(@table_name, "#{col}_id")
@base.remove_column(@table_name, "#{col}_type") unless polymorphic.nil?
end
end
alias :remove_belongs_to :remove_references
# Adds a column or columns of a specified type
# ===== Examples
# t.string(:goat)
# t.string(:goat, :sheep)
%w( string text integer float decimal datetime timestamp time date binary boolean ).each do |column_type|
class_eval <<-EOV, __FILE__, __LINE__ + 1
def #{column_type}(*args) # def string(*args)
options = args.extract_options! # options = args.extract_options!
column_names = args # column_names = args
type = :'#{column_type}' # type = :string
column_names.each do |name| # column_names.each do |name|
column = ColumnDefinition.new(@base, name.to_s, type) # column = ColumnDefinition.new(@base, name, type)
if options[:limit] # if options[:limit]
column.limit = options[:limit] # column.limit = options[:limit]
elsif native[type].is_a?(Hash) # elsif native[type].is_a?(Hash)
column.limit = native[type][:limit] # column.limit = native[type][:limit]
end # end
column.precision = options[:precision] # column.precision = options[:precision]
column.scale = options[:scale] # column.scale = options[:scale]
column.default = options[:default] # column.default = options[:default]
column.null = options[:null] # column.null = options[:null]
@base.add_column(@table_name, name, column.sql_type, options) # @base.add_column(@table_name, name, column.sql_type, options)
end # end
end # end
EOV
end
private
def native
@base.native_database_types
end
end
end
end
|