require 'date'
require 'bigdecimal'
require 'bigdecimal/util'
require 'active_support/core_ext/benchmark'
require 'active_record/connection_adapters/schema_cache'
require 'active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_dumper'
require 'active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_creation'
require 'monitor'
module ActiveRecord
module ConnectionAdapters # :nodoc:
extend ActiveSupport::Autoload
autoload :Column
autoload :ConnectionSpecification
autoload_at 'active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/schema_definitions' do
autoload :IndexDefinition
autoload :ColumnDefinition
autoload :ChangeColumnDefinition
autoload :TableDefinition
autoload :Table
autoload :AlterTable
end
autoload_at 'active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/connection_pool' do
autoload :ConnectionHandler
autoload :ConnectionManagement
end
autoload_under 'abstract' do
autoload :SchemaStatements
autoload :DatabaseStatements
autoload :DatabaseLimits
autoload :Quoting
autoload :ConnectionPool
autoload :QueryCache
autoload :Savepoints
end
autoload_at 'active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/transaction' do
autoload :ClosedTransaction
autoload :RealTransaction
autoload :SavepointTransaction
autoload :TransactionState
end
# Active Record supports multiple database systems. AbstractAdapter and
# related classes form the abstraction layer which makes this possible.
# An AbstractAdapter represents a connection to a database, and provides an
# abstract interface for database-specific functionality such as establishing
# a connection, escaping values, building the right SQL fragments for ':offset'
# and ':limit' options, etc.
#
# All the concrete database adapters follow the interface laid down in this class.
# ActiveRecord::Base.connection returns an AbstractAdapter object, which
# you can use.
#
# Most of the methods in the adapter are useful during migrations. Most
# notably, the instance methods provided by SchemaStatement are very useful.
class AbstractAdapter
include Quoting, DatabaseStatements, SchemaStatements
include DatabaseLimits
include QueryCache
include ActiveSupport::Callbacks
include MonitorMixin
include ColumnDumper
SIMPLE_INT = /\A\d+\z/
define_callbacks :checkout, :checkin
attr_accessor :visitor, :pool
attr_reader :schema_cache, :last_use, :in_use, :logger
alias :in_use? :in_use
def self.type_cast_config_to_integer(config)
if config =~ SIMPLE_INT
config.to_i
else
config
end
end
def self.type_cast_config_to_boolean(config)
if config == "false"
false
else
config
end
end
def initialize(connection, logger = nil, pool = nil) #:nodoc:
super()
@connection = connection
@in_use = false
@instrumenter = ActiveSupport::Notifications.instrumenter
@last_use = false
@logger = logger
@pool = pool
@schema_cache = SchemaCache.new self
@visitor = nil
@prepared_statements = false
end
def valid_type?(type)
true
end
def schema_creation
SchemaCreation.new self
end
def lease
synchronize do
unless in_use
@in_use = true
@last_use = Time.now
end
end
end
def schema_cache=(cache)
cache.connection = self
@schema_cache = cache
end
def expire
@in_use = false
end
def unprepared_visitor
self.class::BindSubstitution.new self
end
def unprepared_statement
old_prepared_statements, @prepared_statements = @prepared_statements, false
old_visitor, @visitor = @visitor, unprepared_visitor
yield
ensure
@visitor, @prepared_statements = old_visitor, old_prepared_statements
end
# Returns the human-readable name of the adapter. Use mixed case - one
# can always use downcase if needed.
def adapter_name
'Abstract'
end
# Does this adapter support migrations? Backend specific, as the
# abstract adapter always returns +false+.
def supports_migrations?
false
end
# Can this adapter determine the primary key for tables not attached
# to an Active Record class, such as join tables? Backend specific, as
# the abstract adapter always returns +false+.
def supports_primary_key?
false
end
# Does this adapter support using DISTINCT within COUNT? This is +true+
# for all adapters except sqlite.
def supports_count_distinct?
true
end
# Does this adapter support DDL rollbacks in transactions? That is, would
# CREATE TABLE or ALTER TABLE get rolled back by a transaction? PostgreSQL,
# SQL Server, and others support this. MySQL and others do not.
def supports_ddl_transactions?
false
end
def supports_bulk_alter?
false
end
# Does this adapter support savepoints? PostgreSQL and MySQL do,
# SQLite < 3.6.8 does not.
def supports_savepoints?
false
end
# Should primary key values be selected from their corresponding
# sequence before the insert statement? If true, next_sequence_value
# is called before each insert to set the record's primary key.
# This is false for all adapters but Firebird.
def prefetch_primary_key?(table_name = nil)
false
end
# Does this adapter support index sort order?
def supports_index_sort_order?
false
end
# Does this adapter support partial indices?
def supports_partial_index?
false
end
# Does this adapter support explain? As of this writing sqlite3,
# mysql2, and postgresql are the only ones that do.
def supports_explain?
false
end
# Does this adapter support setting the isolation level for a transaction?
def supports_transaction_isolation?
false
end
# Does this adapter support database extensions? As of this writing only
# postgresql does.
def supports_extensions?
false
end
# This is meant to be implemented by the adapters that support extensions
def disable_extension(name)
end
# This is meant to be implemented by the adapters that support extensions
def enable_extension(name)
end
# A list of extensions, to be filled in by adapters that support them. At
# the moment only postgresql does.
def extensions
[]
end
# A list of index algorithms, to be filled by adapters that support them.
# MySQL and PostgreSQL have support for them right now.
def index_algorithms
{}
end
# QUOTING ==================================================
# Returns a bind substitution value given a bind +index+ and +column+
# NOTE: The column param is currently being used by the sqlserver-adapter
def substitute_at(column, index)
Arel::Nodes::BindParam.new '?'
end
# REFERENTIAL INTEGRITY ====================================
# Override to turn off referential integrity while executing &block.
def disable_referential_integrity
yield
end
# CONNECTION MANAGEMENT ====================================
# Checks whether the connection to the database is still active. This includes
# checking whether the database is actually capable of responding, i.e. whether
# the connection isn't stale.
def active?
end
# Adapter should redefine this if it needs a threadsafe way to approximate
# if the connection is active
def active_threadsafe?
active?
end
# Disconnects from the database if already connected, and establishes a
# new connection with the database. Implementors should call super if they
# override the default implementation.
def reconnect!
clear_cache!
reset_transaction
end
# Disconnects from the database if already connected. Otherwise, this
# method does nothing.
def disconnect!
clear_cache!
reset_transaction
end
# Reset the state of this connection, directing the DBMS to clear
# transactions and other connection-related server-side state. Usually a
# database-dependent operation.
#
# The default implementation does nothing; the implementation should be
# overridden by concrete adapters.
def reset!
# this should be overridden by concrete adapters
end
###
# Clear any caching the database adapter may be doing, for example
# clearing the prepared statement cache. This is database specific.
def clear_cache!
# this should be overridden by concrete adapters
end
# Returns true if its required to reload the connection between requests for development mode.
# This is not the case for Ruby/MySQL and it's not necessary for any adapters except SQLite.
def requires_reloading?
false
end
# Checks whether the connection to the database is still active (i.e. not stale).
# This is done under the hood by calling active?. If the connection
# is no longer active, then this method will reconnect to the database.
def verify!(*ignored)
reconnect! unless active?
end
# Provides access to the underlying database driver for this adapter. For
# example, this method returns a Mysql object in case of MysqlAdapter,
# and a PGconn object in case of PostgreSQLAdapter.
#
# This is useful for when you need to call a proprietary method such as
# PostgreSQL's lo_* methods.
def raw_connection
@connection
end
def open_transactions
@transaction.number
end
def create_savepoint(name = nil)
end
def rollback_to_savepoint(name = nil)
end
def release_savepoint(name = nil)
end
def case_sensitive_modifier(node)
node
end
def case_insensitive_comparison(table, attribute, column, value)
table[attribute].lower.eq(table.lower(value))
end
def current_savepoint_name
"active_record_#{open_transactions}"
end
# Check the connection back in to the connection pool
def close
pool.checkin self
end
protected
def translate_exception_class(e, sql)
begin
message = "#{e.class.name}: #{e.message}: #{sql}"
rescue Encoding::CompatibilityError
message = "#{e.class.name}: #{e.message.force_encoding sql.encoding}: #{sql}"
end
@logger.error message if @logger
exception = translate_exception(e, message)
exception.set_backtrace e.backtrace
exception
end
def log(sql, name = "SQL", binds = [], statement_name = nil)
@instrumenter.instrument(
"sql.active_record",
:sql => sql,
:name => name,
:connection_id => object_id,
:statement_name => statement_name,
:binds => binds) { yield }
rescue => e
raise translate_exception_class(e, sql)
end
def translate_exception(exception, message)
# override in derived class
ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid.new(message, exception)
end
def without_prepared_statement?(binds)
!@prepared_statements || binds.empty?
end
end
end
end