# frozen_string_literal: true # Be sure to restart your server when you modify this file. # # This file eases your Rails 7.1 framework defaults upgrade. # # Uncomment each configuration one by one to switch to the new default. # Once your application is ready to run with all new defaults, you can remove # this file and set the `config.load_defaults` to `7.1`. # # Read the Guide for Upgrading Ruby on Rails for more info on each option. # https://guides.rubyonrails.org/upgrading_ruby_on_rails.html # No longer add autoloaded paths into `$LOAD_PATH`. This means that you won't be able # to manually require files that are managed by the autoloader, which you shouldn't do anyway. # This will reduce the size of the load path, making `require` faster if you don't use bootsnap, or reduce the size # of the bootsnap cache if you use it. # Rails.application.config.add_autoload_paths_to_load_path = false # Remove the default X-Download-Options headers since it is used only by Internet Explorer. # If you need to support Internet Explorer, add back `"X-Download-Options" => "noopen"`. # Rails.application.config.action_dispatch.default_headers = { # "X-Frame-Options" => "SAMEORIGIN", # "X-XSS-Protection" => "0", # "X-Content-Type-Options" => "nosniff", # "X-Permitted-Cross-Domain-Policies" => "none", # "Referrer-Policy" => "strict-origin-when-cross-origin" # } # Do not treat an `ActionController::Parameters` instance # as equal to an equivalent `Hash` by default. # Rails.application.config.action_controller.allow_deprecated_parameters_hash_equality = false # Active Record Encryption now uses SHA-256 as its hash digest algorithm. Important: If you have # data encrypted with previous Rails versions, there are two scenarios to consider: # # 1. If you have +config.active_support.key_generator_hash_digest_class+ configured as SHA1 (the default # before Rails 7.0), you need to configure SHA-1 for Active Record Encryption too: # Rails.application.config.active_record.encryption.hash_digest_class = OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1 # 2. If you have +config.active_support.key_generator_hash_digest_class+ configured as SHA256 (the new default # in 7.0), then you need to configure SHA-256 for Active Record Encryption: # Rails.application.config.active_record.encryption.hash_digest_class = OpenSSL::Digest::SHA256 # # If you don't currently have data encrypted with Active Record encryption, you can disable this setting to # configure the default behavior starting 7.1+: # Rails.application.config.active_record.encryption.support_sha1_for_non_deterministic_encryption = false # No longer run after_commit callbacks on the first of multiple Active Record # instances to save changes to the same database row within a transaction. # Instead, run these callbacks on the instance most likely to have internal # state which matches what was committed to the database, typically the last # instance to save. # Rails.application.config.active_record.run_commit_callbacks_on_first_saved_instances_in_transaction = false # Configures SQLite with a strict strings mode, which disables double-quoted string literals. # # SQLite has some quirks around double-quoted string literals. # It first tries to consider double-quoted strings as identifier names, but if they don't exist # it then considers them as string literals. Because of this, typos can silently go unnoticed. # For example, it is possible to create an index for a non existing column. # See https://www.sqlite.org/quirks.html#double_quoted_string_literals_are_accepted for more details. # Rails.application.config.active_record.sqlite3_adapter_strict_strings_by_default = true # Disable deprecated singular associations names # Rails.application.config.active_record.allow_deprecated_singular_associations_name = false # Enable the Active Job `BigDecimal` argument serializer, which guarantees # roundtripping. Without this serializer, some queue adapters may serialize # `BigDecimal` arguments as simple (non-roundtrippable) strings. # # When deploying an application with multiple replicas, old (pre-Rails 7.1) # replicas will not be able to deserialize `BigDecimal` arguments from this # serializer. Therefore, this setting should only be enabled after all replicas # have been successfully upgraded to Rails 7.1. # Rails.application.config.active_job.use_big_decimal_serializer = true # Specify if an `ArgumentError` should be raised if `Rails.cache` `fetch` or # `write` are given an invalid `expires_at` or `expires_in` time. # Options are `true`, and `false`. If `false`, the exception will be reported # as `handled` and logged instead. # Rails.application.config.active_support.raise_on_invalid_cache_expiration_time = true # Specify whether Query Logs will format tags using the SQLCommenter format # (https://open-telemetry.github.io/opentelemetry-sqlcommenter/), or using the legacy format. # Options are `:legacy` and `:sqlcommenter`. # Rails.application.config.active_record.query_log_tags_format = :sqlcommenter # Specify the default serializer used by `MessageEncryptor` and `MessageVerifier` # instances. # # The legacy default is `:marshal`, which is a potential vector for # deserialization attacks in cases where a message signing secret has been # leaked. # # In Rails 7.1, the new default is `:json_allow_marshal` which serializes and # deserializes with `ActiveSupport::JSON`, but can fall back to deserializing # with `Marshal` so that legacy messages can still be read. # # In Rails 7.2, the default will become `:json` which serializes and # deserializes with `ActiveSupport::JSON` only. # # Alternatively, you can choose `:message_pack` or `:message_pack_allow_marshal`, # which serialize with `ActiveSupport::MessagePack`. `ActiveSupport::MessagePack` # can roundtrip some Ruby types that are not supported by JSON, and may provide # improved performance, but it requires the `msgpack` gem. # # For more information, see # https://guides.rubyonrails.org/v7.1/configuring.html#config-active-support-message-serializer # # If you are performing a rolling deploy of a Rails 7.1 upgrade, wherein servers # that have not yet been upgraded must be able to read messages from upgraded # servers, first deploy without changing the serializer, then set the serializer # in a subsequent deploy. # Rails.application.config.active_support.message_serializer = :json_allow_marshal # Enable a performance optimization that serializes message data and metadata # together. This changes the message format, so messages serialized this way # cannot be read by older versions of Rails. However, messages that use the old # format can still be read, regardless of whether this optimization is enabled. # # To perform a rolling deploy of a Rails 7.1 upgrade, wherein servers that have # not yet been upgraded must be able to read messages from upgraded servers, # leave this optimization off on the first deploy, then enable it on a # subsequent deploy. # Rails.application.config.active_support.use_message_serializer_for_metadata = true # Set the maximum size for Rails log files. # # `config.load_defaults 7.1` does not set this value for environments other than # development and test. # # if Rails.env.local? # Rails.application.config.log_file_size = 100 * 1024 * 1024 # end # Enable raising on assignment to attr_readonly attributes. The previous # behavior would allow assignment but silently not persist changes to the # database. # Rails.application.config.active_record.raise_on_assign_to_attr_readonly = true # Enable validating only parent-related columns for presence when the parent is mandatory. # The previous behavior was to validate the presence of the parent record, which performed an extra query # to get the parent every time the child record was updated, even when parent has not changed. # Rails.application.config.active_record.belongs_to_required_validates_foreign_key = false # Enable precompilation of `config.filter_parameters`. Precompilation can # improve filtering performance, depending on the quantity and types of filters. # Rails.application.config.precompile_filter_parameters = true # Enable before_committed! callbacks on all enrolled records in a transaction. # The previous behavior was to only run the callbacks on the first copy of a record # if there were multiple copies of the same record enrolled in the transaction. # Rails.application.config.active_record.before_committed_on_all_records = true # Disable automatic column serialization into YAML. # To keep the historic behavior, you can set it to `YAML`, however it is # recommended to explicitly define the serialization method for each column # rather than to rely on a global default. # Rails.application.config.active_record.default_column_serializer = nil # Enable a performance optimization that serializes Active Record models # in a faster and more compact way. # # To perform a rolling deploy of a Rails 7.1 upgrade, wherein servers that have # not yet been upgraded must be able to read caches from upgraded servers, # leave this optimization off on the first deploy, then enable it on a # subsequent deploy. # Rails.application.config.active_record.marshalling_format_version = 7.1 # Run `after_commit` and `after_*_commit` callbacks in the order they are defined in a model. # This matches the behaviour of all other callbacks. # In previous versions of Rails, they ran in the inverse order. # Rails.application.config.active_record.run_after_transaction_callbacks_in_order_defined = true # Whether a `transaction` block is committed or rolled back when exited via `return`, `break` or `throw`. # # Rails.application.config.active_record.commit_transaction_on_non_local_return = true # Controls when to generate a value for has_secure_token declarations. # # Rails.application.config.active_record.generate_secure_token_on = :initialize # ** Please read carefully, this must be configured in config/application.rb ** # Change the format of the cache entry. # Changing this default means that all new cache entries added to the cache # will have a different format that is not supported by Rails 7.0 # applications. # Only change this value after your application is fully deployed to Rails 7.1 # and you have no plans to rollback. # When you're ready to change format, add this to `config/application.rb` (NOT # this file): # config.active_support.cache_format_version = 7.1 # Configure Action View to use HTML5 standards-compliant sanitizers when they are supported on your # platform. # # `Rails::HTML::Sanitizer.best_supported_vendor` will cause Action View to use HTML5-compliant # sanitizers if they are supported, else fall back to HTML4 sanitizers. # # In previous versions of Rails, Action View always used `Rails::HTML4::Sanitizer` as its vendor. # # Rails.application.config.action_view.sanitizer_vendor = Rails::HTML::Sanitizer.best_supported_vendor # Configure Action Text to use an HTML5 standards-compliant sanitizer when it is supported on your # platform. # # `Rails::HTML::Sanitizer.best_supported_vendor` will cause Action Text to use HTML5-compliant # sanitizers if they are supported, else fall back to HTML4 sanitizers. # # In previous versions of Rails, Action Text always used `Rails::HTML4::Sanitizer` as its vendor. # # Rails.application.config.action_text.sanitizer_vendor = Rails::HTML::Sanitizer.best_supported_vendor # Configure the log level used by the DebugExceptions middleware when logging # uncaught exceptions during requests # Rails.application.config.action_dispatch.debug_exception_log_level = :error # Configure the test helpers in Action View, Action Dispatch, and rails-dom-testing to use HTML5 # parsers. # # Nokogiri::HTML5 isn't supported on JRuby, so JRuby applications must set this to :html4. # # In previous versions of Rails, these test helpers always used an HTML4 parser. # # Rails.application.config.dom_testing_default_html_version = :html5