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class ActiveRecord::Migration::CommandRecorder
ActiveRecord::Migration::CommandRecorder
records commands done during a migration and knows how to reverse those commands. The CommandRecorder knows how to invert the following commands:
add_column
add_index
add_timestamps
create_table
create_join_table
remove_timestamps
rename_column
rename_index
rename_table
Attributes
Public Class Methods
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/migration/command_recorder.rb, line 21
def initialize(delegate = nil)
@commands = []
@delegate = delegate
@reverting = false
end
Public Instance Methods
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/migration/command_recorder.rb, line 63
def inverse_of(command, args, &block)
method = :"invert_#{command}"
raise IrreversibleMigration unless respond_to?(method, true)
send(method, args, &block)
end
Returns the inverse of the given command. For example:
recorder.inverse_of(:rename_table, [:old, :new])
# => [:rename_table, [:new, :old]]
This method will raise an IrreversibleMigration
exception if it cannot invert the command
.
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/migration/command_recorder.rb, line 48
def record(*command, &block)
if @reverting
@commands << inverse_of(*command, &block)
else
@commands << (command << block)
end
end
record command
. command
should be a method name and arguments. For example:
recorder.record(:method_name, [:arg1, :arg2])
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/migration/command_recorder.rb, line 34
def revert
@reverting = !@reverting
previous = @commands
@commands = []
yield
ensure
@commands = previous.concat(@commands.reverse)
@reverting = !@reverting
end
While executing the given block, the recorded will be in reverting mode. All commands recorded will end up being recorded reverted and in reverse order. For example:
recorder.revert{ recorder.record(:rename_table, [:old, :new]) }
# same effect as recorder.record(:rename_table, [:new, :old])
© 2004–2018 David Heinemeier Hansson
Licensed under the MIT License.