| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Following the conventions in `activesupport` and the semantics of the
`#to_hash` method in Ruby's standard library, the `#to_hash` method for
a hash that has mixed in `IndifferentAccess` will now export the hash as
a normal, not-indifferent hash.
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Extends a Dash with the ability to
accept only predefined values on a property.
#61
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Small amendments for Hash#merge with IndifferentAccess
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1. Use `indifferent_writer` in `convert!` so that when
`indifferent_writer`, `convert_key` or `indifferent_value` is
overridden in included class, `merge` can use those.
2. `convert!` was calling twice if `other` hash was lacking
indifference. `IndifferentAccess.inject!` already does conversion.
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Suppress keyword arguments warning for Ruby 2.7.0
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This PR suppresses the following keyword arguments warning for Ruby 2.7.0.
```console
% bundle exec rspec spec/hashie/extensions/mash/symbolize_keys_spec.rb
(snip)
/Users/koic/src/github.com/hahie/hashie/spec/hashie/extensions/mash/symbolize_keys_spec.rb:29:
warning: Using the last argument as keyword parameters is
deprecated; maybe ** should be added to the call
/Users/koic/src/github.com/hahie/hashie/spec/hashie/extensions/mash/symbolize_keys_spec.rb:21:
warning: The called method `call' is defined here
```
For Ruby 2.8.0-dev (Ruby 3.0) the warning will be `ArgumentError`.
ruby/ruby#2794
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Due to how we have implemented the bang/underbang/query behavior within
Mash, setting keys that have those affixes in them actually allow
overwriting the behavior of those affixes. As such, we shouldn't warn
when setting a key that matches those patterns.
When it comes to setter-like keys, I believe we still _do_ want to warn
for two reasons:
1. Trying to access the key via method access is a syntax error. Ruby
expects any method ending in `=` to be a 2+-arity method due to the
infix notation of setter methods. This is unexpected behavior unless
you're very familiar with Ruby parsing.
2. You can still retrieve the key via the normal `Hash#[]` reader, but
it prevents setting a similar key without the equal sign. You can see
this in the test about setters. I'd say that is unexpected and
surprising behavior.
Because of these two gotchas, I think we should still warn in cases
where you try to set a key that looks like a setter.
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In order for `#dig` to work properly, we need Arrays to be
`Hashie::Array`s to be aware of the key conversion. Our original
`Mash#convert_value` method was deconverting `Hashie::Array`s into
normal Arrays and causing `#dig` to behave in an unexpected manner.
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Add a PermissiveRespondTo extension for Mashes
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By default, Mashes don't state that they respond to unset keys. This
causes unexpected behavior when you try to use a Mash with a
SimpleDelegator.
This new extension allows you create a permissive subclass of Mash that
will be fully compatible with SimpleDelegator and allow you to fully do
thunk-oriented programming with Mashes.
This comes with the trade-off of a ~19KB cache for each of these
subclasses and a ~20% performance penalty on any of those subclasses.
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The `DeepMerge` extension has two methods of mutating hashes: a
destructive one and a non-destructive one. The `#deep_merge` version
should not mutate the original hash or any hash nested within it. The
`#deep_merge!` version is free to mutate the receiver.
Without deeply duplicating the values contained within the hash, the
invariant of immutability cannot be held for the original hash. In order
to preserve that invariant, we need to introduce a method of deeply
duplicating the hash.
The trick here is that we cannot rely on a simple call to `Object#dup`.
Some classes within the Ruby standard library are not duplicable in
particular versions of Ruby. Newer versions of Ruby allow these classes
to be "duplicated" in a way that returns the original value. These
classes represent value objects, so it is safe to return the original
value ... unless the classes are monkey-patched, but that isn't
something we can protect against.
This implementation does a best-effort to deeply duplicate an entire
hash by relying on these value object classes being able to return
themselves without violating immutability.
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* Update github urls to hashie/hashie
* Point omniauth in integration tests at master.
Until omniauth releases the changes merged from
https://github.com/omniauth/omniauth/pull/977 , we must point at
master branch.
* revert incorrect change of gem email
Co-Authored-By: Michael Herold <github@michaeljherold.com>
* Reference open issue for release
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Remove references to blacklists and whitelists
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For accessibility reasons, we should limit our lines to 100 chars max.
https://github.com/slack-ruby/slack-ruby-client/pull/293#discussion_r309472083
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As of ruby 2.6, Hash#merge and Hash#merge! allow for multiple hashes
to be passed to the method, and will merge each one in the order that
they were passed.
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When calling the following non-destructive hash methods:
:compact
:invert
:reject
:select
:slice
:transform_keys
:transform_values
we would be returned an instance of a standard Hash rather
than a Mash (or subclass). This changes that behavior to
instead return an instance of the class the method was
called on.
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In some cases, you want to be able to ignore Mash warnings for keys
that you know you aren't going to access via a method accessor, yet be
warned for other keys that you know you might want to access. This
change adds the ability to selectively ignore warnings for specific keys
instead of globally ignoring the warnings.
The change retains the original behavior as well, so if you call
`Mash.disable_warnings` without a value it will still globally ignore
the warnings.
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`Mash.load` uses the Ruby standard library to load Yaml-serialized files
into a Mash. The original implementation used `YAML.load` for this
purpose. However, that method is inherently unsafe so we switched to
using `YAML.safe_load`.
Safely loading Yaml files has many different domain-specific
configuration flags that we did not, by default, expose. This change
introduces the ability to configure the safe loading of Yaml files so
that all types of Yaml can be loaded when necessary using the flags from
the standard library.
This implementation preserves the backwards-compatibility with the prior
implementation so that it should not require updates from users of the
current `Mash.load` behavior. For those who this change affects, we
included upgrading documentation to ease the transition.
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This patch adds an extension for Mash that makes it behave like
`OpenStruct`. It reduces overhead of `method_missing?` magic which is a
good thing! It's inspired by the recent @sferik's work on `OpenStruct` —
https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/1033.
When using it in `Mash` subclasses it makes them *remember* methods so
then it's more like `ActiveModel` than `OpenStruct` in this case.
To use it like `OpenStruct` one could use this shortcut:
```ruby
{ foo: 1, bar: 2 }.to_mash.with_accessors!
```
Implementation details:
It injects to class an anonymous module that stores accessor method
definitions. This is inspired by `ActiveModel` / `ActiveRecord`. It
allows to override accessors in subclass and call them via `super` if
this is intended.
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Refs: https://github.com/intridea/hashie/issues/464
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Disable Metrics/BlockLength in specs because the length of a block in
the test suite isn't something we want to lint. We want the tests to be
as long as they need to be.
Set an explicit line length metric instead of continually updating this
as we go. Let's pick a max line length that we want to see and stick
with it. This metric should only ever decrease: we don't want to see it
ever increase again.
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Also, reorganize the test into the existing file and update the
changelog.
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Dash, in its current form, was created to be very conservative in
creating the getters for its properties. It only creates them when the
accompanying setter has not already been created. This means that the
property translation capability that is layered on top of Dash to create
a Trash cannot have dependence between properties in an
order-independent way.
This change makes it so Dash now greedily creates a getter method for
each property. To ensure that we don't do this more than once for
a given Dash class, we track the getters we have previously created.
This keeps the number of warnings from Ruby down to the same number of
warnings that were emitted prior to this change.
Given that Dash users expect the getter to be set, this doesn't feel
like it should cause any backwards-compatibility issues.
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Trash should be able to copy properties from other properties without
causing a problem. Trash should also, when doing this, not set any
properties that it doesn't define.
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This is a big step forward in our Rubocop setup. I addressed all of the todos
from the current version of Rubocop that made sense to. The only things that
remain are metrics and one cop that relies on the line length metric to work.
I made some judgment calls on disabling a few cops:
1. The `Layout/IndentHeredoc` cop wants you to either use the squiggly heredoc
from Ruby 2.3 or introduce a library. Since we are a low-level library that
is used as a transitive dependency, we cannot introduce another library as a
dependence, so that option is out. Also, we support Rubies back to 2.0
currently, so using the squiggly heredoc isn't an option. Once we remove
support for Rubies older than 2.3, we can switch to the squiggly heredoc cop.
2. The `Naming/FileName` cop was reporting false positives for a few files in
the repository, so I disabled it on those files.
3. The `Style/DoubleNegation` cop reports lints on a few cases where we use
double negation. Given the very generic nature of Hashie, the double-negation
is the easiest, clearest way to express that we want an item to be a Boolean.
I disabled the cop because we exist in the gray area where this makes sense.
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Add an integration spec for Elasticsearch
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The Elasticsearch gems heavily integrate with Hashie. This leads people to want
to use a Mash as the backer for an Elasticsearch model, but the behavior is
different than they expect. By having this integration spec, we're covering two
things:
1. It might help ensure that we don't break the Elasticsearch ecosystem with
changes in Hashie as has happened in the past.
2. It communicates some gotchas that happen with using a Mash as the backer for
an Elasticsearch model.
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Definition: Codependent properties
A set of two or more properties who have "required" validations that are based
on each other.
Example:
```ruby
class OneOrMore < Hashie::Dash
property :a, required: -> { b.nil? }
property :b, required: -> { a.nil? }
end
```
When constructing a Dash via the merge initializer, codependent properties have
their "required" validation run too early when their values are set to `nil`,
which causes an `ArgumentError` to be raised in the case that the first property
is set to `nil`.
This is an order-dependence bug that is fixed by this commit. By pruning off
`nil` values only during initialization via the merge initializer, we can
prevent this problem from occurring for the case of `nil` values.
However, this is an indication of a larger problem with the architecture of
Dash. We should be setting all the properties before running the validations.
Rearchitecting this will be quite an undertaking.
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During non-destructive merges (i.e. `#merge`), the `IndifferentAccess` mixin was
failing to inject itself into the resulting Hash. This caused a `NoMethodError`
to be thrown when attempting to perform the action.
Now, we properly inject the mixin when necessary so the `#merge` method works.
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In the case where you want to set deeply nested values through chained calls to
the `#[]` method or through method accessors (without using the bang methods),
you might set a `default_proc` on a Mash that recursively creates the key as you
access it. Previously, the `default_proc` was not being propagated down to
sub-Hashes because the way that `#dup` was written wasn't passing the
`default_proc` do the duplicated object.
Now, the `default_proc` is correctly being sent to the duplicated object, which
allows this pattern to work:
```ruby
h = Hashie::Mash.new { |mash, key| mash[key] = mash.class.new(&mash.default_proc) }
h.a.b.c = :xyz
h[:a][:b][:c] #=> :xyz
h[:x][:y][:z] = :abc
h.x.y.z #=> :abc
```
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When running rspec specs on the ruby-grape project with warnings enabled
this warning is printed hundreds of times.
This change fixes the warning.
Also, turn on warnings when running rspec to see when this happens.
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When we switched to using `#respond_to?` to detecting whether to log
a Mash collision, we started reporting when we were overwriting keys
that already exist in the Mash. This is a poor experience because it
causes extra warnings (as in #414) or, in the worst case, causes an
"undefined method" error (as in #413).
This change fixes that problem and benchmarks to ensure we're not
appreciably regressing performance. The results of two benchmarks are
below:
```
bundle exec ruby benchmark/mash_method_access.rb:
Warming up --------------------------------------
before 92.456k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
before 1.290M (± 4.4%) i/s - 6.472M in 5.028183s
Pausing here -- run Ruby again to measure the next benchmark...
Warming up --------------------------------------
after 92.941k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
after 1.326M (± 5.4%) i/s - 6.692M in 5.060756s
Comparison:
after: 1326239.2 i/s
before: 1289624.0 i/s - same-ish: difference falls within error
```
and
```
within spec/integrations/omniauth,
bundle exec rake perf:ips
Warming up --------------------------------------
before 1.260k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
before 13.114k (± 4.2%) i/s - 66.780k in 5.101689s
Pausing here -- run Ruby again to measure the next benchmark...
Warming up --------------------------------------
after 1.299k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
after 13.149k (± 4.0%) i/s - 66.249k in 5.046630s
Comparison:
after: 13148.9 i/s
before: 13113.8 i/s - same-ish: difference falls within error
```
Closes #413
Closes #414
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One of the behaviors of Mash that we see regularly surprise users is
that Mash stringifies any keys passed into it. This leads to unexpected
lack of synergy between Mash and its cousins (particularly Dash), since
the property DSLs do not handle indifferent key access.
This extension ensures that the original keys are kept inside the Mash's
data structure, at the expense of more costly logic for fetching
information indifferently. I have included a benchmark that compares the
two. The benchmark shows that when you are passing string keys into a
Mash, using this extension will actually be _faster_ than the default
implementation, but that the reverse is true when passing symbol keys.
In #296, I tried to do this universally for all Mashes, which slowed
down the fetching behavior for Mash significantly. I like this attempt
much better because it allows users to opt into the new behavior if they
want it, while still keeping the default implementation as-is.
Fixes #196 by giving the option of keeping the original structure of the
Mash when using it with Dash.
Fixes #246 by giving the option of opting into keeping the original
keys.
Closes #296 by giving a more flexible path forward that doesn't change
the semantics of the main Mash class.
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We often have requests to make Mash symbolize keys by default. Since
Hashie is used across so many different version of Ruby, we have been
hesitant to make this behavior the default. However, there are valid use
cases for wanting symbol keys.
To satisfy both the needs of those on older Rubies and the needs of
those who want symbol keys, this extension gives the end-user the
ability to toggle on symbolized keys in their Mash subclasses. By adding
this ability, we can wait to implement the symbol keys as a default for
a while longer.
See #341, #342 for more information. This is a half-measure toward the
implementation of #342 (which makes Mash symbolize keys by default).
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In some circumstances when a project has the Rails constant defined we
may still not be able to require the rails/railtie dependency. Before this
change this would raise an exception. This change seeks to add better
detection of the railtie dependency and add logging that this dependency
is missing but still allow execution to continue.
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This standardizes the way we're loading the example applications for the
integration tests so we're actually testing the behavior of the
application in each case. They're also structured in such a way to test
that the Hashie logger doesn't accidentally write to the STDOUT during
the initialization process of the applications.
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