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張 旭

Active Record Associations - Ruby on Rails Guides - 0 views

  • With Active Record associations, we can streamline these - and other - operations by declaratively telling Rails that there is a connection between the two models.
  • belongs_to has_one has_many has_many :through has_one :through has_and_belongs_to_many
  • an association is a connection between two Active Record models
  • ...195 more annotations...
  • Associations are implemented using macro-style calls, so that you can declaratively add features to your models
  • A belongs_to association sets up a one-to-one connection with another model, such that each instance of the declaring model "belongs to" one instance of the other model.
  • belongs_to associations must use the singular term.
  • belongs_to
  • A has_one association also sets up a one-to-one connection with another model, but with somewhat different semantics (and consequences).
  • This association indicates that each instance of a model contains or possesses one instance of another model
  • belongs_to
  • A has_many association indicates a one-to-many connection with another model.
  • This association indicates that each instance of the model has zero or more instances of another model.
  • belongs_to
  • A has_many :through association is often used to set up a many-to-many connection with another model
  • This association indicates that the declaring model can be matched with zero or more instances of another model by proceeding through a third model.
  • through:
  • through:
  • The collection of join models can be managed via the API
  • new join models are created for newly associated objects, and if some are gone their rows are deleted.
  • The has_many :through association is also useful for setting up "shortcuts" through nested has_many associations
  • A has_one :through association sets up a one-to-one connection with another model. This association indicates that the declaring model can be matched with one instance of another model by proceeding through a third model.
  • A has_and_belongs_to_many association creates a direct many-to-many connection with another model, with no intervening model.
  • id: false
  • The has_one relationship says that one of something is yours
  • using t.references :supplier instead.
  • declare a many-to-many relationship is to use has_many :through. This makes the association indirectly, through a join model
  • set up a has_many :through relationship if you need to work with the relationship model as an independent entity
  • set up a has_and_belongs_to_many relationship (though you'll need to remember to create the joining table in the database).
  • use has_many :through if you need validations, callbacks, or extra attributes on the join model
  • With polymorphic associations, a model can belong to more than one other model, on a single association.
  • belongs_to :imageable, polymorphic: true
  • a polymorphic belongs_to declaration as setting up an interface that any other model can use.
    • 張 旭
       
      _id 記錄的是不同類型的外連鍵 id;_type 記錄的是不同類型的表格名稱。
  • In designing a data model, you will sometimes find a model that should have a relation to itself
  • add a references column to the model itself
  • Controlling caching Avoiding name collisions Updating the schema Controlling association scope Bi-directional associations
  • All of the association methods are built around caching, which keeps the result of the most recent query available for further operations.
  • it is a bad idea to give an association a name that is already used for an instance method of ActiveRecord::Base. The association method would override the base method and break things.
  • You are responsible for maintaining your database schema to match your associations.
  • belongs_to associations you need to create foreign keys
  • has_and_belongs_to_many associations you need to create the appropriate join table
  • If you create an association some time after you build the underlying model, you need to remember to create an add_column migration to provide the necessary foreign key.
  • Active Record creates the name by using the lexical order of the class names
  • So a join between customer and order models will give the default join table name of "customers_orders" because "c" outranks "o" in lexical ordering.
  • For example, one would expect the tables "paper_boxes" and "papers" to generate a join table name of "papers_paper_boxes" because of the length of the name "paper_boxes", but it in fact generates a join table name of "paper_boxes_papers" (because the underscore '' is lexicographically _less than 's' in common encodings).
  • id: false
  • pass id: false to create_table because that table does not represent a model
  • By default, associations look for objects only within the current module's scope.
  • will work fine, because both the Supplier and the Account class are defined within the same scope.
  • To associate a model with a model in a different namespace, you must specify the complete class name in your association declaration:
  • class_name
  • class_name
  • Active Record provides the :inverse_of option
    • 張 旭
       
      意思是說第一次比較兩者的 first_name 是相同的;但透過 c 實體修改 first_name 之後,再次比較就不相同了,因為兩個是記憶體裡面兩個不同的物件。
  • preventing inconsistencies and making your application more efficient
  • Every association will attempt to automatically find the inverse association and set the :inverse_of option heuristically (based on the association name)
  • In database terms, this association says that this class contains the foreign key.
  • In all of these methods, association is replaced with the symbol passed as the first argument to belongs_to.
  • (force_reload = false)
  • The association method returns the associated object, if any. If no associated object is found, it returns nil.
  • the cached version will be returned.
  • The association= method assigns an associated object to this object.
  • Behind the scenes, this means extracting the primary key from the associate object and setting this object's foreign key to the same value.
  • The build_association method returns a new object of the associated type
  • but the associated object will not yet be saved.
  • The create_association method returns a new object of the associated type
  • once it passes all of the validations specified on the associated model, the associated object will be saved
  • raises ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid if the record is invalid.
  • dependent
  • counter_cache
  • :autosave :class_name :counter_cache :dependent :foreign_key :inverse_of :polymorphic :touch :validate
  • finding the number of belonging objects more efficient.
  • Although the :counter_cache option is specified on the model that includes the belongs_to declaration, the actual column must be added to the associated model.
  • add a column named orders_count to the Customer model.
  • :destroy, when the object is destroyed, destroy will be called on its associated objects.
  • deleted directly from the database without calling their destroy method.
  • Rails will not create foreign key columns for you
  • The :inverse_of option specifies the name of the has_many or has_one association that is the inverse of this association
  • set the :touch option to :true, then the updated_at or updated_on timestamp on the associated object will be set to the current time whenever this object is saved or destroyed
  • specify a particular timestamp attribute to update
  • If you set the :validate option to true, then associated objects will be validated whenever you save this object
  • By default, this is false: associated objects will not be validated when this object is saved.
  • where includes readonly select
  • make your code somewhat more efficient
  • no need to use includes for immediate associations
  • will be read-only when retrieved via the association
  • The select method lets you override the SQL SELECT clause that is used to retrieve data about the associated object
  • using the association.nil?
  • Assigning an object to a belongs_to association does not automatically save the object. It does not save the associated object either.
  • In database terms, this association says that the other class contains the foreign key.
  • the cached version will be returned.
  • :as :autosave :class_name :dependent :foreign_key :inverse_of :primary_key :source :source_type :through :validate
  • Setting the :as option indicates that this is a polymorphic association
  • :nullify causes the foreign key to be set to NULL. Callbacks are not executed.
  • It's necessary not to set or leave :nullify option for those associations that have NOT NULL database constraints.
  • The :source_type option specifies the source association type for a has_one :through association that proceeds through a polymorphic association.
  • The :source option specifies the source association name for a has_one :through association.
  • The :through option specifies a join model through which to perform the query
  • more efficient by including representatives in the association from suppliers to accounts
  • When you assign an object to a has_one association, that object is automatically saved (in order to update its foreign key).
  • If either of these saves fails due to validation errors, then the assignment statement returns false and the assignment itself is cancelled.
  • If the parent object (the one declaring the has_one association) is unsaved (that is, new_record? returns true) then the child objects are not saved.
  • If you want to assign an object to a has_one association without saving the object, use the association.build method
  • collection(force_reload = false) collection<<(object, ...) collection.delete(object, ...) collection.destroy(object, ...) collection=(objects) collection_singular_ids collection_singular_ids=(ids) collection.clear collection.empty? collection.size collection.find(...) collection.where(...) collection.exists?(...) collection.build(attributes = {}, ...) collection.create(attributes = {}) collection.create!(attributes = {})
  • In all of these methods, collection is replaced with the symbol passed as the first argument to has_many, and collection_singular is replaced with the singularized version of that symbol.
  • The collection<< method adds one or more objects to the collection by setting their foreign keys to the primary key of the calling model
  • The collection.delete method removes one or more objects from the collection by setting their foreign keys to NULL.
  • objects will be destroyed if they're associated with dependent: :destroy, and deleted if they're associated with dependent: :delete_all
  • The collection.destroy method removes one or more objects from the collection by running destroy on each object.
  • The collection_singular_ids method returns an array of the ids of the objects in the collection.
  • The collection_singular_ids= method makes the collection contain only the objects identified by the supplied primary key values, by adding and deleting as appropriate
  • The default strategy for has_many :through associations is delete_all, and for has_many associations is to set the foreign keys to NULL.
  • The collection.clear method removes all objects from the collection according to the strategy specified by the dependent option
  • uses the same syntax and options as ActiveRecord::Base.find
  • The collection.where method finds objects within the collection based on the conditions supplied but the objects are loaded lazily meaning that the database is queried only when the object(s) are accessed.
  • The collection.build method returns one or more new objects of the associated type. These objects will be instantiated from the passed attributes, and the link through their foreign key will be created, but the associated objects will not yet be saved.
  • The collection.create method returns a new object of the associated type. This object will be instantiated from the passed attributes, the link through its foreign key will be created, and, once it passes all of the validations specified on the associated model, the associated object will be saved.
  • :as :autosave :class_name :dependent :foreign_key :inverse_of :primary_key :source :source_type :through :validate
  • :delete_all causes all the associated objects to be deleted directly from the database (so callbacks will not execute)
  • :nullify causes the foreign keys to be set to NULL. Callbacks are not executed.
  • where includes readonly select
  • :conditions :through :polymorphic :foreign_key
  • By convention, Rails assumes that the column used to hold the primary key of the association is id. You can override this and explicitly specify the primary key with the :primary_key option.
  • The :source option specifies the source association name for a has_many :through association.
  • You only need to use this option if the name of the source association cannot be automatically inferred from the association name.
  • The :source_type option specifies the source association type for a has_many :through association that proceeds through a polymorphic association.
  • The :through option specifies a join model through which to perform the query.
  • has_many :through associations provide a way to implement many-to-many relationships,
  • By default, this is true: associated objects will be validated when this object is saved.
  • where extending group includes limit offset order readonly select uniq
  • If you use a hash-style where option, then record creation via this association will be automatically scoped using the hash
  • The extending method specifies a named module to extend the association proxy.
  • Association extensions
  • The group method supplies an attribute name to group the result set by, using a GROUP BY clause in the finder SQL.
  • has_many :line_items, -> { group 'orders.id' },                        through: :orders
  • more efficient by including line items in the association from customers to orders
  • The limit method lets you restrict the total number of objects that will be fetched through an association.
  • The offset method lets you specify the starting offset for fetching objects via an association
  • The order method dictates the order in which associated objects will be received (in the syntax used by an SQL ORDER BY clause).
  • Use the distinct method to keep the collection free of duplicates.
  • mostly useful together with the :through option
  • -> { distinct }
  • .all.inspect
  • If you want to make sure that, upon insertion, all of the records in the persisted association are distinct (so that you can be sure that when you inspect the association that you will never find duplicate records), you should add a unique index on the table itself
  • unique: true
  • Do not attempt to use include? to enforce distinctness in an association.
  • multiple users could be attempting this at the same time
  • checking for uniqueness using something like include? is subject to race conditions
  • When you assign an object to a has_many association, that object is automatically saved (in order to update its foreign key).
  • If any of these saves fails due to validation errors, then the assignment statement returns false and the assignment itself is cancelled.
  • If the parent object (the one declaring the has_many association) is unsaved (that is, new_record? returns true) then the child objects are not saved when they are added
  • All unsaved members of the association will automatically be saved when the parent is saved.
  • assign an object to a has_many association without saving the object, use the collection.build method
  • collection(force_reload = false) collection<<(object, ...) collection.delete(object, ...) collection.destroy(object, ...) collection=(objects) collection_singular_ids collection_singular_ids=(ids) collection.clear collection.empty? collection.size collection.find(...) collection.where(...) collection.exists?(...) collection.build(attributes = {}) collection.create(attributes = {}) collection.create!(attributes = {})
  • If the join table for a has_and_belongs_to_many association has additional columns beyond the two foreign keys, these columns will be added as attributes to records retrieved via that association.
  • Records returned with additional attributes will always be read-only
  • If you require this sort of complex behavior on the table that joins two models in a many-to-many relationship, you should use a has_many :through association instead of has_and_belongs_to_many.
  • aliased as collection.concat and collection.push.
  • The collection.delete method removes one or more objects from the collection by deleting records in the join table
  • not destroy the objects
  • The collection.destroy method removes one or more objects from the collection by running destroy on each record in the join table, including running callbacks.
  • not destroy the objects.
  • The collection.clear method removes every object from the collection by deleting the rows from the joining table.
  • not destroy the associated objects.
  • The collection.find method finds objects within the collection. It uses the same syntax and options as ActiveRecord::Base.find.
  • The collection.where method finds objects within the collection based on the conditions supplied but the objects are loaded lazily meaning that the database is queried only when the object(s) are accessed.
  • The collection.exists? method checks whether an object meeting the supplied conditions exists in the collection.
  • The collection.build method returns a new object of the associated type.
  • the associated object will not yet be saved.
  • the associated object will be saved.
  • The collection.create method returns a new object of the associated type.
  • it passes all of the validations specified on the associated model
  • :association_foreign_key :autosave :class_name :foreign_key :join_table :validate
  • The :foreign_key and :association_foreign_key options are useful when setting up a many-to-many self-join.
  • Rails assumes that the column in the join table used to hold the foreign key pointing to the other model is the name of that model with the suffix _id added.
  • If you set the :autosave option to true, Rails will save any loaded members and destroy members that are marked for destruction whenever you save the parent object.
  • By convention, Rails assumes that the column in the join table used to hold the foreign key pointing to this model is the name of this model with the suffix _id added.
  • By default, this is true: associated objects will be validated when this object is saved.
  • where extending group includes limit offset order readonly select uniq
  • set conditions via a hash
  • In this case, using @parts.assemblies.create or @parts.assemblies.build will create orders where the factory column has the value "Seattle"
  • If you use a hash-style where, then record creation via this association will be automatically scoped using the hash
  • using a GROUP BY clause in the finder SQL.
  • Use the uniq method to remove duplicates from the collection.
  • assign an object to a has_and_belongs_to_many association, that object is automatically saved (in order to update the join table).
  • If any of these saves fails due to validation errors, then the assignment statement returns false and the assignment itself is cancelled.
  • If the parent object (the one declaring the has_and_belongs_to_many association) is unsaved (that is, new_record? returns true) then the child objects are not saved when they are added.
  • If you want to assign an object to a has_and_belongs_to_many association without saving the object, use the collection.build method.
  • Normal callbacks hook into the life cycle of Active Record objects, allowing you to work with those objects at various points
  • define association callbacks by adding options to the association declaration
  • Rails passes the object being added or removed to the callback.
  • stack callbacks on a single event by passing them as an array
  • If a before_add callback throws an exception, the object does not get added to the collection.
  • if a before_remove callback throws an exception, the object does not get removed from the collection
  • extend these objects through anonymous modules, adding new finders, creators, or other methods.
  • order_number
  • use a named extension module
  • proxy_association.owner returns the object that the association is a part of.
張 旭

Active Record Migrations - Ruby on Rails Guides - 0 views

    • 張 旭
       
       跟 belongs_to 與 has_many 設定對應的 Migrattion
    • 張 旭
       
      has_and_belongs_to_many 的對應?
  • add_column and remove_column
  • ...114 more annotations...
  • allowing your schema and changes to be database independent.
  • each migration as being a new 'version' of the database
  • each migration modifies it to add or remove tables, columns, or entries
  • Active Record will also update your db/schema.rb file to match the up-to-date structure of your database.
  • A primary key column called id will also be added implicitly, as it's the default primary key for all Active Record models
  • roll this migration back, it will remove the table
  • timestamps macro adds two columns, created_at and updated_at
  • On databases that support transactions with statements that change the schema, migrations are wrapped in a transaction
  • reversible
  • use up and down instead of change
  • Migrations are stored as files in the db/migrate directory, one for each migration class.
  • a UTC timestamp identifying
  • Rails uses this timestamp to determine which migration should be run and in what order
  • "AddXXXToYYY" or "RemoveXXXFromYYY"
  • use a Ruby DSL
  • column type as references
  • part_number:string:index
  • a migration to remove a column
  • "CreateXXX"
  • change_column_null
  • AddUserRefToProducts
  • :references
  • produce join tables if JoinTable is part of the name
  • CreateJoinTable
  • The model and scaffold generators will create migrations appropriate for adding a new model.
  • enclosed by curly braces and follow the field type
  • create_table
  • By default, create_table will create a primary key called id
  • add an index on the new column
  • when using MySQL, the default is ENGINE=InnoDB
  • create_join_table creates an HABTM (has and belongs to many) join table
  • To customize the name of the table, provide a :table_name option:
  • create_join_table also accepts a block
  • change_table, used for changing existing tables
  • remove
  • rename
  • add_column
  • change_column
  • remove_column
  • change_column_default
  • place an SQL fragment in the :options option.
  • limit
  • precision
  • scale
  • polymorphic
  • default
  • index
  • add_foreign_key
  • Active Record only supports single column foreign keys.
  • use the old style of migration using up and down methods instead of the change method.
  • .connection.execute
  • change_table is also reversible, as long as the block does not call change, change_default or remove.
  • remove_column is reversible if you supply the column type as the third argument
  • Complex migrations may require processing that Active Record doesn't know how to reverse
  • reversible
  • Using reversible will ensure that the instructions are executed in the right order too.
  • add_column add_foreign_key add_index add_reference add_timestamps change_column_default (must supply a :from and :to option) change_column_null create_join_table create_table disable_extension drop_join_table drop_table (must supply a block) enable_extension remove_column (must supply a type) remove_foreign_key (must supply a second table) remove_index remove_reference remove_timestamps rename_column rename_index rename_table
  • :column_options option
  • have the option :null set to false by default
  • By default, the name of the join table comes from the union of the first two arguments provided to create_join_table
  • in alphabetical order
  • change_column command is irreversible.
    • 張 旭
       
      關聯物在前,被關聯物在後。 A 關聯到 B
  • If the column names can not be derived from the table names, you can use the :column and :primary_key options.
  • figure out the column name
  • foreign key for a specific column
  • foreign key by name
    • 張 旭
       
      不懂 column 跟 name 的用法差異,基本上一樣。
  • Active Record knows how to reverse the migration automatically
    • 張 旭
       
      使用內建的 method,Rails 比較容易自動 rollback
    • 張 旭
       
      除了幾個特殊的 change_ 跟 remove_
  • should use reversible or write the up and down methods instead of using the change method
  • If your migration is irreversible, you should raise ActiveRecord::IrreversibleMigration from your down method.
  • DontUseConstraintForZipcodeValidationMigration
  • rails db:migrate
  • the db:migrate task also invokes the db:schema:dump task, which will update your db/schema.rb file to match the structure of your database.
  • specify a target version
  • all migrations up to and including 20080906120000
  • run the down method on all the migrations down to, but not including, 20080906120000
  • rails db:rollback
  • db:migrate:redo task is a shortcut for doing a rollback and then migrating back up again
    • 張 旭
       
      舊版的還是 rake!
  • STEP parameter
  • db:setup task will create the database, load the schema and initialize it with the seed data
  • db:reset task will drop the database and set it up again. This is functionally equivalent to rails db:drop db:setup.
  • run a specific migration up or down, the db:migrate:up and db:migrate:down
  • the RAILS_ENV environment variable
  • db:migrate VERBOSE=false will suppress all output.
  • If you have already run the migration, then you cannot just edit the migration and run the migration again: Rails thinks it has already run the migration and so will do nothing when you run rails db:migrate.
  • must rollback the migration (for example with bin/rails db:rollback), edit your migration and then run rails db:migrate to run the corrected version.
  • editing existing migrations is not a good idea.
  • should write a new migration that performs the changes you require
  • revert method can be helpful when writing a new migration to undo previous migrations in whole or in part
  • require_relative
  • revert
  • They are not designed to be edited, they just represent the current state of the database.
  • Schema Files for
  • Schema files are also useful if you want a quick look at what attributes an Active Record object has
  • annotate_models gem automatically adds and updates comments at the top of each model summarizing the schema if you desire that functionality.
  • database-independent
  • multiple databases
  • db/schema.rb cannot express database specific items such as triggers, stored procedures or check constraints
  • you can execute custom SQL statements, the schema dumper cannot reconstitute those statements from the database
  • db:structure:dump
    • 張 旭
       
      資料庫種類不相依的 schema 付出的代價就是有些特殊的資料庫特性無法描述出來,例如 trigger;如果有在 migration 寫 SQL 的,簡單說 schema dumper 這邊就要設定成 :sql 而不是預設的 :ruby
  • set in config/application.rb by the config.active_record.schema_format setting, which may be either :sql or :ruby.
  • check them into source control.
  • db/schema.rb contains the current version number of the database
  • Validations such as validates :foreign_key, uniqueness: true are one way in which models can enforce data integrity
  • The :dependent option on associations allows models to automatically destroy child objects when the parent is destroyed.
  • Migrations can also be used to add or modify data
  • Initial
  • To add initial data after a database is created, Rails has a built-in 'seeds' feature that makes the process quick and easy.
  • db/seeds.rb
  • rails db:seed
張 旭

Active Record Basics - Ruby on Rails Guides - 0 views

  • the model - which is the layer of the system responsible for representing business data and logic.
  • Active Record facilitates the creation and use of business objects whose data requires persistent storage to a database
  • Database Table - Plural with underscores separating words
  • ...33 more annotations...
  • objects carry both persistent data and behavior which operates on that data
  • Object-Relational Mapping, commonly referred to as its abbreviation ORM, is a technique that connects the rich objects of an application to tables in a relational database management system
  • Represent associations between these models
  • Validate models before they get persisted to the database
  • The idea is that if you configure your applications in the very same way most of the times then this should be the default way.
  • Rails will pluralize your class names to find the respective database table.
  • use the ActiveRecord::Base.table_name= method to specify the table name
  • Model Class - Singular with the first letter of each word capitalized
  • Foreign keys - These fields should be named following the pattern singularized_table_name_id
  • Primary keys - By default, Active Record will use an integer column named id as the table's primary key
  • created_at
  • updated_at
  • (table_name)_count - Used to cache the number of belonging objects on associations.
  • Object Relational Mapping
  • Single Table Inheritance (STI)
  • rake db:rollback
  • ActiveRecord::Base.primary_key=
  • CRUD is an acronym for the four verbs we use to operate on data: Create, Read, Update and Delete.
  • new method will return a new object
  • create will return the object and save it to the database.
  • Using the new method, an object can be instantiated without being saved
  • user.save will commit the record to the database
  • update_all class method
  • an Active Record object can be destroyed which removes it from the database
  • Validation is a very important issue to consider when persisting to database, so the methods create, save and update take it into account when running: they return false when validation fails and they didn't actually perform any operation on database.
  • a bang counterpart
  • Active Record callbacks allow you to attach code to certain events in the life-cycle of your models
  • Rails keeps track of which files have been committed to the database and provides rollback features
  • rake db:migrate
  • class_name.yml
  • Convention over Configuration
    • 張 旭
       
      Model 是單數,Table 是複數。想象一下,處理 Object 的時候是逐一處理,但是存放的地方是放了一堆 Objects。
    • 張 旭
       
      外鍵是單數的形式,這也很好理解:因為關聯到的是一個外部的 Object
張 旭

如何在 Ubuntu 18.04 下正确配置网络 - 运维之美 - 0 views

  •  
    "systemd-resolve --status"
張 旭

How Percona XtraBackup Works - 0 views

  • Percona XtraBackup is based on InnoDB‘s crash-recovery functionality.
  • it performs crash recovery on the files to make them a consistent, usable database again
  • InnoDB maintains a redo log, also called the transaction log. This contains a record of every change to InnoDB data.
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • When InnoDB starts, it inspects the data files and the transaction log, and performs two steps. It applies committed transaction log entries to the data files, and it performs an undo operation on any transactions that modified data but did not commit.
  • Percona XtraBackup works by remembering the log sequence number (LSN) when it starts, and then copying away the data files.
  • Percona XtraBackup runs a background process that watches the transaction log files, and copies changes from it.
  • Percona XtraBackup needs to do this continually
  • Percona XtraBackup needs the transaction log records for every change to the data files since it began execution.
  • Percona XtraBackup uses Backup locks where available as a lightweight alternative to FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK.
  • Locking is only done for MyISAM and other non-InnoDB tables after Percona XtraBackup finishes backing up all InnoDB/XtraDB data and logs.
  • xtrabackup tries to avoid backup locks and FLUSH TABLES WITH READ LOCK when the instance contains only InnoDB tables. In this case, xtrabackup obtains binary log coordinates from performance_schema.log_status
  • When backup locks are supported by the server, xtrabackup first copies InnoDB data, runs the LOCK TABLES FOR BACKUP and then copies the MyISAM tables.
  • the STDERR of xtrabackup is not written in any file. You will have to redirect it to a file, e.g., xtrabackup OPTIONS 2> backupout.log
  • During the prepare phase, Percona XtraBackup performs crash recovery against the copied data files, using the copied transaction log file. After this is done, the database is ready to restore and use.
  • the tools enable you to do operations such as streaming and incremental backups with various combinations of copying the data files, copying the log files, and applying the logs to the data.
  • To restore a backup with xtrabackup you can use the --copy-back or --move-back options.
  • you may have to change the files’ ownership to mysql before starting the database server, as they will be owned by the user who created the backup.
  •  
    "Percona XtraBackup is based on InnoDB's crash-recovery functionality."
張 旭

Internet Gateways - Amazon Virtual Private Cloud - 0 views

  • to provide a target in your VPC route tables for internet-routable traffic
  • to perform network address translation (NAT) for instances that have been assigned public IPv4 addresses
  • Ensure that instances in your subnet have a globally unique IP address (public IPv4 address, Elastic IP address, or IPv6 address)
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • To use an internet gateway, your subnet's route table must contain a route that directs internet-bound traffic to the internet gateway.
  • If your subnet is associated with a route table that has a route to an internet gateway, it's known as a public subnet.
  • To enable communication over the internet for IPv4, your instance must have a public IPv4 address or an Elastic IP address that's associated with a private IPv4 address on your instance.
  • Your instance is only aware of the private (internal) IP address space defined within the VPC and subnet
  • internet gateway logically provides the one-to-one NAT on behalf of your instance
  • To enable communication over the internet for IPv6, your VPC and subnet must have an associated IPv6 CIDR block, and your instance must be assigned an IPv6 address from the range of the subnet.
  • When you create a subnet, we automatically associate it with the main route table for the VPC.
  • the main route table doesn't contain a route to an internet gateway
  • Each instance that you launch into a VPC is automatically associated with its default security group.
  • a default security group allow no inbound traffic from the internet and allow all outbound traffic to the internet.
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ProxySQL Experimental Feature: Native ProxySQL Clustering - Percona Database Performanc... - 0 views

  • several ProxySQL instances to communicate with and share configuration updates with each other.
  • 4 tables where you can make changes and propagate the configuration
  • When you make a change like INSERT/DELETE/UPDATE on any of these tables, after running the command LOAD … TO RUNTIME , ProxySQL creates a new checksum of the table’s data and increments the version number in the table runtime_checksums_values
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • all nodes are monitoring and communicating with all the other ProxySQL nodes. When another node detects a change in the checksum and version (both at the same time), each node will get a copy of the table that was modified, make the same changes locally, and apply the new config to RUNTIME to refresh the new config, make it visible to the applications connected and automatically save it to DISK for persistence.
  • a “synchronous cluster” so any changes to these 4 tables on any ProxySQL server will be replicated to all other ProxySQL nodes.
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Active Record Migrations - Ruby on Rails Guides - 0 views

  • a convenient way to alter your database schema
  • each migration as being a new 'version' of the database
  • On databases that support transactions with statements that change the schema, migrations are wrapped in a transaction
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • a UTC timestamp identifying the migration
  • references(also available as belongs_to)
  • produce join tables if JoinTable is part of the name
  • The model and scaffold generators will create migrations appropriate for adding a new model
  • The create_table method is one of the most fundamental
  • By default, create_table will create a primary key called id
  • the default is ENGINE=InnoDB
  • Migration method create_join_table creates a HABTM join table.
  • By default, create_join_table will create two columns with no options
  • change_table, used for changing existing tables
  • execute method to execute arbitrary SQL
  • The change method is the primary way of writing migrations
  • migration definitions
  • write the up and down methods instead of using the change method
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Home · sysown/proxysql Wiki - 0 views

  • bear in mind that the best way to configure ProxySQL is through its admin interface.
  • llow you to control the list of the backend servers, how traffic is routed to them, and other important settings (such as caching, access control, etc)
  • Once you've made modifications to the in-memory data structure, you must load the new configuration to the runtime, or persist the new settings to disk
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • mysql_variables: contains global variables that control the functionality for handling the incoming MySQL traffic.
  • mysql_users: contains rows for the mysql_users table from the admin interface. Basically, these define the users which can connect to the proxy, and the users with which the proxy can connect to the backend servers.
  • mysql_servers: contains rows for the mysql_servers table from the admin interface. Basically, these define the backend servers towards which the incoming MySQL traffic is routed.
  • mysql_query_rules: contains rows for the mysql_query_rules table from the admin interface. Basically, these define the rules used to classify and route the incoming MySQL traffic, according to various criteria (patterns matched, user used to run the query, etc.).
張 旭

NAT Gateways - Amazon Virtual Private Cloud - 0 views

  • a network address translation (NAT) gateway to enable instances in a private subnet to connect to the internet or other AWS services
  • but prevent the internet from initiating a connection with those instances
  • NAT gateways are not supported for IPv6 traffic
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • must specify the public subnet in which the NAT gateway should reside
  • update the route table associated with one or more of your private subnets to point Internet-bound traffic to the NAT gateway.
  • NAT gateway is created in a specific Availability Zone and implemented with redundancy in that zone.
  • ensure that resources use the NAT gateway in the same Availability Zone
  • The main route table sends internet traffic from the instances in the private subnet to the NAT gateway. The NAT gateway sends the traffic to the internet gateway using the NAT gateway’s Elastic IP address as the source IP address
  • A NAT gateway supports 5 Gbps of bandwidth and automatically scales up to 45 Gbps
  • You can associate exactly one Elastic IP address with a NAT gateway
  • A NAT gateway supports the following protocols: TCP, UDP, and ICMP
  • cannot associate a security group with a NAT gateway.
  • create a NAT gateway in the same subnet as your NAT instance, and then replace the existing route in your route table that points to the NAT instance with a route that points to the NAT gateway
  • A NAT gateway cannot send traffic over VPC endpoints, VPN connections, AWS Direct Connect, or VPC peering connections.
張 旭

How to Benchmark Performance of MySQL & MariaDB Using SysBench | Severalnines - 1 views

  • SysBench is a C binary which uses LUA scripts to execute benchmarks
  • support for parallelization in the LUA scripts, multiple queries can be executed in parallel
  • by default, benchmarks which cover most of the cases - OLTP workloads, read-only or read-write, primary key lookups and primary key updates.
  • ...21 more annotations...
  • SysBench is not a tool which you can use to tune configurations of your MySQL servers (unless you prepared LUA scripts with custom workload or your workload happen to be very similar to the benchmark workloads that SysBench comes with)
  • it is great for is to compare performance of different hardware.
  • Every new server acquired should go through a warm-up period during which you will stress it to pinpoint potential hardware defects
  • by executing OLTP workload which overloads the server, or you can also use dedicated benchmarks for CPU, disk and memory.
  • bulk_insert.lua. This test can be used to benchmark the ability of MySQL to perform multi-row inserts.
  • All oltp_* scripts share a common table structure. First two of them (oltp_delete.lua and oltp_insert.lua) execute single DELETE and INSERT statements.
  • oltp_point_select, oltp_update_index and oltp_update_non_index. These will execute a subset of queries - primary key-based selects, index-based updates and non-index-based updates.
  • you can run different workload patterns using the same benchmark.
  • Warmup helps to identify “regular” throughput by executing benchmark for a predefined time, allowing to warm up the cache, buffer pools etc.
  • By default SysBench will attempt to execute queries as fast as possible. To simulate slower traffic this option may be used. You can define here how many transactions should be executed per second.
  • SysBench gives you ability to generate different types of data distribution.
  • decide if SysBench should use prepared statements (as long as they are available in the given datastore - for MySQL it means PS will be enabled by default) or not.
  • sysbench ./sysbench/src/lua/oltp_read_write.lua  help
  • By default, SysBench will attempt to execute queries in explicit transaction. This way the dataset will stay consistent and not affected: SysBench will, for example, execute INSERT and DELETE on the same row, making sure the data set will not grow (impacting your ability to reproduce results).
  • specify error codes from MySQL which SysBench should ignore (and not kill the connection).
  • the two most popular benchmarks - OLTP read only and OLTP read/write.
  • 1 million rows will result in ~240 MB of data. Ten tables, 1000 000 rows each equals to 2.4GB
  • by default, SysBench looks for ‘sbtest’ schema which has to exist before you prepare the data set. You may have to create it manually.
  • pass ‘--histogram’ argument to SysBench
  • ~48GB of data (20 tables, 10 000 000 rows each).
  • if you don’t understand why the performance was like it was, you may draw incorrect conclusions out of the benchmarks.
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What is Data Definition Language (DDL) and how is it used? - 1 views

  • Data Definition Language (DDL) is used to create and modify the structure of objects in a database using predefined commands and a specific syntax.
  • DDL includes Structured Query Language (SQL) statements to create and drop databases, aliases, locations, indexes, tables and sequences.
  • Since DDL includes SQL statements to define changes in the database schema, it is considered a subset of SQL.
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • Data Manipulation Language (DML), commands are used to modify data in a database. DML statements control access to the database data.
  • DDL commands are used to create, delete or alter the structure of objects in a database but not its data.
  • DDL deals with descriptions of the database schema and is useful for creating new tables, indexes, sequences, stogroups, etc. and to define the attributes of these objects, such as data type, field length and alternate table names (aliases).
  • Data Query Language (DQL) is used to get data within the schema objects of a database and also to query it and impose order upon it.
  • DQL is also a subset of SQL. One of the most common commands in DQL is SELECT.
  • The most common command types in DDL are CREATE, ALTER and DROP.
張 旭

CDC and DDL Changes to Source Tables - Microsoft® SQL Server 2012 Unleashed [... - 1 views

  • One of the common challenges when capturing data changes from your source tables is how to handle DDL changes to the source tables.
  • Change Data Capture
crazylion lee

soundcloud/lhm - 1 views

  •  
    "Online MySQL schema migrations" # 可以不用lock table
crazylion lee

pt-online-schema-change - 0 views

  •  
    "pt-online-schema-change - ALTER tables without locking them"
張 旭

The Flatiron School | Why You Don't Need Has_and_belongs_to_many... - 0 views

  • When creating associations between models, you almost never know how this relationship will blossom as your application grows.
  • setup a solid has_many :through relationship with an associated join table, you provide yourself with a huge amount of flexibility down the road.
  • A has_many :through association is used to setup a many to many relationship with another model
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • This relationship now allows for extending the association within the join table.
  • You should use has_many :through if you need validations, callbacks, or extra attributes on the join model
張 旭

VPCs and Subnets - Amazon Virtual Private Cloud - 0 views

  • you must specify a range of IPv4 addresses for the VPC in the form of a Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) block
  • A VPC spans all the Availability Zones in the region
  • add one or more subnets in each Availability Zone.
  • ...19 more annotations...
  • Each subnet must reside entirely within one Availability Zone and cannot span zones.
  • Availability Zones are distinct locations that are engineered to be isolated from failures in other Availability Zones
  • If a subnet's traffic is routed to an internet gateway, the subnet is known as a public subnet.
  • If a subnet doesn't have a route to the internet gateway, the subnet is known as a private subnet.
  • If a subnet doesn't have a route to the internet gateway, but has its traffic routed to a virtual private gateway for a VPN connection, the subnet is known as a VPN-only subnet.
  • By default, all VPCs and subnets must have IPv4 CIDR blocks—you can't change this behavior.
  • The allowed block size is between a /16 netmask (65,536 IP addresses) and /28 netmask (16 IP addresses).
  • The first four IP addresses and the last IP address in each subnet CIDR block are not available for you to use
  • The allowed block size is between a /28 netmask and /16 netmask
  • The CIDR block must not overlap with any existing CIDR block that's associated with the VPC.
  • Each subnet must be associated with a route table
  • Every subnet that you create is automatically associated with the main route table for the VPC
  • Security groups control inbound and outbound traffic for your instances
  • network ACLs control inbound and outbound traffic for your subnets
  • each subnet must be associated with a network ACL
  • You can create a flow log on your VPC or subnet to capture the traffic that flows to and from the network interfaces in your VPC or subnet.
  • A VPC peering connection enables you to route traffic between the VPCs using private IP addresses
  • you cannot create a VPC peering connection between VPCs that have overlapping CIDR blocks
  • recommend that you create a VPC with a CIDR range large enough for expected future growth, but not one that overlaps with current or expected future subnets anywhere in your corporate or home network, or that overlaps with current or future VPCs
張 旭

The Exhaustive Guide to Rails Time Zones - Alexander Danilenko - 0 views

  • you can use "wrong" methods in development and fairly often get valid results. But then you'll face with unexpected problems on production.
  • Ruby provides two classes to manage time: Time and DateTime
  • that's in Ruby! When it comes to Rails things get a bit more complicated
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • Rails gives your ability to configure application time zone.
  • we have 3 (!) different time zones in our application: system time, application time and database time.
  • DateTime.now and Time.now both give you the time in system time zone
  • Ruby standard library methods that know nothing about Rails time zone configuration
  • It's not Rails responsible for adding time zone, but ActiveSupport
  • switch from Time.now to Time.zone.now
  • Time.zone.now
  • no need to use it explicitly as there is shorter and more clear option.
  • Time.zone.today
  • Time.zone.local
  • Time.zone.at
  • Time.zone.parse
  • DateTime.strptime(str, "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M %Z").in_time_zone
  • always keep in mind that when you build time or date object you should respect current time zone.
  • use Time.zone instead of Time, Date or DateTime
張 旭

Active Record Migrations - Ruby on Rails Guides - 0 views

  • each migration as being a new 'version' of the database.
  • A schema starts off with nothing in it, and each migration modifies it to add or remove tables, columns, or entries
  • Active Record will also update your db/schema.rb file to match the up-to-date structure of your database.
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • The timestamps macro adds two columns, created_at and updated_at.
  • A primary key column called id will also be added implicitly, as it's the default primary key for all Active Record models
  • On databases that support transactions with statements that change the schema, migrations are wrapped in a transaction
  • If the database does not support this then when a migration fails the parts of it that succeeded will not be rolled back. You will have to rollback the changes that were made by hand.
  • If your adapter supports DDL transactions you can use disable_ddl_transaction! to disable them for a single migration
  • reversible
  • AddXXXToYYY
  • RemoveXXXFromYYY
  • Migrations are stored as files in the db/migrate directory, one for each migration class
  • a UTC timestamp identifying the migration followed by an underscore followed by the name of the migration.
  • The name of the migration class (CamelCased version) should match the latter part of the file name
  • add_details_to_products.rb should define AddDetailsToProducts
  • create_products.rb should define class CreateProducts
  • Rails uses this timestamp to determine which migration should be run and in what order,
張 旭

Building a RESTful API in a Rails application - 0 views

  • designing and implementing a REST API in an intentionally simplistic task management web application, and will cover some best practices to ensure maintainability of the code.
  • each individual request should have no context of the requests that came before it.
  • each request that modifies the database should act on one and only one row of one and only one table
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • The resource endpoints should return representations of the resource as data, usually XML or JSON.
  • POST for create, PUT for update, PATCH for upsert (update and insert).
  • an existing API should never be modified, except for critical bugfixes
  • Rather than changing existing endpoints, expose a new version
  • using unique database ids in the route chain allows users to access short routes, and simplifies resource lookup
  • while exposing internal database ids to the consumer and requiring the consumer to maintain a reference to ids on their end
  • The downfall is longer nested routes
  • require reauthentication on a per-request level
  • Devise.secure_compare helps avoid timing attacks
  • Defensive programming is a software design principle that dictates that a piece of software should be designed to continue functioning in unforeseen circumstances.
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