databases/ruby-activerecord60:
## Rails 6.0.3.5 (February 10, 2021) ##
* Fix possible DoS vector in PostgreSQL money type
Carefully crafted input can cause a DoS via the regular expressions used
for validating the money format in the PostgreSQL adapter. This patch
fixes the regexp.
Thanks to @dee-see from Hackerone for this patch!
[CVE-2021-22880]
*Aaron Patterson*
www/ruby-actionpack60
## Rails 6.0.3.5 (February 10, 2021) ##
* Prevent open redirect when allowed host starts with a dot
[CVE-2021-22881]
Thanks to @tktech (https://hackerone.com/tktech) for reporting this
issue and the patch!
*Aaron Patterson*
Update Ruby on Rails 6.0 related packages to 6.0.3.4.
This is security fix for ruby-actionpack60.
## Rails 6.0.3.4 (October 07, 2020) ##
* [CVE-2020-8264] Prevent XSS in Actionable Exceptions
Update Ruby on Rails to 6.0.3.2.
www/ruby-actionpack60 is the really updated package and other packages
have no change except version.
CHANGELOG of www/ruby-actionpack60 is here:
## Rails 6.0.3.2 (June 17, 2020) ##
* [CVE-2020-8185] Only allow ActionableErrors if
show_detailed_exceptions is enabled
Update ruby-activerecord60 to 6.0.3.
## Rails 6.0.3 (May 06, 2020) ##
* Recommend applications don't use the `database` kwarg in `connected_to`
The database kwarg in `connected_to` was meant to be used for one-off scripts but is often used in requests. This is really dangerous because it re-establishes a connection every time. It's deprecated in 6.1 and will be removed in 6.2 without replacement. This change soft deprecates it in 6.0 by removing documentation.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
* Fix support for PostgreSQL 11+ partitioned indexes.
*Sebastián Palma*
* Add support for beginless ranges, introduced in Ruby 2.7.
*Josh Goodall*
* Fix insert_all with enum values
Fixes#38716.
*Joel Blum*
* Regexp-escape table name for MS SQL
Add `Regexp.escape` to one method in ActiveRecord, so that table names with regular expression characters in them work as expected. Since MS SQL Server uses "[" and "]" to quote table and column names, and those characters are regular expression characters, methods like `pluck` and `select` fail in certain cases when used with the MS SQL Server adapter.
*Larry Reid*
* Store advisory locks on their own named connection.
Previously advisory locks were taken out against a connection when a migration started. This works fine in single database applications but doesn't work well when migrations need to open new connections which results in the lock getting dropped.
In order to fix this we are storing the advisory lock on a new connection with the connection specification name `AdisoryLockBase`. The caveat is that we need to maintain at least 2 connections to a database while migrations are running in order to do this.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*, *John Crepezzi*
* Ensure `:reading` connections always raise if a write is attempted.
Now Rails will raise an `ActiveRecord::ReadOnlyError` if any connection on the reading handler attempts to make a write. If your reading role needs to write you should name the role something other than `:reading`.
*Eileen M. Uchitelle*
* Enforce fresh ETag header after a collection's contents change by adding
ActiveRecord::Relation#cache_key_with_version. This method will be used by
ActionController::ConditionalGet to ensure that when collection cache versioning
is enabled, requests using ConditionalGet don't return the same ETag header
after a collection is modified. Fixes#38078.
*Aaron Lipman*
* A database URL can now contain a querystring value that contains an equal sign. This is needed to support passing PostgresSQL `options`.
*Joshua Flanagan*
* Retain explicit selections on the base model after applying `includes` and `joins`.
Resolves#34889.
*Patrick Rebsch*
Add ruby-activerecord60 package version 6.0.2.2.
= Active Record -- Object-relational mapping put on rails
Active Record connects classes to relational database tables to establish an
almost zero-configuration persistence layer for applications. The library
provides a base class that, when subclassed, sets up a mapping between the new
class and an existing table in the database. In context of an application,
these classes are commonly referred to as *models*. Models can also be
connected to other models; this is done by defining *associations*.
This is for Ruby on Rails 6.0.