The ActiveModelSerializers.silence_warnings was used to avoid warnings on the
Ruby interpreter when define a private attr_acessor. This method is not used in
any part of the code and the recommend way to handle this case is to use
protected instead the silence_warnings [1].
This patch remove the method from the project, this way we avoid people using
this by mistake.
[1]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/10967
- adds handling for when the returned resource is not serializable via ams
- fix for when resource is an Array
- Moves grape include to grape namespace. Changes Enumerable to Array because a plain hash is enumerable.
- Add integration test
- Refine scope of Grape version dependency
- Assert that the response is equal to a manually defined JSON string
- Add single module to include in Grape projects
- Create a Serializable Resource to test rails-api from Grape
- Update docs
- Fix discrepency between ActiveRecord 4.0 - 4.1 and 4.2
- Updated Changelog
- Remove parens from `render`, use `serializable` in all tests.
As an example, all serializers implement `#object` as a reference to the
object being esrialized, but this was preventing adding a key to the
serialized representation with the `object` name.
Instead of having attributes directly map to methods on the serializer,
we introduce one layer of abstraction: the `_attributes_map`. This hash
maps the key names expected in the output to the names of the
implementing methods.
This simplifies some things (removing the need to maintain both
`_attributes` and `_attribute_keys`), but does add some complexity in
order to support overriding attributes by defining methods on the
serializer. It seems that with the addition of the inline-block format,
we may want to remove the usage of programatically defining methods on
the serializer for this kind of customization.
Also
- Add reference to config from ActiveModelSerializers.config
- correctly call super in FragmentCacheTest#setup
- rename test rails app from Foo to ActiveModelSerializers::RailsApplication
Squashed commits:
Add Logging
Generates logging when renders a serializer.
Tunning performance on notify_active_support
- Use yield over block.call
- Freeze the event name string
Organize the logger architeture
* Keep only the `ActiveModel::Serializer.logger` to follow the same public API we
have for example to config, like `ActiveModel::Serializer.config.adapter` and
remove the `ActiveModelSerializers.logger` API.
* Define the logger on the load of the AMS, following the Rails convention on
Railties [1], [2] and [3].
This way on non Rails apps we have a default logger and on Rails apps we will
use the `Rails.logger` the same way that Active Job do [4].
[1]: 2ad9afe4ff/activejob/lib/active_job/railtie.rb (L9-L11)
[2]: 2ad9afe4ff/activerecord/lib/active_record/railtie.rb (L75-L77)
[3]: 2ad9afe4ff/actionview/lib/action_view/railtie.rb (L19-L21)
[4]: 2ad9afe4ff/activejob/lib/active_job/logging.rb (L10-L11)
Performance tunning on LogSubscriber#render
Move the definition of locals to inside the `info` block this way the code is
executed only when the logger is called.
Remove not needed check on SerializableResource
Use SerializableResource on ActionController integration
On the ActionController was using a adapter, and since the instrumentation is
made on the SerializableResource we need to use the SerializableResource over
the adapter directly. Otherwise the logger is not called on a Rails app.
Use SerializableResource on the ActionController, since this is the main
interface to create and call a serializer.
Using always the SerializableResource we can keep the adapter code more easy to
mantain since no Adapter will need to call the instrumentation, only the
SerializableResource care about this.
Add docs about logging
Add a CHANGELOG entry
Keep the ActiveModelSerializers.logger
Better wording on Logging docs
[ci skip]
Add doc about instrumentation
[ci skip]
Use ActiveModel::Callbacks on the SerializableResource
Breaking change:
- Adapters now inherit Adapter::Base
- 'Adapter' is now a module, no longer a class
Why?
- using a class as a namespace that you also inherit from is complicated and circular at time i.e.
buggy (see https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/pull/1177)
- The class methods on Adapter aren't necessarily related to the instance methods, they're more
Adapter functions
- named `Base` because it's a Rails-ism
- It helps to isolate and highlight what the Adapter interface actually is