* fix nested insert with returning computed fields gives error, fix#3609
* revert using ordered hashmaps, sort columns based on ordinal postion
* fix 1. keys order 2. json/jsonb column value in nested insert returning
* add a note for sorted columns
* cast 'VALUES' expression as table row type
* use single CTE expression for generating returning for nested inserts
We upload a set of accumulating timers and counters to track service
time for different types of operations, across several dimensions (e.g.
did we hit the plan cache, was a remote involved, etc.)
Also...
Standardize on DiffTime as a standard duration type, and try to use it
consistently.
See discussion here:
https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine/pull/3584#pullrequestreview-340679369
It should be possible to overwrite that module so the new threadDelay
sticks per the pattern in #3705 blocked on #3558
Rename the Control.Concurrent.Extended.threadDelay to `sleep` since a
naive use with a literal argument would be very bad!
We catch a bug in 'computeTimeDiff'.
Add convenient 'Read' instances to the time unit utility types. Make
'Second' a newtype to support this.
This fixes#3759. Also, while we’re at it, also improve the way
invalidations are synced across instances so enums and remote schemas
are appropriately reloaded by the schema syncing process.
* WIP: Remove hdb_views for inserts
* Show failing row in check constraint error
* Revert "Show failing row in check constraint error"
This reverts commit dd2cac29d0.
* Use the better query plan
* Simplify things
* fix cli test
* Update downgrading.rst
* remove 1.1 asset for cli
- Move MonadBase/MonadBaseControl instances for TxE into pg-client-hs
- Set the -qn2 RTS option by default to limit the parallel GC to 2
threads
- Remove eventlog instrumentation
- Don’t rebuild the schema cache again after running a query that needs
it to be rebuilt, since we do that explicitly now.
- Remove some redundant checks, and relocate a couple others.
This changes TableCoreCacheT to internally record dependencies at a
per-table level. In practice, this dramatically improves the performance
of building permissions: it makes it far, far less likely for
permissions to be needlessly rebuilt because some unrelated table
changed.
These aren't suitable e.g. for running in CI since some take far too
long (and an impossibly long-time when running under criterion's normal
bootstrapping sampling regime.
We might try to improve this ourselves:
https://github.com/bos/criterion/issues/218
An initial summary analysis will be in #3530.
* export metadata without nulls, empty arrays
* property tests for 'ReplaceMetadata' using QuickCheck
-> Derive Arbitrary class for 'ReplaceMetadata' dependant types
* reduce property test cases number to 30
QuickCheck generates the `ReplaceMetadata` value really large
for higher number test cases. Encoded JSON for such values is large and
consumes more memory. Thus, CI is giving up while running property
tests.
* circle-ci: Add property tests as saperate job
* add no command mode to tests
* add yaml.v2 to go mod
* remove indirect comment for yaml.v2 dependency
The connection handler in websocket transport was not using the
'UserAuthentication' interface to resolve user info. Fix resolving
user info in websocket transport to use the common
'UserAuthentication' interface
Instead of
'WITH some_alias (SELECT * from some_func()) SELECT <rows> FROM some_alias'
for SQL function queries, Use
'SELECT <rows> FROM some_func() AS some_alias'
* save permissions, relationships and collections in catalog with 'is_system_defined'
* Use common stanzas in the .cabal file
* Refactor migration code into lib instead of exe
* Add new server test suite that exercises migrations
* Make graphql-engine clean succeed even if the schema does not exist
This fix is a little ugly, but it’s the only simple solution without a
significant refactoring that restructures the relationship between
GraphQL/Validate and GraphQL/Resolve. The ugliness should go away if we
implement something like #2801.
* Separate DB and metadata migrations
* Refactor Migrate.hs to generate list of migrations at compile-time
* Replace ginger with shakespeare to improve performance
* Improve migration log messages
Although brotli itself is MIT-licensed, the Haskell brotli library that provides bindings to it is GPL-licensed, so we cannot use it unless we get a response on haskell-hvr/brotli#1.
* allow customizing GraphQL root field names, close#981
* document v2 track_table API in reference
* support customising column field names in GraphQL schema
* [docs] add custom column fields doc in API reference
* add tests
* rename 'ColField' to 'ColumnField'
* embed column's graphql field in 'PGColumnInfo'
-> Value constructor of 'PGCol' is not exposed
-> Using 'parseJSON' to construct 'PGCol' in 'FromJSON' instances
* avoid using 'Maybe TableConfig'
* refactors & 'custom_column_fields' -> 'custom_column_names'
* cli-test: add configuration field in metadata export test
* update expected keys in `FromJSON` instance of `TableMeta`
* use `buildSchemaCacheFor` to update configuration in v2 track_table
* remove 'GraphQLName' type and use 'isValidName' exposed from parser lib
* point graphql-parser-hs library git repo to hasura
* support 'set_table_custom_fields' query API & added docs and tests
This fixes an issue where queries could incorrectly be considered
reusable if a variable was used in two positions: one where it affected
SQL generation and one where it did not.
* initial raster support
* _st_intersects_geom -> _st_intersects_geom_nband
* add tests
* update docs
* improve docs
As requested by @marionschleifer
* new type for raster values
Suggested by @lexi-lambda
* replace `SEUnsafe "NULL"` with SENull
* use positional arguments in SQL functions
* only allow omitting set of last arguments in functions
* disallow omitting of a non default argument in functions
These changes also add a new type, PGColumnType, between PGColInfo and
PGScalarType, and they process PGRawColumnType values into PGColumnType
values during schema cache generation.
This mostly simplifies the RootFlds type to make it clearer what it’s
used for, but it has the convenient side-effect of preventing some
“impossible” cases using the type system.
* allow altering type of a column iff session vars are defined in permissions
* use a sum type to define dependency reason
* set jwt expiry test's expiry time to 4 seconds
* derive Data instance for necessary types to simplify 'hasStaticExp'