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Add test for removing and unloading a record from a hasMany relationship #4987
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Rebased to latest master (ac01921), checking to see if #5011 would resolve this issue. However, I still see the following test errors. The test I just added:
A new test failure since
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@@ -1788,6 +1788,37 @@ testInDebug('A sync hasMany errors out if there are unlaoded records in it', fun | |||
}, /You looked up the 'comments' relationship on a 'post' with id 1 but some of the associated records were not loaded. Either make sure they are all loaded together with the parent record, or specify that the relationship is async \('DS.hasMany\({ async: true }\)'\)/); | |||
}); | |||
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testInDebug('After removing and unloading a record, a hasMany relationship should still be valid', function(assert) { |
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we may as well test this always
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Changed to always test.
…rd() For an async relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), now adjusts only the relationship’s currentState, leaving that relationship’s canonical state alone, ensuring the existing client-side delete semantics are preserved. But when that relationship is reloaded, the canonicalState consulted. For sync relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), both currentState and canonical state are updated. This is to mirror the client-side delete semantics. But since we cannot reload a sync relationship we must assume this to be the new canonical state and rely on subsequent `push` or `adapterPayloads` or manual `store.push` to update. This aims to: * [FIX] hasMany arrays never contain dematerialized records (so they no longer become broken) * [FIX] using unloadRecord as a type of client side delete is restored * [PRESERVE] the garbage collector pass to cleanup orphaned models * [PRESERVE] second access to a relationship which did contain an unloadRecord to cause a reload note: if both sides of a relationships are unloaded, the above doesn’t apply. This is largely just when members of a loaded relationship are themselves unloaded. [fixes #4986 #5052 #4987 #4996]
…rd() For an async relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), now adjusts only the relationship’s currentState, leaving that relationship’s canonical state alone, ensuring the existing client-side delete semantics are preserved. But when that relationship is reloaded, the canonicalState consulted. For sync relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), both currentState and canonical state are updated. This is to mirror the client-side delete semantics. But since we cannot reload a sync relationship we must assume this to be the new canonical state and rely on subsequent `push` or `adapterPayloads` or manual `store.push` to update. This aims to: * [FIX] hasMany arrays never contain dematerialized records (so they no longer become broken) * [FIX] using unloadRecord as a type of client side delete is restored * [PRESERVE] the garbage collector pass to cleanup orphaned models * [PRESERVE] second access to a relationship which did contain an unloadRecord to cause a reload note: if both sides of a relationships are unloaded, the above doesn’t apply. This is largely just when members of a loaded relationship are themselves unloaded. [fixes #4986 #5052 #4987 #4996]
…rd() For an async relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), now adjusts only the relationship’s currentState, leaving that relationship’s canonical state alone, ensuring the existing client-side delete semantics are preserved. But when that relationship is reloaded, the canonicalState consulted. For sync relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), both currentState and canonical state are updated. This is to mirror the client-side delete semantics. But since we cannot reload a sync relationship we must assume this to be the new canonical state and rely on subsequent `push` or `adapterPayloads` or manual `store.push` to update. This aims to: * [FIX] hasMany arrays never contain dematerialized records (so they no longer become broken) * [FIX] using unloadRecord as a type of client side delete is restored * [PRESERVE] the garbage collector pass to cleanup orphaned models * [PRESERVE] second access to a relationship which did contain an unloadRecord to cause a reload note: if both sides of a relationships are unloaded, the above doesn’t apply. This is largely just when members of a loaded relationship are themselves unloaded. [fixes #4986 #5052 #4987 #4996]
…rd() For an async relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), now adjusts only the relationship’s currentState, leaving that relationship’s canonical state alone, ensuring the existing client-side delete semantics are preserved. But when that relationship is reloaded, the canonicalState consulted. For sync relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), both currentState and canonical state are updated. This is to mirror the client-side delete semantics. But since we cannot reload a sync relationship we must assume this to be the new canonical state and rely on subsequent `push` or `adapterPayloads` or manual `store.push` to update. This aims to: * [FIX] hasMany arrays never contain dematerialized records (so they no longer become broken) * [FIX] using unloadRecord as a type of client side delete is restored * [PRESERVE] the garbage collector pass to cleanup orphaned models * [PRESERVE] second access to a relationship which did contain an unloadRecord to cause a reload note: if both sides of a relationships are unloaded, the above doesn’t apply. This is largely just when members of a loaded relationship are themselves unloaded. [fixes #4986 #5052 #4987 #4996]
…rd() For an async relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), now adjusts only the relationship’s currentState, leaving that relationship’s canonical state alone, ensuring the existing client-side delete semantics are preserved. But when that relationship is reloaded, the canonicalState consulted. For sync relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), both currentState and canonical state are updated. This is to mirror the client-side delete semantics. But since we cannot reload a sync relationship we must assume this to be the new canonical state and rely on subsequent `push` or `adapterPayloads` or manual `store.push` to update. This aims to: * [FIX] hasMany arrays never contain dematerialized records (so they no longer become broken) * [FIX] using unloadRecord as a type of client side delete is restored * [PRESERVE] the garbage collector pass to cleanup orphaned models * [PRESERVE] second access to a relationship which did contain an unloadRecord to cause a reload note: if both sides of a relationships are unloaded, the above doesn’t apply. This is largely just when members of a loaded relationship are themselves unloaded. [fixes #4986 #5052 #4987 #4996]
…rd() For an async relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), now adjusts only the relationship’s currentState, leaving that relationship’s canonical state alone, ensuring the existing client-side delete semantics are preserved. But when that relationship is reloaded, the canonicalState consulted. For sync relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), both currentState and canonical state are updated. This is to mirror the client-side delete semantics. But since we cannot reload a sync relationship we must assume this to be the new canonical state and rely on subsequent `push` or `adapterPayloads` or manual `store.push` to update. This aims to: * [FIX] hasMany arrays never contain dematerialized records (so they no longer become broken) * [FIX] using unloadRecord as a type of client side delete is restored * [PRESERVE] the garbage collector pass to cleanup orphaned models * [PRESERVE] second access to a relationship which did contain an unloadRecord to cause a reload note: if both sides of a relationships are unloaded, the above doesn’t apply. This is largely just when members of a loaded relationship are themselves unloaded. [fixes #4986 #5052 #4987 #4996]
…rd() For an async relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), now adjusts only the relationship’s currentState, leaving that relationship’s canonical state alone, ensuring the existing client-side delete semantics are preserved. But when that relationship is reloaded, the canonicalState consulted. For sync relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), both currentState and canonical state are updated. This is to mirror the client-side delete semantics. But since we cannot reload a sync relationship we must assume this to be the new canonical state and rely on subsequent `push` or `adapterPayloads` or manual `store.push` to update. This aims to: * [FIX] hasMany arrays never contain dematerialized records (so they no longer become broken) * [FIX] using unloadRecord as a type of client side delete is restored * [PRESERVE] the garbage collector pass to cleanup orphaned models * [PRESERVE] second access to a relationship which did contain an unloadRecord to cause a reload note: if both sides of a relationships are unloaded, the above doesn’t apply. This is largely just when members of a loaded relationship are themselves unloaded. [fixes #4986 #5052 #4987 #4996]
…rd() For an async relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), now adjusts only the relationship’s currentState, leaving that relationship’s canonical state alone, ensuring the existing client-side delete semantics are preserved. But when that relationship is reloaded, the canonicalState consulted. For sync relationship [x, y] with x.unloadRecord(), both currentState and canonical state are updated. This is to mirror the client-side delete semantics. But since we cannot reload a sync relationship we must assume this to be the new canonical state and rely on subsequent `push` or `adapterPayloads` or manual `store.push` to update. This aims to: * [FIX] hasMany arrays never contain dematerialized records (so they no longer become broken) * [FIX] using unloadRecord as a type of client side delete is restored * [PRESERVE] the garbage collector pass to cleanup orphaned models * [PRESERVE] second access to a relationship which did contain an unloadRecord to cause a reload note: if both sides of a relationships are unloaded, the above doesn’t apply. This is largely just when members of a loaded relationship are themselves unloaded. [fixes #4986 #5052 #4987 #4996]
Abandoning since it was merged as part of #5092 |
In relation to #4986.
Note: This test is intentionally failing right now. It is passing if run against a branch prior to 6d96eda.