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Here's part of an integration test that I'm having:

user = User.first
assert !user.is_active?

get confirm_email_user_url(user),:confirmId => user.mail_confirmation_hash

assert_equal response.status,200
# because confirm_email_user_url modifies the activation state of the object
user = User.first
assert_equal user.state,"activated"

I spent the last hour debugging this :). In my initial version, I wasn't reinitializing user after confirm_email_user_url was accessed, and the state was always inactive even though the user was activated.

How do I know if I should "reload" ( lacking of a better name ) my model object? What should I call in order to do so?

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2 Answers 2

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+50

You'd need to call user.reload whenever the data has changed in the database.

In your above code, the "user" object is created in memory from the data fetched from the database by User.first. Then, it looks like your confirm_email_user_url modifies the database. The object doesn't know about this until you reload it, which re-acquires the data from the database.

I'm not sure if there's a programmatic way to know when you will need to reload the object, but as a developer you should be aware of what is going on and handle appropriately. In most of my experience (which is somewhat limited), this is only an issue during testing. In production, it's not typical for an object to be modified in the database while it is loaded in memory. What usually happens is the object in memory is modified and then saved to the database (i.e., user.email = "foo@bar.com" followed by user.save). I suppose if you had a high-activity application where lots of users might be modifying something in short succession, you would want to be careful about it.

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  • i don't understand, user = User.first, doesn't User.first will trigger the query again? it should auto-reload? no?
    – Sam YC
    Dec 15, 2016 at 8:18
  • User.first will query the db again. You can check it by opening rails c in one window and tail -f log/development.rb in the other. Then in console type user = User.first twice. You will see two queries in second window with logs
    – ToTenMilan
    Jan 16, 2019 at 11:36
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Btw. this doesn't really work when you do stuff on the model itself like Report.count. After endless tries of resetting the column information or getting an instance of the first/last record and reload it the only thing that helped me was reconnecting the database between the counts like this:

initial_count = Report.count

# do something, like invoking a rake task that imports the reports, ..

Report.connection.reconnect!
final_count = Report.count

This worked for Rails 2.3.8+, I don't know about the 3+ versions.

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  • For my particular use case (multiple requests accessing the same data, then one request updating the data, and the second request trying to get the update), the equivalent of user.reload did not work, but Report.connection.reconnect! worked.
    – SWoo
    Jun 25, 2015 at 2:43

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