discourse/plugins/discourse-subscriptions/app/models/discourse_subscriptions/customer.rb
David Taylor 3332e9f4c3
DEV: Always pass --force to annotaterb and reorder annotations (#39977)
`.annotaterb.yml` has carried `classified_sort: true` since the project
switched from `annotate` to `annotaterb` (commit 0eab7daea4, July 2025),
but annotaterb's default behaviour is to compare the existing schema
block against what it would generate and skip the rewrite when the
column list matches — even when the *ordering* of those columns differs.
The result is that models which haven't had a schema change since the
config landed never get reordered, and `classified_sort` drift
accumulates indefinitely.

`--force` makes annotaterb always rewrite, so a single `bin/rake
annotate:clean` run brings every model into the canonical format and
keeps them there. Every schema block is now grouped primary-key →
regular columns → timestamps → foreign keys (alphabetical within each
group). Pure annotation comment change — no code modifications.

Also cleans up the rake task to avoid string interpolation for `system`
calls.
2026-05-13 14:12:48 +01:00

32 lines
832 B
Ruby

# frozen_string_literal: true
module DiscourseSubscriptions
class Customer < ActiveRecord::Base
self.table_name = "discourse_subscriptions_customers"
scope :find_user, ->(user) { find_by_user_id(user.id) }
has_many :subscriptions
def self.create_customer(user, customer)
create(customer_id: customer[:id], user_id: user.id)
end
end
end
# == Schema Information
#
# Table name: discourse_subscriptions_customers
#
# id :bigint not null, primary key
# created_at :datetime not null
# updated_at :datetime not null
# customer_id :string not null
# product_id :string
# user_id :bigint
#
# Indexes
#
# index_discourse_subscriptions_customers_on_customer_id (customer_id)
# index_discourse_subscriptions_customers_on_user_id (user_id)
#