- 1.0.0
- 1.1.6
- 1.2.6
- 2.0.3 (0)
- 2.1.0 (0)
- 2.2.1 (31)
- 2.3.8 (0)
- 3.0.0 (0)
- 3.0.9 (-2)
- 3.1.0 (0)
- 3.2.1 (0)
- 3.2.8 (0)
- 3.2.13 (0)
- 4.0.2 (0)
- 4.1.8 (0)
- 4.2.1 (0)
- 4.2.7 (0)
- 4.2.9 (0)
- 5.0.0.1 (2)
- 5.1.7 (0)
- 5.2.3 (0)
- 6.0.0 (0)
- 6.1.3.1 (0)
- 6.1.7.7 (0)
- 7.0.0
- 7.1.3.2 (-1)
- 7.1.3.4 (0)
- 7.2.3 (0)
- 8.0.0 (0)
- 8.1.1 (0)
- What's this?
{ActiveRecord::Base.transaction}[rdoc-ref:Transactions::ClassMethods#transaction] uses this exception to distinguish a deliberate rollback from other exceptional situations. Normally, raising an exception will cause the {.transaction}[rdoc-ref:Transactions::ClassMethods#transaction] method to rollback the database transaction and pass on the exception. But if you raise an ActiveRecord::Rollback exception, then the database transaction will be rolled back, without passing on the exception.
For example, you could do this in your controller to rollback a transaction:
class BooksController < ActionController::Base def create Book.transaction do book = Book.new(params[:book]) book.save! if today_is_friday? # The system must fail on Friday so that our support department # won't be out of job. We silently rollback this transaction # without telling the user. raise ActiveRecord::Rollback end end # ActiveRecord::Rollback is the only exception that won't be passed on # by ActiveRecord::Base.transaction, so this line will still be reached # even on Friday. redirect_to root_url end end

