Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | michaeldyrynda |
Maintainer Contact: | michael@dyrynda.com.au (Michael Dyrynda) |
Package Create Date: | 2016-05-01 |
Package Last Update: | 2024-08-13 |
Home Page: | https://dyrynda.com.au |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-12-24 15:08:17 |
Package Statistics | |
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Total Downloads: | 2,069,808 |
Monthly Downloads: | 63,033 |
Daily Downloads: | 1,431 |
Total Stars: | 1,027 |
Total Watchers: | 14 |
Total Forks: | 78 |
Total Open Issues: | 2 |
In scenarios when you delete a parent record - say for example a blog post - you may want to also delete any comments associated with it as a form of self-maintenance of your data.
Normally, you would use your database's foreign key constraints, adding an ON DELETE CASCADE
rule to the foreign key constraint in your comments table.
It may be useful to be able to restore a parent record after it was deleted. In those instances, you may reach for Laravel's soft deleting functionality.
In doing so, however, you lose the ability to use the cascading delete functionality that your database would otherwise provide. That is where this package aims to bridge the gap in functionality when using the SoftDeletes
trait.
<?php
namespace App;
use App\Comment;
use Dyrynda\Database\Support\CascadeSoftDeletes;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\SoftDeletes;
class Post extends Model
{
use SoftDeletes, CascadeSoftDeletes;
protected $cascadeDeletes = ['comments'];
protected $dates = ['deleted_at'];
public function comments()
{
return $this->hasMany(Comment::class);
}
}
Now you can delete an App\Post
record, and any associated App\Comment
records will be deleted. If the App\Comment
record implements the CascadeSoftDeletes
trait as well, it's children will also be deleted and so on.
$post = App\Post::find($postId)
$post->delete(); // Soft delete the post, which will also trigger the delete() method on any comments and their children.
Note: It's important to know that when you cascade your soft deleted child records, there is no way to know which were deleted by the cascading operation, and which were deleted prior to that. This means that when you restore the blog post, the associated comments will not be.
Because this trait hooks into the deleting
Eloquent model event, we can prevent the parent record from being deleted as well as any child records, if any exception is triggered. A LogicException
will be triggered if the model does not use the Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\SoftDeletes
trait, or if any of the defined cascadeDeletes
relationships do not exist, or do not return an instance of Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Relations\Relation
.
Additional Note: If you already have existing event listeners in place for a model that is going to cascade soft deletes, you can adjust the priority or firing order of events to have CascadeSoftDeletes fire after your event. To do this you can set the priority of your deleting event listener to be 1.
MODEL::observe( MODELObserver::class, 1 );
The second param is the priority.
MODEL::deleting( MODELObserver::class, 1 );
As of right now this is not documented in the Larvel docs, but just know that the default priority is 0
for all listeners, and that 0
is the lowest priority. Passing a param of greater than 0
to your listener will cause your listener to fire before listeners with default priority of 0
This trait is installed via Composer. To install, simply add to your composer.json
file:
$ composer require dyrynda/laravel-cascade-soft-deletes
If you are having general issues with this package, feel free to contact me on Twitter.
If you believe you have found an issue, please report it using the GitHub issue tracker, or better yet, fork the repository and submit a pull request.
If you're using this package, I'd love to hear your thoughts. Thanks!
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