Paranoia

Paranoia is a re-implementation of acts_as_paranoid for Rails 3, using much, much, much less code.

You would use either plugin / gem if you wished that when you called destroy on an Active Record object that it didn't actually destroy it, but just "hid" the record. Paranoia does this by setting a deleted_at field to the current time when you destroy a record, and hides it by scoping all queries on your model to only include records which do not have a deleted_at field.

If you wish to actually destroy an object you may call really_destroy!.

Installation & Usage

For Rails 3, please use version 1 of Paranoia:

gem 'paranoia', '~> 1.0'

For Rails 4, please use version 2 of Paranoia:

gem 'paranoia', '~> 2.0'

Of course you can install this from GitHub as well:

gem 'paranoia', :github => 'radar/paranoia', :branch => 'master'
# or
gem 'paranoia', :github => 'radar/paranoia', :branch => 'rails4'

Then run:

bundle install

Updating is as simple as bundle update paranoia.

Run your migrations for the desired models

Run:

rails generate migration AddDeletedAtToClients deleted_at:datetime

and now you have a migration

class AddDeletedAtToClients < ActiveRecord::Migration
  def change
    add_column :clients, :deleted_at, :datetime
  end
end

Usage

In your model:

class Client < ActiveRecord::Base
  acts_as_paranoid

  ...
end

Hey presto, it's there! Calling destroy will now set the deleted_at column:

>> client.deleted_at => nil
>> client.destroy => client
>> client.deleted_at => [current timestamp]

If you really want it gone gone, call really_destroy!

>> client.deleted_at => nil
>> client.real_destroy! => client

If you want a method to be called on destroy, simply provide a before_destroy callback:

class Client < ActiveRecord::Base
  acts_as_paranoid

  before_destroy :some_method

  def some_method
    # do stuff
  end

  ...
end

If you want to use a column other than deleted_at, you can pass it as an option:

class Client < ActiveRecord::Base
  acts_as_paranoid column: :destroyed_at

  ...
end

If you want to access soft-deleted associations, override the getter method:

def product
  Product.unscoped { super }
end

If you want to find all records, even those which are deleted:

Client.with_deleted

If you want to find only the deleted records:

Client.only_deleted

If you want to check if a record is soft-deleted:

client.destroyed?

If you want to restore a record:

Client.restore(id)

If you want to restore a whole bunch of records:

Client.restore([id1, id2, ..., idN])

If you want to restore a record and their dependently destroyed associated records:

Client.restore(id, :recursive => true)

If you want callbacks to trigger before a restore:

before_restore :callback_name_goes_here

For more information, please look at the tests.

Acts As Paranoid Migration

You can replace the older acts_as_paranoid methods as follows:

Old Syntax New Syntax
find_with_deleted(:all) Client.with_deleted
find_with_deleted(:first) Client.with_deleted.first
find_with_deleted(id) Client.with_deleted.find(id)

License

This gem is released under the MIT license.