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Don't delete your records, move them to a different table.
Like acts_as_paranoid
, but doesn't mess with your SQL queries.
gem install acts_as_archive
config.gem 'acts_as_archive'
gem 'acts_as_archive'
require 'acts_as_archive' class Application < Sinatra::Base include ActsAsArchive::Adapters::Sinatra end
Create config/acts_as_archive.yml
to define the archive class, parent of the archive class and archive table for each of your models:
Article: - class: Article::Archive parent: ActiveRecord::Base table: archived_articles
It is expected that neither the archive class or archive table exist yet. ActsAsArchive
will create these automatically.
Run rake db:migrate
. Your archive table is created automatically.
Use destroy
, destroy_all
, delete
, and delete_all
like you normally would.
Records move into the archive table instead of being destroyed.
If your model's relationship has the :dependent
option, and the relationship also uses acts_as_archive
, that relationship will archive automatically.
New migrations are automatically applied to the archive table.
No action is necessary on your part.
Use the archive class you specified in the configuration:
Article::Archive.first
Use any of the destroy methods, but add a bang (!):
Article::Archive.first.destroy! Article.delete_all!([ "id in (?)", [ 1, 2, 3 ] ])
Use any of the destroy/delete methods on the archived record to move it back to its original table:
Article::Archive.first.destroy Article::Archive.delete_all([ "id in (?)", [ 1, 2, 3 ] ])
Any relationships that were automatically archived will be restored as well.
You will find an extra deleted_at
datetime column on the archive table.
You may manually add a restored_at
datetime column to the origin table if you wish to store restoration time as well.
Add this line to a migration, or run it via script/console
:
Article.migrate_from_acts_as_paranoid
This copies all records with non-null deleted_at
values to the archive.
There is a wiki entry that describes the development setup in-depth.