prisma-extension-soft-delete-typegraphql
v1.0.2
Published
Prisma extension for soft deleting records
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Table of Contents
- Installation
- Usage
- Behaviour
- LICENSE
Installation
This module is distributed via npm and should be installed as one of your project's dependencies:
npm install prisma-extension-soft-delete
@prisma/client
is a peer dependency of this library, so you will need to
install it if you haven't already:
npm install @prisma/client
Usage
Extension Setup
To add soft delete functionality to your Prisma client create the extension using the createSoftDeleteExtension
function and pass it to client.$extends
.
The createSoftDeleteExtension
function takes a config object where you can define the models you want to use soft
delete with.
import { PrismaClient } from "@prisma/client";
const client = new PrismaClient();
const extendedClient = client.$extends(
createSoftDeleteExtension({
models: {
Comment: true,
},
})
);
By default the extension will use a deleted
field of type Boolean
on the model. If you want to use a custom field
name or value you can pass a config object for the model. For example to use a deletedAt
field where the value is null
by default and a DateTime
when the record is deleted you would pass the following:
const extendedClient = client.$extends(
createSoftDeleteExtension({
models: {
Comment: {
field: "deletedAt",
createValue: (deleted) => {
if (deleted) return new Date();
return null;
},
},
},
})
);
The field
property is the name of the field to use for soft delete, and the createValue
property is a function that
takes a deleted argument and returns the value for whether the record is soft deleted or not. The createValue
method
must return a falsy value if the record is not deleted and a truthy value if it is deleted.
It is possible to setup soft delete for multiple models at once by passing a config for each model in the models
object:
const extendedClient = client.$extends(
createSoftDeleteExtension({
models: {
Comment: true,
Post: true,
},
})
);
To modify the default field and type for all models you can pass a defaultConfig
:
const extendedClient = client.$extends(
createSoftDeleteExtension({
models: {
Comment: true,
Post: true,
},
defaultConfig: {
field: "deletedAt",
createValue: (deleted) => {
if (deleted) return new Date();
return null;
},
},
})
);
When using the default config you can also override the default config for a specific model by passing a config object for that model:
const extendedClient = client.$extends(
createSoftDeleteExtension({
models: {
Comment: true,
Post: {
field: "deleted",
createValue: Boolean,
},
},
defaultConfig: {
field: "deletedAt",
createValue: (deleted) => {
if (deleted) return new Date();
return null;
},
},
})
);
The config object also has a allowToOneUpdates
option that can be used to allow updates to toOne relationships through
nested updates. By default this is set to false
and will throw an error if you try to update a toOne relationship
through a nested update. If you want to allow this you can set allowToOneUpdates
to true
:
const extendedClient = client.$extends(
createSoftDeleteExtension({
models: {
Comment: {
field: "deleted",
createValue: Boolean,
allowToOneUpdates: true,
},
},
})
);
For more information for why updating through toOne relationship is disabled by default see the Updating Records section.
Similarly to allowToOneUpdates
there is an allowCompoundUniqueIndexWhere
option that can be used to allow using
where objects with compound unique index fields when using findUnique
queries. By default this is set to false
and
will throw an error if you try to use a where with compound unique index fields. If you want to allow this you can set
allowCompoundUniqueIndexWhere
to true
:
const extendedClient = client.$extends(
createSoftDeleteExtension({
models: {
Comment: {
field: "deleted",
createValue: Boolean,
allowCompoundUniqueIndexWhere: true,
},
},
})
);
For more information for why updating through toOne relationship is disabled by default see the
Excluding Soft Deleted Records in a findUnique
Operation section.
To allow to one updates or compound unique index fields globally you can use the defaultConfig
to do so:
const extendedClient = client.$extends(
createSoftDeleteExtension({
models: {
User: true,
Comment: true,
},
defaultConfig: {
field: "deleted",
createValue: Boolean,
allowToOneUpdates: true,
allowCompoundUniqueIndexWhere: true,
},
})
);
Prisma Schema Setup
The Prisma schema must be updated to include the soft delete field for each model you want to use soft delete with.
For models configured to use the default field and type you must add the deleted
field to your Prisma schema manually.
Using the Comment model configured in Extension Setup you would need add the following to the
Prisma schema:
model Comment {
deleted Boolean @default(false)
[other fields]
}
If the Comment model was configured to use a deletedAt
field where the value is null by default and a DateTime
when
the record is deleted you would need to add the following to your Prisma schema:
model Comment {
deletedAt DateTime?
[other fields]
}
Models configured to use soft delete that are related to other models through a toOne relationship must have this relationship defined as optional. This is because the extension will exclude soft deleted records when the relationship is included or selected. If the relationship is not optional the types for the relation will be incorrect and you may get runtime errors.
For example if you have an author
relationship on the Comment model and the User model is configured to use soft
delete you would need to change the relationship to be optional:
model Comment {
authorId Int?
author User? @relation(fields: [authorId], references: [id])
[other fields]
}
@unique
fields on models that are configured to use soft deletes may cause problems due to the records not actually
being deleted. If a record is soft deleted and then a new record is created with the same value for the unique field,
the new record will not be created.
Behaviour
The main behaviour of the extension is to replace delete operations with update operations that set the soft delete field to the deleted value.
The extension also prevents accidentally fetching or updating soft deleted records by excluding soft deleted records from find queries, includes, selects and bulk updates. The extension does allow explicit queries for soft deleted records and allows updates through unique fields such is it's id. The reason it allows updates through unique fields is because soft deleted records can only be fetched explicitly so updates through a unique fields should be intentional.
Deleting Records
When deleting a record using the delete
or deleteMany
operations the extension will change the operation to an
update
operation and set the soft delete field to be the deleted value defined in the config for that model.
For example if the Comment model was configured to use the default deleted
field of type Boolean
the extension
would change the delete
operation to an update
operation and set the deleted
field to true
.
Deleting a Single Record
When deleting a single record using the delete
operation:
await client.comment.delete({
where: {
id: 1,
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.comment.update({
where: {
id: 1,
},
data: {
deleted: true,
},
});
Deleting Multiple Records
When deleting multiple records using the deleteMany
operation:
await client.comment.deleteMany({
where: {
id: {
in: [1, 2, 3],
},
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.comment.updateMany({
where: {
id: {
in: [1, 2, 3],
},
},
data: {
deleted: true,
},
});
Deleting Through a relationship
When using a nested delete through a relationship the extension will change the nested delete operation to an update operation:
await client.post.update({
where: {
id: 1,
},
data: {
comments: {
delete: {
where: {
id: 2,
},
},
},
author: {
delete: true,
},
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.post.update({
where: {
id: 1,
},
data: {
comments: {
update: {
where: {
id: 2,
},
data: {
deleted: true,
},
},
},
author: {
update: {
deleted: true,
},
},
},
});
The same behaviour applies when using a nested deleteMany
with a toMany relationship.
Hard Deletes
Hard deletes are not currently supported by this extension, when the extendedWhereUnique
feature is supported
it will be possible to explicitly hard delete a soft deleted record. In the meantime you can use the executeRaw
operation to perform hard deletes.
Excluding Soft Deleted Records
When using the findUnique
, findFirst
and findMany
operations the extension will modify the where
object passed
to exclude soft deleted records. It does this by adding an additional condition to the where
object that excludes
records where the soft delete field is set to the deleted value defined in the config for that model.
Excluding Soft Deleted Records in a findFirst
Operation
When using a findFirst
operation the extension will modify the where
object to exclude soft deleted records, so for:
await client.comment.findFirst({
where: {
id: 1,
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.comment.findFirst({
where: {
id: 1,
deleted: false,
},
});
Excluding Soft Deleted Records in a findMany
Operation
When using a findMany
operation the extension will modify the where
object to exclude soft deleted records, so for:
await client.comment.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.comment.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
deleted: false,
},
});
Excluding Soft Deleted Records in a findUnique
Operation
When using a findUnique
operation the extension will change the query to use findFirst
so that it can modify the
where
object to exclude soft deleted records, so for:
await client.comment.findUnique({
where: {
id: 1,
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.comment.findFirst({
where: {
id: 1,
deleted: false,
},
});
When querying using a compound unique index in the where object the extension will throw an error by default. This
is because it is not possible to use these types of where object with findFirst
and it is not possible to exclude
soft-deleted records when using findUnique
. For example take the following query:
await client.user.findUnique({
where: {
name_email: {
name: "foo",
email: "bar",
},
},
});
Since the compound unique index @@unique([name, email])
is being queried through the name_email
field of the where
object the extension will throw to avoid accidentally returning a soft deleted record.
It is possible to override this behaviour by setting allowCompoundUniqueIndexWhere
to true
in the model config.
Updating Records
Updating records is split into three categories, updating a single record using a root operation, updating a single record through a relation and updating multiple records either through a root operation or a relation.
When updating a single record using a root operation such as update
or upsert
the extension will not modify the
operation. This is because unless explicitly queried for soft deleted records should not be returned from queries,
so if these operations are updating a soft deleted record it should be intentional.
When updating a single record through a relation the extension will throw an error by default. This is because it is not possible to filter out soft deleted records for nested toOne relations. For example take the following query:
await client.post.update({
where: {
id: 1,
},
data: {
author: {
update: {
name: "foo",
},
},
},
});
Since the author
field is a toOne relation it does not support a where object. This means that if the author
field
is a soft deleted record it will be updated accidentally.
It is possible to override this behaviour by setting allowToOneUpdates
to true
in the extension config.
When updating multiple records using updateMany
the extension will modify the where
object passed to exclude soft
deleted records. For example take the following query:
await client.comment.updateMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
data: {
content: "foo",
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.comment.updateMany({
where: {
id: 1,
deleted: false,
},
data: {
content: "foo",
},
});
This also works when a toMany relation is updated:
await client.post.update({
where: {
id: 1,
},
data: {
comments: {
updateMany: {
where: {
id: 1,
},
data: {
content: "foo",
},
},
},
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.post.update({
where: {
id: 1,
},
data: {
comments: {
updateMany: {
where: {
id: 1,
deleted: false,
},
data: {
content: "foo",
},
},
},
},
});
Explicitly Updating Many Soft Deleted Records
When using the updateMany
operation it is possible to explicitly update many soft deleted records by setting the
deleted field to the deleted value defined in the config for that model. An example that would update soft deleted
records would be:
await client.comment.updateMany({
where: {
content: "foo",
deleted: true,
},
data: {
content: "bar",
},
});
Where objects
When using a where
query it is possible to reference models configured to use soft deletes. In this case the
extension will modify the where
object to exclude soft deleted records from the query, so for:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
comments: {
some: {
content: "foo",
},
},
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
comments: {
some: {
content: "foo",
deleted: false,
},
},
},
});
This also works when the where object includes logical operators:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
OR: [
{
comments: {
some: {
author: {
name: "Jack",
},
},
},
},
{
comments: {
none: {
author: {
name: "Jill",
},
},
},
},
],
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
OR: [
{
comments: {
some: {
deleted: false,
author: {
name: "Jack",
},
},
},
},
{
comments: {
none: {
deleted: false,
author: {
name: "Jill",
},
},
},
},
],
},
});
When using the every
modifier the extension will modify the where
object to exclude soft deleted records from the
query in a different way, so for:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
comments: {
every: {
content: "foo",
},
},
},
});
The extension would change the operation to:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
comments: {
every: {
OR: [{ deleted: { not: false } }, { content: "foo" }],
},
},
},
});
This is because if the same logic that is used for some
and none
were to be used with every
then the query would
fail for cases where there are deleted models.
The deleted case uses the not
operator to ensure that the query works for custom fields and types. For example if the
field was configured to be deletedAt
where the type is DateTime
when deleted and null
when not deleted then the
query would be:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
comments: {
every: {
OR: [{ deletedAt: { not: null } }, { content: "foo" }],
},
},
},
});
Explicitly Querying Soft Deleted Records
It is possible to explicitly query soft deleted records by setting the configured field in the where
object. For
example the following will include deleted records in the results:
await client.comment.findMany({
where: {
deleted: true,
},
});
It is also possible to explicitly query soft deleted records through relationships in the where
object. For example
the following will also not be modified:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
comments: {
some: {
deleted: true,
},
},
},
});
Including or Selecting Soft Deleted Records
When using include
or select
the extension will modify the include
and select
objects passed to exclude soft
deleted records.
Including or Selecting toMany Relations
When using include
or select
on a toMany relationship the extension will modify the where object to exclude soft
deleted records from the query, so for:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
include: {
comments: true,
},
});
If the Comment model was configured to be soft deleted the extension would modify the include
action where object to
exclude soft deleted records, so the query would be:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
include: {
comments: {
where: {
deleted: false,
},
},
},
});
The same applies for select
:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
select: {
comments: true,
},
});
This also works for nested includes and selects:
await client.user.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
include: {
posts: {
select: {
comments: {
where: {
content: "foo",
},
},
},
},
},
});
The extension would modify the query to:
await client.user.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
include: {
posts: {
select: {
comments: {
where: {
deleted: false,
content: "foo",
},
},
},
},
},
});
Including or Selecting toOne Relations
Records included through a toOne relation are also excluded, however there is no way to explicitly include them. For example the following query:
await client.post.findFirst({
where: {
id: 1,
},
include: {
author: true,
},
});
The extension would not modify the query since toOne relations do not support where clauses. Instead the extension will manually filter results based on the configured deleted field.
So if the author of the Post was soft deleted the extension would filter the results and remove the author from the results:
{
id: 1,
title: "foo",
author: null
}
When selecting specific fields on a toOne relation the extension will manually add the configured deleted field to the select object, filter the results and finally strip the deleted field from the results before returning them.
For example the following query would behave that way:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
select: {
author: {
select: {
name: true,
},
},
},
});
Explicitly Including Soft Deleted Records in toMany Relations
It is possible to explicitly include soft deleted records in toMany relations by adding the configured deleted field to
the where
object. For example the following will include deleted records in the results:
await client.post.findMany({
where: {
id: 1,
},
include: {
comments: {
where: {
deleted: true,
},
},
},
});
LICENSE
Apache 2.0