Thread: Peer-review requested of soft-delete scheme

Peer-review requested of soft-delete scheme

From
Mark Stosberg
Date:
Hello,

I'm working on designing a soft-delete scheme for our key entity-- there
are 17 other tables that reference our key table via RI. Let's call the
table "foo".

I understand there are a couple common design patterns for soft-deletes:

1. Use a trigger to move the rows to a "tombstone table".
2. Add an "deleted flag" to the table.

The "tombstone table" approach is out for us because all the RI.

The "deleted flag" approach would be a natural fit for us. There's
already a "state" column in the table, and there will only be a small
number rows in the "soft-deleted" state at a time, as we'll hard-delete
them after a few months. The table has only about about 10,000 rows in
it anyway.

My challenge is that I want to make very hard or impossible to access
the soft-deleted rows through SELECT statements. There are lots of
selects statements in the system.

My current idea is to rename the "foo" table to something that would
stand-out like "foo_with_deleted_rows". Then we would create a view
named "foo" that would select all the rows except the soft-deleted views.

I think that would make it unlikely for a developer or reviewer to mess
up SELECTs involving the statement.  Inserts/Updates/Delete statements
against the table are view, and coud reference the underlying table
directly.

Is this sensible? Is there another approach to soft-deletes I should be
considering?

Thanks!
   Mark




Re: Peer-review requested of soft-delete scheme

From
Jasen Betts
Date:
On 2013-04-16, Mark Stosberg <mark@summersault.com> wrote:

> My challenge is that I want to make very hard or impossible to access
> the soft-deleted rows through SELECT statements. There are lots of
> selects statements in the system.
>
> My current idea is to rename the "foo" table to something that would
> stand-out like "foo_with_deleted_rows". Then we would create a view
> named "foo" that would select all the rows except the soft-deleted views.

[...]

> Is this sensible? Is there another approach to soft-deletes I should be
> considering?

yes, rename the table and replace it with a view that excludes the soft
deleted records. Make "do instead" rules to handle inserts, updates
and deletes on the view by rediecting them to the base table.

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