Hello Achilleus Thanks for your feedback. On changing the return to NULL: According to the docs, if I return NULL in the BEFORE trigger itself, all subsequent triggers and the row-level op itself (the actual delete) will be skipped completely, which is no good. I will confirm this to make sure though.
On your suggestion of manually updating, I have been trying something like this with interesting (but undesirable!) results: CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION fn_trg_mark_ref_as_deleted() RETURNS TRIGGER AS $$ BEGIN UPDATE ref_table SET deleted = TRUE WHERE ref_id = OLD.ref_id; RETURN OLD; END; $$ LANGUAGE 'plpgsql' VOLATILE; CREATE TRIGGER mark_ref_as_deleted BEFORE DELETE ON ref_table FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE fn_trg_mark_ref_as_deleted(); (I'm returning OLD for the reason above). Oddly, this does indeed set the soft-delete flag but never deletes the row, even if there are no constraint dependencies. I'm going to keep playing but any other suggestions would be very welcome :) Here are some sample schema and defs for anyone who's interested: ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- -- SCHEMA DEFS: BEGIN; CREATE TABLE ref_table ( ref_id INTEGER NOT NULL, deleted BOOLEAN DEFAULT FALSE, CONSTRAINT ref_table_pkey PRIMARY KEY (ref_id) ); CREATE TABLE dep_table ( dep_id INTEGER NOT NULL, ref_id INTEGER NOT NULL, CONSTRAINT dep_table_pkey PRIMARY KEY (dep_id) ); ALTER TABLE dep_table ADD CONSTRAINT dep_table_depends_on_ref_table FOREIGN KEY (ref_id) REFERENCES ref_table (ref_id) MATCH FULL ON DELETE NO ACTION ON UPDATE CASCADE NOT DEFERRABLE; CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION fn_trg_mark_ref_as_deleted() RETURNS TRIGGER AS $$ BEGIN UPDATE ref_table SET deleted = TRUE WHERE ref_id = OLD.ref_id; RETURN OLD; END; $$ LANGUAGE 'plpgsql' VOLATILE; CREATE TRIGGER mark_ref_as_deleted BEFORE DELETE ON ref_table FOR EACH ROW EXECUTE PROCEDURE fn_trg_mark_ref_as_deleted(); COMMIT; ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- -- SAMPLE DATA: BEGIN; DELETE FROM dep_table; DELETE FROM ref_table; INSERT INTO ref_table (ref_id) VALUES (1); INSERT INTO ref_table (ref_id) VALUES (2); INSERT INTO ref_table (ref_id) VALUES (3); INSERT INTO ref_table (ref_id) VALUES (4); INSERT INTO ref_table (ref_id) VALUES (5); INSERT INTO dep_table (dep_id,ref_id) VALUES (100,1); INSERT INTO dep_table (dep_id,ref_id) VALUES (101,1); INSERT INTO dep_table (dep_id,ref_id) VALUES (102,2); INSERT INTO dep_table (dep_id,ref_id) VALUES (103,2); INSERT INTO dep_table (dep_id,ref_id) VALUES (104,3); COMMIT; ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- -- SAMPLE QUERIES (which don't do what I would like!): DELETE FROM ref_table WHERE ref_id = 1 -- Ideally should sets the 'deleted' flag and not remove the row. (works OK) DELETE FROM ref_table WHERE ref_id = 5 -- Ideally should remove the row completely. (Does not work OK) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------- Thanks all, Simon Kinsella ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: explain analyze is your friend