filament/actions
Filament Actions adds reusable, customizable UI actions to Filament admin panels. Define buttons, modals, confirmations, and forms with a fluent API, then run callbacks, validations, and notifications consistently across tables, resources, and pages.
import AutoScreenshot from "@components/AutoScreenshot.astro" import UtilityInjection from "@components/UtilityInjection.astro"
Filament includes an action that is able to force-delete soft-deleted Eloquent records. When the trigger button is clicked, a modal asks the user for confirmation. You may use it like so:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteAction;
ForceDeleteAction::make()
Or if you want to add it as a table bulk action, so that the user can choose which rows to force-delete, use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteBulkAction:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteBulkAction;
use Filament\Tables\Table;
public function table(Table $table): Table
{
return $table
->toolbarActions([
ForceDeleteBulkAction::make(),
]);
}
You may set up a custom redirect when the form is submitted using the successRedirectUrl() method:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteAction;
ForceDeleteAction::make()
->successRedirectUrl(route('posts.list'))
<UtilityInjection set="actions" version="5.x">As well as $record, the successRedirectUrl() function can inject various utilities as parameters.</UtilityInjection>
When the record is successfully force-deleted, a notification is dispatched to the user, which indicates the success of their action.
To customize the title of this notification, use the successNotificationTitle() method:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteAction;
ForceDeleteAction::make()
->successNotificationTitle('User force-deleted')
<UtilityInjection set="actions" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the successNotificationTitle() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>
You may customize the entire notification using the successNotification() method:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteAction;
use Filament\Notifications\Notification;
ForceDeleteAction::make()
->successNotification(
Notification::make()
->success()
->title('User force-deleted')
->body('The user has been force-deleted successfully.'),
)
<UtilityInjection set="actions" version="5.x" extras="Notification;;Filament\Notifications\Notification;;$notification;;The default notification object, which could be a useful starting point for customization.">As well as allowing a static value, the successNotification() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>
To disable the notification altogether, use the successNotification(null) method:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteAction;
ForceDeleteAction::make()
->successNotification(null)
You can use the before() and after() methods to execute code before and after a record is force-deleted:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteAction;
ForceDeleteAction::make()
->before(function () {
// ...
})
->after(function () {
// ...
})
<UtilityInjection set="actions" version="5.x">These hook functions can inject various utilities as parameters.</UtilityInjection>
By default, the ForceDeleteBulkAction will load all Eloquent records into memory, before looping over them and deleting them one by one.
If you are deleting a large number of records, you may want to use the chunkSelectedRecords() method to fetch a smaller number of records at a time. This will reduce the memory usage of your application:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteBulkAction;
ForceDeleteBulkAction::make()
->chunkSelectedRecords(250)
Filament loads Eloquent records into memory before deleting them for two reasons:
authorizeIndividualRecords('forceDelete'), for example).forceDeleting and forceDeleted events in a model observer.If you do not require individual record policy authorization and model events, you can use the fetchSelectedRecords(false) method, which will not fetch the records into memory before deleting them, and instead will delete them in a single query:
use Filament\Actions\ForceDeleteBulkAction;
ForceDeleteBulkAction::make()
->fetchSelectedRecords(false)
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