Governed ability
Trash post
aafm/trash-post Guarded write
Move a post to trash (recoverable, never permanently deleted).
How it is governed
The same model as every ability in the plugin, stated for this one.
- Off until you enable it
Like every ability, Trash post ships switched off. You turn it on one at a time, and an update never widens access on its own.
- Guarded write
Writes stay conservative, and the plugin re-checks the capability before the call runs.
- Capability gated
A connection only sees Trash post if the user you connected can run it, and the plugin checks that capability again before it executes.
- Every call audited
The call is written to the log in your own database, denials included, with the argument keys but never the values.
- It can delete
This ability can delete. Where WordPress supports it, items go to Trash and can be restored, and the last administrator can never be removed.
See it in action
An illustrative run. Your real calls and data stay on your own site.
Try it with a prompt
Example requests you could paste to your agent.
Move post 142 to the Trash.
Trash that outdated announcement post.
Send post 88 to the Trash so it can be restored later.
These are illustrative example prompts. The agent runs them as the user you connected, checked against that user's capabilities and written to your audit log.
Frequently asked
Short answers for Trash post.
Is the post gone for good?
No, it goes to the Trash where WordPress lets you restore it. It is never a permanent delete.
What controls it?
It is off by default, requires delete access, and is written to the audit log.
Governed by default, from the first call.
Trash post is off until you enable it, scoped to the user you connect, and logged like everything else. Turn on only what you need.
Every ability off until you enable it, capability-gated on every call.