9

I'm trying to work how how to delete all files in a folder in Azure File Storage.

CloudFileDirectory.ListFilesAndDirectories() returns an IEnumerable of IListFileItem. But this doesn't help much because it doesn't have a filename property or similar.

This is what I have so far:

var folder = root.GetDirectoryReference("myfolder");

if (folder.Exists()) {
    foreach (var file in folder.ListFilesAndDirectories()) {

        // How do I delete 'file'

    }
}

How can I change an IListFileItem to a CloudFile so I can call myfile.Delete()?

7 Answers 7

16

ListFilesAndDirectories can return both files and directories so you get a base class for those two. Then you can check which if the types it is and cast. Note you'll want to track any sub-directories so you can recursively delete the files in those.

var folder = root.GetDirectoryReference("myfolder");

if (folder.Exists())
{
    foreach (var item in folder.ListFilesAndDirectories())
    {         
        if (item.GetType() == typeof(CloudFile))
        {
            CloudFile file = (CloudFile)item;

            // Do whatever
        }

        else if (item.GetType() == typeof(CloudFileDirectory))
        {
            CloudFileDirectory dir = (CloudFileDirectory)item;

            // Do whatever
        }
    }
}
2
  • 1
    Perfect, thanks! I wondered if this might have been how to do it, but the MSDN docs around IListFileItem are really poor.
    – BG100
    Mar 1, 2016 at 9:38
  • 1
    Thanks! I have to agree that the docs around all the C# Storage Account stuff are incredibly poor!
    – Carl
    Jun 4, 2019 at 21:59
6

Took existing answers, fixed some bugs and created an extension method to delete the directory recursively

public static async Task DeleteAllAsync(this ShareDirectoryClient dirClient) {

    await foreach (ShareFileItem item in dirClient.GetFilesAndDirectoriesAsync()) {
        if (item.IsDirectory) {
            var subDir = dirClient.GetSubdirectoryClient(item.Name);
            await subDir.DeleteAllAsync();
        } else {
            await dirClient.DeleteFileAsync(item.Name);
        }
    }

    await dirClient.DeleteAsync();
}

Call it like

var dirClient = shareClient.GetDirectoryClient("test");
await dirClient.DeleteAllAsync();
3
  • Why are you using Queue? Why can't one use the await foreach loop straightway?
    – Sugar Bowl
    Apr 13, 2022 at 0:53
  • 1
    @SugarBowl - you are correct. The Queue was not needed. I had copied and modified one of the other answers to make this an extension method and did not notice that. I've updated the answer. Thanks for pointing it out. Apr 13, 2022 at 1:30
  • 1
    This is the way to go for Azure File Shares.
    – Sugar Bowl
    Apr 13, 2022 at 15:07
2

This recursive version works if you have 'directories' inside your 'directory'

       public void DeleteOutputDirectory()
       {
           var share = _fileClient.GetShareReference(_settings.FileShareName);
           var rootDir = share.GetRootDirectoryReference();

           DeleteDirectory(rootDir.GetDirectoryReference("DirName"));
       }

       private static void DeleteDirectory(CloudFileDirectory directory)
       {
           if (directory.Exists())
           {
               foreach (IListFileItem item in directory.ListFilesAndDirectories())
               {
                   switch (item)
                   {
                       case CloudFile file:
                           file.Delete();
                           break;
                       case CloudFileDirectory dir:
                           DeleteDirectory(dir);
                           break;
                   }
               }

               directory.Delete();
           }
       }
1

This implementation would be very easy to achieve with Recursion in PowerShell. Where you specify the directory [can be the root directory in your case] and then all contents of that directory including all files, subdirectories gets deleted. Refer to the github ready PowerShell for the same - https://github.com/kunalchandratre1/DeleteAzureFilesDirectoriesPowerShell

0

The accepted answer seems outdated now. The following snippet uses the latest sdk. To have a better performance It's implemented as a for loop not a recursive algorithm. It discovers all files and folders which are located at directoryPath. Once a file is discovered you can delete it.

var rootDirectory = directoryPath != null 
? shareClient.GetDirectoryClient(directoryPath)
: shareClient.GetRootDirectoryClient();

var remaining = new Queue<ShareDirectoryClient>();
remaining.Enqueue(rootDirectory);

while (remaining.Count > 0)
{
    var shareDirectoryClient = remaining.Dequeue();

     await foreach (var item in shareDirectoryClient.GetFilesAndDirectoriesAsync())
     {
          if (!item.IsDirectory)
          {
              var shareFileClient = shareDirectoryClient.GetFileClient(item.Name);
                    files.Add(shareFileClient);
              // do what you want
              await shareFile.DeleteAsync();
          }

          if (item.IsDirectory)
          {
              remaining.Enqueue(shareDirectoryClient.GetSubdirectoryClient(item.Name));
              // do what you want
              await shareFile.DeleteAsync();
          }
     }
}

In the above code directory may be null or a path to a directory that you want to delete.

To Initialize the client, you can use the following method:

AccountSasBuilder sas = new AccountSasBuilder
{
    Services = AccountSasServices.Files,
    ResourceTypes = AccountSasResourceTypes.All,
    ExpiresOn = DateTimeOffset.UtcNow.AddMonths(1)
};

 sas.SetPermissions(AccountSasPermissions.List | AccountSasPermissions.Read | AccountSasPermissions.Delete);

var credential = new StorageSharedKeyCredential(AccountName, AccountKey);
var sasUri = new UriBuilder(AccountUri);
sasUri.Query = sas.ToSasQueryParameters(credential).ToString();

var shareServiceClient = new ShareServiceClient(sasUri.Uri);
var shareClient = shareServiceClient.GetShareClient(FileShareName);
   
1
  • That won't work - the first code sample is full of typos and bugs...
    – Miros
    Aug 13, 2020 at 14:30
0

This method should do the trick - please comment if I'm wrong or it could be improved in any way.

public async override Task DeleteFolder(string storagePath)
{
    var remaining = new Queue<ShareDirectoryClient>();
    remaining.Enqueue(Share.GetDirectoryClient(storagePath));

    while(remaining.Count > 0)
    {
        ShareDirectoryClient dir = remaining.Dequeue();

        await foreach (ShareFileItem item in dir.GetFilesAndDirectoriesAsync())
        {
            if(item.IsDirectory)
            {
                var subDir = dir.GetSubdirectoryClient(item.Name);
                await DeleteFolder(subDir.Path);
            }
            else
            {
                await dir
                    .GetFileClient(item.Name)
                    .DeleteAsync();
            }
        }

        await dir.DeleteAsync();
    }
}
1
  • And by the way (Microsoft are you looking?), this is how it's done using Dropbox API V2: using(var client = await GetClient()) { var res = await client.Files.DeleteV2Async(storagePath); }
    – Miros
    Aug 13, 2020 at 19:12
0
  1. Connect to your Azure container with a Virtual Machine (if file share, then go to fileshare > connect > and follow the commands to paste in your virtual machine - to connect to file share)
  2. Connect to your container in the virtual machine command interface (cd 'location of your container')
  3. Delete the folder (rm -rf 'folder to be deleted')

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