547

In my Node application I need to remove a directory which has some files, but fs.rmdir only works on empty directories. How can I do this?

1

35 Answers 35

701

As of Node.js 14.14.0, the recommended way is to use fs.rmSync:

fs.rmSync(dir, { recursive: true, force: true });
13
  • 7
    @anneb That happens if you are using an older version of Node.js (< 12.10). The latest version recognizes the option recursive: true and deletes non-empty folders without complaint.
    – GOTO 0
    Sep 16, 2019 at 7:52
  • 9
    Function signature is actually fs.rmdir(path[, options], callback) or fs.rmdirSync(path[, options]) Nov 27, 2019 at 22:51
  • 3
    @Emerica In the official node.js docs there is a big orange notification saying fs.rmdir is experimental with stability 1. "Stability: 1 - Experimental. The feature is not subject to Semantic Versioning rules. Non-backward compatible changes or removal may occur in any future release. Use of the feature is not recommended in production environments."
    – Tim
    Apr 20, 2020 at 18:01
  • 6
    recursive rmdir uses rimraf internally as can be seen in pull request github.com/nodejs/node/pull/29168/files
    – kaznovac
    Apr 21, 2020 at 2:53
  • 24
    Please note that the recursive option is deprecated since v14.14.0. API-docs suggest to use fs.rm(path, { recursive: true, force: true }) instead. Jun 9, 2021 at 19:05
393

There is a module for this called rimraf (https://npmjs.org/package/rimraf). It provides the same functionality as rm -Rf

Async usage:

var rimraf = require("rimraf");
rimraf("/some/directory", function () { console.log("done"); });

Sync usage:

rimraf.sync("/some/directory");
13
  • 112
    This is something that can be done easily with NodeJS Core libs why install an unmaintained 3rd party package?
    – SudoKid
    Jun 5, 2018 at 23:07
  • 6
    @EmettSpeer When do you mean by "be done easily"? Self writing a function like deleteFolderRecursive in following answer?
    – Freewind
    Sep 10, 2018 at 8:59
  • 36
    "but even with the function below its better then adding an unneeded package to your system." I strongly disagree. You're reinventing the wheel for the 19 millionth time for absolutely no reason at all, and risking introducing bugs or security vulnerabilities in the process. At the very least it's a waste of time. Inb4 "what if they drop the package": in the extremely unlikely event that the package is removed from the npm registry you can always replace it with your own then. There's no point in bandaging your head before you break it.
    – Demonblack
    Oct 16, 2018 at 13:22
  • 3
    now you can use del (npmjs.com/package/del) instead of @rimraf Oct 26, 2018 at 22:59
  • 7
    you can now use a recursive option: stackoverflow.com/a/57866165/6269864
    – user6269864
    Sep 10, 2019 at 12:30
302
+100

To remove folder synchronously

    const fs = require('fs');
    const Path = require('path');

    const deleteFolderRecursive = function (directoryPath) {
    if (fs.existsSync(directoryPath)) {
        fs.readdirSync(directoryPath).forEach((file, index) => {
          const curPath = path.join(directoryPath, file);
          if (fs.lstatSync(curPath).isDirectory()) {
           // recurse
            deleteFolderRecursive(curPath);
          } else {
            // delete file
            fs.unlinkSync(curPath);
          }
        });
        fs.rmdirSync(directoryPath);
      }
    };
18
  • 34
    Might want to add some checks that you're not going to accidentally run this on '/'. For example, being passed an empty path and a typo in file could result in curPath being the root dir. Mar 26, 2016 at 14:48
  • 11
    More robust implementation: replace var curPath = path + "/" + file; with var curPath = p.join(path, file); provided you included the path module: var p = require("path")
    – Andry
    Aug 13, 2016 at 6:47
  • 9
    Windows has \ slashes, so path.join(dirpath, file) should be better than path + "/" + file
    – thybzi
    Feb 28, 2017 at 10:03
  • 5
    You might get "Maximum call stack size exceeded" with this code due to too many operations in one tick time. @Walf if you run console application, you have 1 client, not more. So, no need to use async for console app in this case Feb 28, 2018 at 22:16
  • 5
    I receive 'Error: ENOTEMPTY: directory not empty'
    – Seagull
    Sep 20, 2018 at 6:34
192

Most of the people using fs with Node.js would like functions close to the "Unix way" of dealing with files. I'm using fs-extra to bring all the cool stuff :

fs-extra contains methods that aren't included in the vanilla Node.js fs package. Such as mkdir -p, cp -r, and rm -rf.

Even better, fs-extra is a drop in replacement for native fs. All methods in fs are unmodified and attached to it. It means that you can replace fs by fs-extra :

// this can be replaced
const fs = require('fs')

// by this
const fs = require('fs-extra')

And then you can remove a folder this way:

fs.removeSync('/tmp/myFolder'); 
//or
fs.remove('/tmp/myFolder', callback);
1
  • for the sync version you need removeSync('/tmp/myFolder')
    – olidem
    May 22, 2020 at 16:18
42

As of Node v14 (October 2020), the fs module has fs.rm and rs.rmSync that support recursive, non-empty directory unlinking:

https://nodejs.org/docs/latest-v14.x/api/fs.html#fs_fs_rm_path_options_callback

So you can now do something like this:

const fs = require('fs');
fs.rm('/path/to/delete', { recursive: true }, () => console.log('done'));

or:

const fs = require('fs');
fs.rmSync('/path/to/delete', { recursive: true });
console.log('done');
2
  • sorry for my fast, mistaken downvote. I want to correct my mistake... but I can't un-downvote till the answer is edited/updated. Mar 19, 2021 at 10:38
  • Unfortunately the documentation is misleading because it will still complain and refuse to delete empty directories, at least for me. With both recursive AND force set to true, I still get "ENOTEMPTY: directory not empty". Mar 21, 2023 at 5:10
28

My modified answer from @oconnecp (https://stackoverflow.com/a/25069828/3027390)

Uses path.join for better cross-platform experience. So, don't forget to require it.

var path = require('path');

Also renamed function to rimraf ;)

/**
 * Remove directory recursively
 * @param {string} dir_path
 * @see https://stackoverflow.com/a/42505874/3027390
 */
function rimraf(dir_path) {
    if (fs.existsSync(dir_path)) {
        fs.readdirSync(dir_path).forEach(function(entry) {
            var entry_path = path.join(dir_path, entry);
            if (fs.lstatSync(entry_path).isDirectory()) {
                rimraf(entry_path);
            } else {
                fs.unlinkSync(entry_path);
            }
        });
        fs.rmdirSync(dir_path);
    }
}
21

I don't usually resurrect old threads but there is a lot on churn here and sans the rimraf answer these all seem overly complicated to me.

First in modern Node (>= v8.0.0) you can simplify the process using only node core modules, fully asynchronous, and parallelize the unlinking of files concurrently all in a function of five lines and still keep readability:

const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
const { promisify } = require('util');
const readdir = promisify(fs.readdir);
const rmdir = promisify(fs.rmdir);
const unlink = promisify(fs.unlink);

exports.rmdirs = async function rmdirs(dir) {
  let entries = await readdir(dir, { withFileTypes: true });
  await Promise.all(entries.map(entry => {
    let fullPath = path.join(dir, entry.name);
    return entry.isDirectory() ? rmdirs(fullPath) : unlink(fullPath);
  }));
  await rmdir(dir);
};

On another note a guard for path traversal attacks is inappropriate for this function because

  1. It is out of scope based on the Single Responsibility Principle.
  2. Should be handled by the caller not this function. This is akin to the command-line rm -rf in that it takes an argument and will allow the user to rm -rf / if asked to. It would be the responsibility of a script to guard not the rm program itself.
  3. This function would be unable to determine such an attack since it does not have a frame of reference. Again that is the responsibility of the caller who would have the context of intent which would provide it a reference to compare the path traversal.
  4. Sym-links are not a concern as .isDirectory() is false for sym-links and are unlinked not recursed into.

Last but not least, there is a rare race condition that the recursion could error if one of the entries was unlinked or deleted outside this script at just the right time while this recursion is running. Since this scenario is not typical in most environments it can likely be overlooked. However, if required (for some edge cases) this issue can be mitigated with this slightly more complex example:

exports.rmdirs = async function rmdirs(dir) {
  let entries = await readdir(dir, { withFileTypes: true });
  let results = await Promise.all(entries.map(entry => {
    let fullPath = path.join(dir, entry.name);
    let task = entry.isDirectory() ? rmdirs(fullPath) : unlink(fullPath);
    return task.catch(error => ({ error }));
  }));
  results.forEach(result => {
    // Ignore missing files/directories; bail on other errors
    if (result && result.error.code !== 'ENOENT') throw result.error;
  });
  await rmdir(dir);
};

EDIT: Make isDirectory() a function. Remove the actual directory at the end. Fix missing recursion.

5
  • 1
    This is a really neat solution. Question regarding the second code sample: you don’t call await on your Promise.all(…); is this intentional? It seems like in its current state results.forEach would iterate over promises, while the code expects to iterate over results. Am I missing something? Jul 2, 2019 at 23:09
  • @Tony you are correct it is a typo/bug. Good catch!
    – Sukima
    Jul 2, 2019 at 23:31
  • Maybe a check first to ensure that the directory exists? something like if (!fs.existsSync(dir)) return
    – GTPV
    Jul 10, 2019 at 14:12
  • 1
    @GTPV Why? This increases the responsibility of this function. readdir will throw an error as it should. If you rmdir non-existing-dir the exit code is an error. It would be the responsibility of the consumer to try/catch. This is the same method described in the Node docs when it comes to using fs functions. They expect you to try/catch and look at the error's code to determine what to do. An extra check introduces a race condition.
    – Sukima
    Jul 10, 2019 at 14:15
  • I definitely see your point. I would expect though intuitively that attempting to delete a folder which does not exists would be successful as it would simply do nothing. No race condition if the synchronous version of fs.exists is used. P.S. this is a great solution.
    – GTPV
    Jul 10, 2019 at 14:51
18

From Node docs, as one can see here.

To get a behavior similar to the rm -rf Unix command, use fs.rm() with options { recursive: true, force: true }.

For Example

import { rm } from 'node:fs/promises';

await rm('/path/to', { recursive: true, force: true });
12

I wrote this function called remove folder. It will recursively remove all the files and folders in a location. The only package it requires is async.

var async = require('async');

function removeFolder(location, next) {
    fs.readdir(location, function (err, files) {
        async.each(files, function (file, cb) {
            file = location + '/' + file
            fs.stat(file, function (err, stat) {
                if (err) {
                    return cb(err);
                }
                if (stat.isDirectory()) {
                    removeFolder(file, cb);
                } else {
                    fs.unlink(file, function (err) {
                        if (err) {
                            return cb(err);
                        }
                        return cb();
                    })
                }
            })
        }, function (err) {
            if (err) return next(err)
            fs.rmdir(location, function (err) {
                return next(err)
            })
        })
    })
}
2
  • 4
    The idea is actually to not write your own code if it has been written by somebody else already. The better way to do it is use either rimraf or fs-extra or any other node module, to do the work for you. Oct 2, 2014 at 22:53
  • 97
    Yeah, writing your own code is terrible, because using dozens of 3rd party modules for relatively trivial operations has never proven to have any drawbacks in large scale applications.
    – Eric Rini
    May 23, 2015 at 5:03
12

Here is an async version of @SharpCoder's answer

const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');

function deleteFile(dir, file) {
    return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
        var filePath = path.join(dir, file);
        fs.lstat(filePath, function (err, stats) {
            if (err) {
                return reject(err);
            }
            if (stats.isDirectory()) {
                resolve(deleteDirectory(filePath));
            } else {
                fs.unlink(filePath, function (err) {
                    if (err) {
                        return reject(err);
                    }
                    resolve();
                });
            }
        });
    });
};

function deleteDirectory(dir) {
    return new Promise(function (resolve, reject) {
        fs.access(dir, function (err) {
            if (err) {
                return reject(err);
            }
            fs.readdir(dir, function (err, files) {
                if (err) {
                    return reject(err);
                }
                Promise.all(files.map(function (file) {
                    return deleteFile(dir, file);
                })).then(function () {
                    fs.rmdir(dir, function (err) {
                        if (err) {
                            return reject(err);
                        }
                        resolve();
                    });
                }).catch(reject);
            });
        });
    });
};
11

[EDIT: using node.js v15.5.0]

Having just tried using some of the solutions posted here, I encountered the following deprecation warning:

(node:13202) [DEP0147] DeprecationWarning: In future versions of Node.js, fs.rmdir(path, { recursive: true }) will throw if path does not exist or is a file. Use fs.rm(path, { recursive: true, force: true }) instead

fs.rm(path, { recursive: true, force: true }); works nicely, with fs.rmSync(path, { recursive: true, force: true }); if you want to use the blocking version.

4
  • Which version of node are you using? I get TypeError: fs.rm is not a function when I try to use fs.rm Jan 24, 2021 at 1:03
  • 1
    I'm running with v15.5.0 Jan 24, 2021 at 14:27
  • 1
    Makes sense. I'm running v12, and it looks like fs.rm and fs.rmSync were added in v14 Jan 25, 2021 at 16:32
  • 1
    This is perfect! It worked seamlessly and it doesn't require the install of any 3rd party dependencies. Mar 6, 2021 at 18:00
8

If you are using node 8+ want asyncronicity and don't want external dependencies, here is the async/await version:

const path = require('path');
const fs = require('fs');
const util = require('util');

const readdir = util.promisify(fs.readdir);
const lstat = util.promisify(fs.lstat);
const unlink = util.promisify(fs.unlink);
const rmdir = util.promisify(fs.rmdir);

const removeDir = async (dir) => {
    try {
        const files = await readdir(dir);
        await Promise.all(files.map(async (file) => {
            try {
                const p = path.join(dir, file);
                const stat = await lstat(p);
                if (stat.isDirectory()) {
                    await removeDir(p);
                } else {
                    await unlink(p);
                    console.log(`Removed file ${p}`);
                }
            } catch (err) {
                console.error(err);
            }
        }))
        await rmdir(dir);
        console.log(`Removed dir ${dir}`);
    } catch (err) {
      console.error(err);
    }
}
0
7
const fs = require("fs");
fs.rmdir("./test", { recursive: true }, (err) => {
  if (err) {
    console.error(err);
  }
});

Provide the recursive: true option. And it will recursively delete all the files and directories of the given path. (Assuming test is directory present at root. )

0
5

2020 Update

From version 12.10.0 recursiveOption has been added for options.

Note that recursive deletion is experimental.

So you would do for sync:

fs.rmdirSync(dir, {recursive: true});

or for async:

fs.rmdir(dir, {recursive: true});
5

According to the fs documentation, fsPromises currently provides the recursive option on an experimental basis, which, at least in my own case on Windows, removes the directory and any files therein.

fsPromises.rmdir(path, {
  recursive: true
})

Does recursive: true remove the files on Linux and MacOS?

1
  • This is the best answer as of 2020+. And it's working on MacOS
    – bentael
    Dec 3, 2020 at 15:54
5

Explanations

As of Node.js v14, we can now use the require("fs").promises.rm function to remove a file using a promise. The first argument will be the file or folder to remove (even non-existant ones). You can use the recursive and force options in the second argument's object to mimic the behavior of the rm Shell command utility with the -rf options.

Example

"use strict";

require("fs").promises.rm("directory", {recursive: true, force: true}).then(() => {
  console.log("removed");
}).catch(error => {
  console.error(error.message);
});

See

Node.js v14 Documentation

Mozilla Developer Promises Documentation

rm command manual page

5

If you prefer async/await, you can use the fs/promises API.

const fs = require('fs/promises');

const removeDir = async (dirPath) => {
  await fs.rm(dirPath, {recursive: true});
}

If you know the path of a single file in the folder and wish to delete the folder where that file is contained.

const fs = require('fs/promises');
const path = require('path');

const removeDir = async (filePath) => {
  const { dir } = path.parse(filePath);
  await fs.rm(dir, { recursive: true });
}
1
  • What is the minimum version of node? Feb 1, 2023 at 17:05
4

I reached here while trying to get over with the gulp and I'm writing for further reaches.

When you want to delete files and folders using del, you should append /** for recursive deletion.

gulp.task('clean', function () {
    return del(['some/path/to/delete/**']);
});
4

In the latest version of Node.js (12.10.0 or later), the rmdir style functions fs.rmdir(), fs.rmdirSync(), and fs.promises.rmdir() have a new experimental option recursive that allows deleting non-empty directories, e.g.

fs.rmdir(path, { recursive: true });

The related PR on GitHub: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/29168

4

Async version of @SharpCoder's answer using fs.promises:

const fs = require('fs');
const afs = fs.promises;

const deleteFolderRecursive = async path =>  {
    if (fs.existsSync(path)) {
        for (let entry of await afs.readdir(path)) {
            const curPath = path + "/" + entry;
            if ((await afs.lstat(curPath)).isDirectory())
                await deleteFolderRecursive(curPath);
            else await afs.unlink(curPath);
        }
        await afs.rmdir(path);
    }
};
4
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
  const fs = require("fs");
  // directory path
  const dir = "your/dir";

  // delete directory recursively <------
  fs.rmdir(dir, { recursive: true }, (err) => {
    if (err) {
      reject(err);
    }
    resolve(`${dir} is deleted!`);
  });
});
3

In an asynchronous approach , to delete a non empty dir using the

rmdir(path,{recursive:true,force:true}
rm(path,{recursive:true,force:true}

will work

A code snippet:

const fsp = require("fs/promises");

deleteDirRecursively("./b");
removeRecursively("./BCD/b+");

async function deleteDirRecursively(dirPath) {
  try {
    // fsPromises.rmdir() on a file (not a directory) results in the promise being rejected
    // with an ENOENT error on Windows and an ENOTDIR error on POSIX.
    // To get a behavior similar to the rm -rf Unix command,
    // use fsPromises.rm() with options { recursive: true, force: true }.
    //will not thorw error if dir is empty
    //will thow error if dir is not present
    await fsp.rmdir(dirPath, { recursive: true, force: true });
    console.log(dirPath, "deleted successfully");
  } catch (err) {
    console.log(err);
  }

async function removeRecursively(path) {
  try {
    //has ability to remove both file and dir
    //can delete dir recursively and forcefully
    //will delete an empty dir.
    //will remove all the contents of a dir.
    // the only difference between rmdir and rm is that rmdir can only delete dir's
    await fsp.rm(path, { recursive: true, force: true });
    console.log(path, "deleted successfully");
  } catch (err) {
    console.log(err);
  }
}
2

Just use rmdir module! it's easy and simple.

2
  • 7
    It is not always a good idea to use a module for every small piece of code. If you have to create a license agreement for example, this generates a real pain.
    – Mijago
    Feb 8, 2017 at 7:18
  • 4
    you need to add a code sample for your answer to be more interesting
    – Xeltor
    Aug 28, 2017 at 16:43
2

A quick and dirty way (maybe for testing) could be to directly use the exec or spawn method to invoke OS call to remove the directory. Read more on NodeJs child_process.

let exec = require('child_process').exec
exec('rm -Rf /tmp/*.zip', callback)

Downsides are:

  1. You are depending on underlying OS i.e. the same method would run in unix/linux but probably not in windows.
  2. You cannot hijack the process on conditions or errors. You just give the task to underlying OS and wait for the exit code to be returned.

Benefits:

  1. These processes can run asynchronously.
  2. You can listen for the output/error of the command, hence command output is not lost. If operation is not completed, you can check the error code and retry.
2
  • 2
    Perfect for when you write script and don't want to install dependencies because you're about to delete this script in 30 seconds after you deleted all your files!!
    – Mathias
    Nov 1, 2018 at 20:18
  • There are always ways to mess up and delete the root filesystem. In this case OP can remove the -f flag to be safe, or make sure while typing that he/she is not going to delete everything. exec + rm is a valid and useful command in node which I use often during testing.
    – Rash
    May 4, 2019 at 3:49
2

The de facto package is rimraf, but here is my tiny async version:

const fs = require('fs')
const path = require('path')
const Q = require('q')

function rmdir (dir) {
  return Q.nfcall(fs.access, dir, fs.constants.W_OK)
    .then(() => {
      return Q.nfcall(fs.readdir, dir)
        .then(files => files.reduce((pre, f) => pre.then(() => {
          var sub = path.join(dir, f)
          return Q.nfcall(fs.lstat, sub).then(stat => {
            if (stat.isDirectory()) return rmdir(sub)
            return Q.nfcall(fs.unlink, sub)
          })
        }), Q()))
    })
    .then(() => Q.nfcall(fs.rmdir, dir))
}

1

Ultra-speed and fail-proof

You can use the lignator package (https://www.npmjs.com/package/lignator), it's faster than any async code (e.g. rimraf) and more fail-proof (especially in Windows, where file removal is not instantaneous and files might be locked by other processes).

4,36 GB of data, 28 042 files, 4 217 folders on Windows removed in 15 seconds vs rimraf's 60 seconds on old HDD.

const lignator = require('lignator');

lignator.remove('./build/');
1

Sync folder remove with the files or only a file.

I am not much of a giver nor a contributor but I couldn't find a good solution of this problem and I had to find my way... so I hope you'll like it :)

Works perfect for me with any number of nested directories and sub directories. Caution for the scope of 'this' when recursing the function, your implementation may be different. In my case this function stays into the return of another function that's why I am calling it with this.

    const fs = require('fs');

    deleteFileOrDir(path, pathTemp = false){
            if (fs.existsSync(path)) {
                if (fs.lstatSync(path).isDirectory()) {
                    var files = fs.readdirSync(path);
                    if (!files.length) return fs.rmdirSync(path);
                    for (var file in files) {
                        var currentPath = path + "/" + files[file];
                        if (!fs.existsSync(currentPath)) continue;
                        if (fs.lstatSync(currentPath).isFile()) {
                            fs.unlinkSync(currentPath);
                            continue;
                        }
                        if (fs.lstatSync(currentPath).isDirectory() && !fs.readdirSync(currentPath).length) {
                            fs.rmdirSync(currentPath);
                        } else {
                            this.deleteFileOrDir(currentPath, path);
                        }
                    }
                    this.deleteFileOrDir(path);
                } else {
                    fs.unlinkSync(path);
                }
            }
            if (pathTemp) this.deleteFileOrDir(pathTemp);
        }
1

2020 Answer

If you want to do it in a npm script, You DON'T need to previously install any 3rd party package if you use the command npx

If for example, you want to delete the folders dist and .cache when you run npm run clean then just add this command to your package.json

{
  "scripts": {
    "clean": "npx rimraf dist .cache"
  }
}

It will work in any operative system

5
  • Doesn't this still require installation of the rimraf dependency?
    – trebor
    Jan 8, 2021 at 5:26
  • @trebor no, because we are running it with npx , which allows running a package without installing it Jan 9, 2021 at 1:05
  • 1
    @JuanmaMenendez Thats wrong. From the docs of npx: "By default, npx will check whether <command> exists in $PATH, or in the local project binaries, and execute that. If <command> is not found, it will be installed prior to execution." Which seems obvious, how would you execute something which isn't there? The advantage of npx is, that it will try to find your command in your PATH and locally in your project and only do an installation if it is nowhere to be found. Jan 9, 2021 at 10:39
  • It won't add the package to the project, though. But nonetheless it will have to install it somewhere. So for packages which are mainly intented to be called from build scripts or commandline, I prefer installing them globally, so with one installation, they are available everywhere Jan 9, 2021 at 10:56
  • @derpirscher 'npx' behind the curtain, temporally install the packages if it needs to do it, but for us that''s transparent. With 'npx' we don't need to add the package we want to use in our package.json. We, just execute it. Jan 10, 2021 at 15:19
0

Another alternative is using the fs-promise module that provides promisified versions of the fs-extra modules

you could then write like this example:

const { remove, mkdirp, writeFile, readFile } = require('fs-promise')
const { join, dirname } = require('path')

async function createAndRemove() {
  const content = 'Hello World!'
  const root = join(__dirname, 'foo')
  const file = join(root, 'bar', 'baz', 'hello.txt')

  await mkdirp(dirname(file))
  await writeFile(file, content)
  console.log(await readFile(file, 'utf-8'))
  await remove(join(__dirname, 'foo'))
}

createAndRemove().catch(console.error)

note: async/await requires a recent nodejs version (7.6+)

0

I wish there was a way to do this without additional modules for something so minuscule and common, but this is the best I could come up with.

Update: Should now work on Windows (tested Windows 10), and should also work on Linux/Unix/BSD/Mac systems.

const
    execSync = require("child_process").execSync,
    fs = require("fs"),
    os = require("os");

let removeDirCmd, theDir;

removeDirCmd = os.platform() === 'win32' ? "rmdir /s /q " : "rm -rf ";

theDir = __dirname + "/../web-ui/css/";

// WARNING: Do not specify a single file as the windows rmdir command will error.
if (fs.existsSync(theDir)) {
    console.log(' removing the ' + theDir + ' directory.');
    execSync(removeDirCmd + '"' + theDir + '"', function (err) {
        console.log(err);
    });
}
5
  • Maybe fs-extra's is the way to go if you want a single module.
    – b01
    Sep 4, 2016 at 12:39
  • 3
    This method is downright dangerous. String concatenation of a shell command, especially without escaping, invites code execution vulnerabilities and similar. If you're going to use rmdir, use child_process.execFile which does not invoke the shell, and pass arguments explicitly instead.
    – nevyn
    Mar 14, 2018 at 12:29
  • @nevyn I will give that a try and update my answer if it works.
    – b01
    Mar 16, 2018 at 16:55
  • Always prefer not to use third parties! Thanks! Oct 12, 2018 at 10:03
  • In addition to that, this method is pretty slow. Nodejs native api is much faster.
    – mersey
    Dec 12, 2019 at 12:27

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