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I'm writing a batch (.bat) script and I need to handle the case in which the deletion of a folder fails. I'm using %errorlevel% to catch the exit code, but in the case of the rd command it seems not to work:

C:\Users\edo\Desktop>rd testdir
Directory is not empty

C:\Users\edo\Desktop>echo %errorlevel%
0

Why? What do you suggest?

2 Answers 2

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Wow, this is the 2nd case I've seen where ERRORLEVEL is not set properly! See File redirection in Windows and %errorlevel%.

The solution is the same as for detecting redirection failure. Use the || operator to take action upon failure.

rd testdir || echo The command failed!

The bizarre thing is, when you use the || operator, the ERRORLEVEL is then set properly to 145 if the folder was not empty, or 2 if the folder did not exist. So you don't even need to do anything. You could conditionally "execute" a remark, and the errorlevel will then be set properly.

rd testdir || rem
echo %errorlevel%

I thought the above gave a complete picture. But then a series of comments below demonstrated there are still potential problems when /RD /S is used. If a file or subfolder under the parent folder is locked (at any level under parent) then RD /S /Q PARENT && echo removed || echo failed will print out an error message, but the && branch fires instead of the || branch. Very unfortunate. If the command fails because the parent folder itself is locked, then || will properly fire and set the ERRORLEVEL.

It is possible to detect failure in all cases by swapping stderr with stdout and piping the result to FINDSTR "^". If a match is found, then there must have been an error.

3>&2 2>&1 1>&3 rd /s test | findstr "^" && echo FAILED

The swap of stderr and stdout is important when /q is missing because it allows the "Are you sure (Y/N)?" prompt to be visible on stderr, separate from the error message on stdout.

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  • 4
    This works fine for codes 2 and 145, but in case of "Access denied" or "The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process" then it just leaves ERRORLEVEL unchanged. :( Apr 7, 2015 at 11:26
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    helped me out! Thank you... itados.blogspot.co.at/2015/04/dos-error-levels.html Apr 21, 2015 at 0:26
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    This does not work with parameter /s for me. Can someone confirm this?
    – Stefan
    Jun 27, 2017 at 13:01
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    @Barniferous, it depends on the error. I can confirm @Stefan's findings. I.e., rd /q /s tmp && echo OK || echo ERROR !errorlevel! will print "The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process." and then "OK" (no errorlevel). Other errors, like the ERROR 2 from dbenham's post are reported correctly, though. Repro: open command prompt and cd to a dir. In another command prompt, try to delete that dir with dbenham's solution. No errorlevel, but error is printed... :S. Tested on Windows 7.
    – Abel
    Oct 29, 2017 at 16:28
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    Conditional Execution || doesn't work, at all, if an internal folder is blocked for an access Access is denied. The RD just have 0 exit code.
    – it3xl
    Sep 16, 2018 at 13:11
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rd does not set errorlevel to zero - it leaves errorlevel intact: f.e. if previous operation ends in positive errorlevel and rd finishes successfully it leaves errorlevel unchanged. Example: error levels of robocopy below 4 are warnings and not errors and can be ignored so the following code may end with error even when the directory was deleted successfully:

robocopy ...
if errorlevel 4 goto :error
rd somedir
if errorlevel 1 goto :error

Solution: ignore the error and check if the directory still exists after rd:

rd somedir
if exist somedir goto :error
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    Also about robocopy: be sure not to reset the errorlevel with set errorlevel=0 after you check it's not >= 4 because this command creates an environment variable that permanently overwrites the internal errorlevel. Read here
    – rychu
    Apr 10, 2015 at 13:44
  • This is the best solution IMO. Instead of trying to do convoluted workarounds, swapping outputs, and other crap trying to detect all the odd cases... just see whether the directory is still there; if it is, you had a problem.
    – Doktor J
    May 31, 2019 at 17:02

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