What is the simplest way to forcefully delete a directory and all its subdirectories in PowerShell? I am using PowerShell V2 in Windows 7.
I have learned from several sources that the most obvious command, Remove-Item $targetDir -Recurse -Force
, does not work correctly. This includes a statement in the PowerShell V2 online help (found using Get-Help Remove-Item -Examples
) that states:
...Because the Recurse parameter in this cmdlet is faulty, the command uses the Get-Childitem cmdlet to get the desired files, and it uses the pipeline operator to pass them to the Remove-Item cmdlet...
I have seen various examples that use Get-ChildItem and pipe it to Remove-Item, but the examples usually remove some set of files based on a filter, not the entire directory.
I am looking for the cleanest way to blow out an entire directory, files and child directories, without generating any user warning messages using the least amount of code. A one-liner would be nice if it is easy to understand.
RD /S /Q
– Rubens Farias Nov 17 '09 at 23:49rd
is an alias forRemove-Item
in powershell.cmd /c "rd /s /q"
works, though. – codekaizen May 2 '13 at 2:45