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For a given folder, how can I delete all broken links within it?

I found this answer that shows how to delete one broken link, but I can't put that together in only one line. Is there a one-liner for this?

A broken symbolic is a link that points to a file/folder that doesn't exists any longer.

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    Straight from "man find": ` find -L /usr/ports/packages -type l -exec rm -- {} + Delete all broken symbolic links in /usr/ports/packages.` Aug 29, 2017 at 13:55

9 Answers 9

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Here's a POSIX way of deleting all broken symbolic links in the current directory, without recursion. It works by telling find to traverse symbolic links (-L), but stopping (-prune) at every directory-or-symbolic-link-to-such.

find -L . -name . -o -type d -prune -o -type l -exec rm {} +

You can also use a shell loop. The test -L matches symbolic links, and -e matches existing files (excluding broken symlinks).

for x in * .[!.]* ..?*; do if [ -L "$x" ] && ! [ -e "$x" ]; then rm -- "$x"; fi; done

If you want to recurse into subdirectories, this technique doesn't work. With GNU find (as found on non-embedded Linux and Cygwin), you can use the -xtype predicate to detect broken symbolic links (-xtype uses the type of the target for symbolic links, and reports l for broken links).

find -xtype l -delete

POSIXly, you need to combine two tools. You can use find -type l -exec … to invoke a command on each symbolic link, and [ -e "$x" ] to test whether that link is non-broken.

find . -type l -exec sh -c 'for x; do [ -e "$x" ] || rm "$x"; done' _ {} +

The simplest solution is to use zsh. To delete all broken symbolic links in the current directory:

rm -- *(-@D)

The characters in parentheses are glob qualifiers: - to dereference symlinks, @ to match only symlinks (the combination -@ means broken symlinks only), and D to match dot files. To recurse into subdirectories, make that:

rm -- **/*(-@D)
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    +1 for really cool zsh example, and overall answer. But same question: Why rm and not unlink? Isn't there cases where rm is unsafe?
    – fotanus
    Feb 28, 2014 at 17:05
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    was just looking at this question: unix.stackexchange.com/questions/34248/… and the cautions regarding "find -L" -- not sure if it applies, and don't have time to chase it, but someone may want to consider investigating the potential hazards here.
    – JustJeff
    Oct 7, 2014 at 14:03
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    Another option: find -L /path/to/check -type l -delete (Source: commandlinefu.com/commands/view/2369/…)
    – thdoan
    Nov 26, 2014 at 4:10
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    why does this find expression not use -maxdepth to prevent recursion? Feb 11, 2018 at 15:31
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    @billycrook Oh, for the first one. Because I was giving a POSIX solution and -maxdepth isn't in POSIX (yet, I think it's planned to be in SUSv5). Feb 11, 2018 at 19:17
32

Simple answer based on the answer you linked (for a given directory, $DIR):

find -L $DIR -maxdepth 1 -type l -delete
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    I like this the best. Even the find man page seems to imply this is a solution for finding broken symlinks. Dec 28, 2016 at 2:58
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    On Mac OS (BSD find), @sanmiguel’s command gives an error: find: -delete: forbidden when symlinks are followed
    – Diti
    May 18, 2017 at 11:06
  • Works like a charm in CentOS
    – Erdal G.
    Nov 24, 2017 at 12:21
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    @JDub9 it's the difference between where to look and what to match when you look there. -L is where to look: include the contents of symlinked dirs. -type l is what to match: symlinks found when looking.
    – sanmiguel
    Oct 16, 2020 at 6:07
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    @jDub9 -L tells find to return info on the file a symlink points to, or the symlink itself if the file it points to does not exist. -type l returns only matches that are symlinks, which immediately filters out any link targets that exist, leaving only symlinks that point to a non-existent file.
    – sanmiguel
    Mar 11, 2021 at 16:27
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For MAC, do a dry run as follows:-

DIR=<some path>
find -L $DIR -maxdepth 1 -type l -print

Now, you can prune the old symlinks as follows:-

for f in `find -L $DIR -maxdepth 1 -type l`; do unlink $f; done
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  • Great but doesn't handle directory names with a space.
    – Anael
    Mar 31, 2022 at 1:19
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    ... which is why "$VAR" references in the shell should habitually be put into double quotes, except you know exactly what you're doing.
    – Harald
    Jan 22, 2023 at 13:04
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From man find EXAMPLES:

find -L /usr/ports/packages -type l -exec rm -- {} +

Delete all broken symbolic links in /usr/ports/packages.

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    find -L /usr/ports/packages -type l -print -delete May 25, 2018 at 11:36
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The package symlinks is pre-installed on many distributions (including Ubuntu 16.04 & Fedora 25) and has some really useful features, one of which does precisely what you're looking for:

symlinks -d ./
    -d == delete dangling links
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7

Answer based on the accepted answer to the question question "How can I find broken symlinks":

find . -type l -! -exec test -e {} \; -print | xargs rm
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3

You can try using rmlint.

First, change directory to the folder that contains broken symlinks, and then run the following commands to find bad symlinks pointing nowhere:

rmlint --types="badlinks"

Then rmlint will create a bash script rmlint.sh in your current directory and print a list of bad symlinks in your terminal. To delete all the bad symlinks in your current directory, you can run

./rmlint.sh

Not exactly one liner, but it is very easy to use.

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You could use readlink to determine if a symlink is broken or not.

The following would list all the broken symlinks in a given directory (and subdirectories):

find . -type l -exec sh -c 'readlink -f "{}" 1>/dev/null || echo "{}"' -- "{}" \;

Replace echo with rm to get rid of the broken ones!

(I've redirected the output of readlink to /dev/null so as to avoid confusion; it'd list the target for the symlinks.)

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  • By you nickname, I see you like redirecting to /dev/null :-) Thanks, what about unlink?
    – fotanus
    Feb 28, 2014 at 14:49
  • @fotanus Why unlink, what's the problem with rm?
    – devnull
    Feb 28, 2014 at 14:51
  • @fotanus BTW, as mentioned, in this case redirecting to /dev/null was purely to avoid confusion. Even if you don't, and replace echo with rm, it won't cause any sideeffect.
    – devnull
    Feb 28, 2014 at 14:52
  • not sure.. because it is a link? :P I know it only removes the entry point, but isn't somewhat safer than rm?
    – fotanus
    Feb 28, 2014 at 17:03
  • It seems you misunderstood what unlink does. It also deletes files. However unlink, as by POSIX, is supposed to only call the syscall unlink and not do anything else, while rm has more options and can do other things such as asking interactively confirming the delete. See this.
    – CherryDT
    Jan 15, 2021 at 18:04
1

This answer is based on @sanmiguel's but with fd

fd -tl -L $DIR -X rm

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