Using PowerShell, is it possible to remove some directory that contains files without prompting to confirm action?
16 Answers
Remove-Item -LiteralPath "foldertodelete" -Force -Recurse
or, with shorter version
rm /path -r -force
-
25I've found that I need to run this twice when run on a directory that contains subdirectories. The first time, there will be a lot of "The directory is not empty" errors. The second time, it completes with no errors. Dec 2, 2011 at 20:02
-
3
-
3@Kiquenet- This works for me, if I add a trailing slash to the path, so this example becomes Remove-Item .\foldertodelete* -Force -Recurse Aug 19, 2013 at 21:11
-
4If you want it to ignore a missing folder you can add
-ErrorAction Ignore
, although that will also hide other errors. May 13, 2016 at 14:00 -
3@Kiquenet Then you can use wildcards to remove everything within that folder:
Remove-Item './folder/*'
. If you really want to clear out only files of all folders you can list all leafs and pipe it to the Remove-Item cmdletGet-ChildItem -Recurse -File | Remove-Item
Jun 1, 2019 at 11:32
From PowerShell remove force answer: help Remove-Item says:
The Recurse parameter in this cmdlet does not work properly
The command to workaround is
Get-ChildItem -Path $Destination -Recurse | Remove-Item -force -recurse
And then delete the folder itself
Remove-Item $Destination -Force
-
1
-
3@beppe9000: I believe, yes. In the recent scripts I am using
Remove-Item -Recurse -Force $dir
and it works. Apr 4, 2016 at 10:56 -
Ok, but I just read that the problem is still here on the windows 10 extended
Get-Help Remove-Item
documentation obtained afterUpdate-Help
is run... Apr 4, 2016 at 17:55 -
2Get-ChildItem should also have the -Force argument, so that it also returns hidden files/folders. Apr 22, 2016 at 9:20
-
1
This worked for me:
Remove-Item $folderPath -Force -Recurse -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
Thus the folder is removed with all files in there and it is not producing error if folder path doesn't exists.
-
3
-
2
2018 Update
In the current version of PowerShell (tested with v5.1 on Windows 10 and Windows 11 in 2023) one can use the simpler Unix syntax rm -R .\DirName
to silently delete the directory .\DirName
with all subdirectories and files it may contain. In fact many common Unix commands work in the same way in PowerShell as in a Linux command line.
One can also clean up a folder, but not the folder itself, using rm -R .\DirName\*
(noted by Jeff in the comments).
-
3none of the powershell commands nor this one works for me on a 2016 server core computer. They all say, `cannot be removed because it is not empty'. I also tried the rd command in windows. I can move the folder anywhere, just can't delete. Mar 3, 2020 at 14:01
in short, We can use rm -r -fo {folderName}
to remove the folder recursively (remove all the files and folders inside) and force
-
-
4still i wonder why powershell not just inherit the whole commands from linux, say rm -rf folder/– seedmeFeb 11, 2022 at 0:48
To delete content without a folder you can use the following:
Remove-Item "foldertodelete\*" -Force -Recurse
rm -Force -Recurse -Confirm:$false $directory2Delete
didn't work in the PowerShell ISE, but it worked through the regular PowerShell CLI.
I hope this helps. It was driving me bannanas.
-
Thank you, same goes for me! FInally this folder was deleted when calling from
PowerShell CLI
and not while developing inPowerShell ISE
. Aug 20, 2018 at 11:58
Powershell works with relative folders. The Remove-Item
has couple of useful aliases which aligns with unix. Some examples:
rm -R -Force ./directory
del -R -Force ./directory/*
Below is a copy-pasteable implementation of Michael Freidgeim's answer
function Delete-FolderAndContents {
# http://stackoverflow.com/a/9012108
param(
[Parameter(Mandatory=$true, Position=1)] [string] $folder_path
)
process {
$child_items = ([array] (Get-ChildItem -Path $folder_path -Recurse -Force))
if ($child_items) {
$null = $child_items | Remove-Item -Force -Recurse
}
$null = Remove-Item $folder_path -Force
}
}
$LogPath = "E:\" # Your local of directories
$Folders = Get-Childitem $LogPath -dir -r | Where-Object {$_.name -like "*temp*"}
foreach ($Folder in $Folders)
{
$Item = $Folder.FullName
Write-Output $Item
Remove-Item $Item -Force -Recurse
}
Since my directory was in C:\users I had to run my powershell as administrator,
del ./[your Folder name] -Force -Recurse
this command worked for me.
-
3
If you have your folder as an object, let's say that you created it in the same script using next command:
$folder = New-Item -ItemType Directory -Force -Path "c:\tmp" -Name "myFolder"
Then you can just remove it like this in the same script
$folder.Delete($true)
$true - states for recursive removal
$LogPath = "E:\" # Your local of directories
$Folders = Get-Childitem $LogPath -dir -r | Where-Object {$_.name -like "*grav*"} # Your keyword name directories
foreach ($Folder in $Folders)
{
$Item = $Folder.FullName
Write-Output $Item
Remove-Item $Item -Force -Recurse -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
}
-
On script above i print fullname of folder and remove it. A good job... Sep 19, 2017 at 20:42
-
1Hi Anderson, you should edit answers if you are not planning to add 2 different answers, maybe you want to delete one of them?– bummiSep 19, 2017 at 20:51
Some multi-level directory folders need to be deleted twice, which has troubled me for a long time. Here is my final code, it works for me, and cleans up nicely, hope it helps.
function ForceDelete {
[CmdletBinding()]
param(
[string] $path
)
rm -r -fo $path
if (Test-Path -Path $path){
Start-Sleep -Seconds 1
Write-Host "Force delete retrying..." -ForegroundColor white -BackgroundColor red
rm -r -fo $path
}
}
ForceDelete('.\your-folder-name')
ForceDelete('.\your-file-name.php')
-
this is just a wrapper around answers already posted. what benefit do you see in your Answer over the others? ///// also, calling a function with
()
around the values is not correct in PoSh ... that just says "treat this as an array". Apr 16, 2022 at 9:02
If you want to concatenate a variable with a fixed path and a string as the dynamic path into a whole path to remove the folder, you may need the following command:
$fixPath = "C:\Users\myUserName\Desktop"
Remove-Item ("$fixPath" + "\Folder\SubFolder") -Recurse
In the variable $newPath
the concatenate path is now: "C:\Users\myUserName\Desktop\Folder\SubFolder"
So you can remove several directories from the starting point ("C:\Users\myUserName\Desktop"
), which is already defined and fixed in the variable $fixPath
.
$fixPath = "C:\Users\myUserName\Desktop"
Remove-Item ("$fixPath" + "\Folder\SubFolder") -Recurse
Remove-Item ("$fixPath" + "\Folder\SubFolder1") -Recurse
Remove-Item ("$fixPath" + "\Folder\SubFolder2") -Recurse
-
1