I need a way to recursively delete a folder and its children.
Is there a prebuilt tool for this, or do I need to write one?
DEL /S
doesn't delete directories.
DELTREE
was removed from Windows 2000+
I need a way to recursively delete a folder and its children.
Is there a prebuilt tool for this, or do I need to write one?
DEL /S
doesn't delete directories.
DELTREE
was removed from Windows 2000+
RMDIR or RD if you are using the classic Command Prompt (cmd.exe):
rd /s /q "path"
If you are using PowerShell you can use Remove-Item
(which is aliased to del
, erase
, rd
, ri
, rm
and rmdir
) and takes a -Recurse
argument that can be shorted to -r
rd -r "path"
rmdir /s /q foo\*
gives an error for syntax incorrect.
– Thomas G. Mayfield
Jun 7 '10 at 23:50
rd /s /q foo && echo "yay"
will fail if directory "foo" doesn't exist.
– Dirk Groeneveld
Mar 31 '13 at 19:47
Access is denied
and others The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process
?
– Eugene
Jan 13 '14 at 9:00
admin:
takeown /r /f folder
cacls folder /c /G "ADMINNAME":F /T
rmdir /s folder
Works for anything including sys files
EDIT: I actually found the best way which also solves file path too long problem as well:
mkdir \empty
robocopy /mir \empty folder
robocopy /mir c:\empty .
– Léon Pelletier
Nov 6 '15 at 4:56
takeown
helped me as I copied folder from Linux system with rsync by mistake and I had no privileges to remove that folder... Not even the robocopy worked. Thanks
– Jarda
Sep 12 '16 at 6:29
RMDIR [/S] [/Q] [drive:]path
RD [/S] [/Q] [drive:]path
/S
Removes all directories and files in the specified directory in addition to the directory itself. Used to remove a directory tree.
/Q
Quiet mode, do not ask if ok to remove a directory tree with /S
Go to the path and trigger this command.
rd /s /q "FOLDER_NAME"
/s : Removes the specified directory and all subdirectories including any files. Use /s to remove a tree.
/q : Runs rmdir in quiet mode. Deletes directories without confirmation.
/? : Displays help at the command prompt.
For deleting a directory (whether or not it exists) use the following:
if exist myfolder ( rmdir /s/q myfolder )
Try this command:
del /s foldername
First, let’s review what rm -rf
does:
C:\Users\ohnob\things>touch stuff.txt
C:\Users\ohnob\things>rm -rf stuff.txt
C:\Users\ohnob\things>mkdir stuff.txt
C:\Users\ohnob\things>rm -rf stuff.txt
C:\Users\ohnob\things>ls -l
total 0
C:\Users\ohnob\things>rm -rf stuff.txt
There are three scenarios where rm -rf
is commonly used where it is expected to return 0
:
I’m going to ignore the whole permissions thing, but nobody uses permissions or tries to deny themselves write access on things in Windows anyways (OK, that’s meant to be a joke…).
First set ERRORLEVEL
to 0 and then delete the path only if it exists, using different commands depending on whether or not it is a directory. IF EXIST
does not set ERRORLEVEL
to 0 if the path does not exist, so setting the ERRORLEVEL
to 0 first is necessary to properly detect success in a way that mimics normal rm -rf
usage. Guarding the RD
with IF EXIST
is necessary because RD
, unlike rm -f
, will throw an error if the target does not exist.
The following script snippet assumes that DELPATH is prequoted. (This is safe when you do something like SET DELPATH=%1
. Try putting ECHO %1
in a .cmd
and passing it an argument with spaces in it and see what happens for yourself). After the snippet completes, you can check for failure with IF ERRORLEVEL 1
.
: # Determine whether we need to invoke DEL or RD or do nothing.
SET DELPATH_DELMETHOD=RD
PUSHD %DELPATH% 2>NUL
IF ERRORLEVEL 1 (SET DELPATH_DELMETHOD=DEL) ELSE (POPD)
IF NOT EXIST %DELPATH% SET DELPATH_DELMETHOD=NOOP
: # Reset ERRORLEVEL so that the last command which
: # otherwise set it does not cause us to falsely detect
: # failure.
CMD /C EXIT 0
IF %DELPATH_DELMETHOD%==DEL DEL /Q %DELPATH%
IF %DELPATH_DELMETHOD%==RD RD /S /Q %DELPATH%
Point is, everything is simpler when the environment just conforms to POSIX. Or if you install a minimal MSYS and just use that.
You can install GnuWin32 and use *nix commands natively on windows. I install this before I install anything else on a minty fresh copy of windows. :)
Here is what you need to do...
Create a batch file with the following line
RMDIR /S %1
Save your batch file as Remove.bat
and put it in C:\windows
Create the following registry key
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\Remove Directory (RMDIR)
Launch regedit
and update the default value HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\shell\Remove Directory (RMDIR)\default
with the following value
"c:\windows\REMOVE.bat" "%1"
Thats it! Now you can right click any directory and use the RMDIR function
here is what worked for me:
Just try decreasing the length of the path. i.e :: Rename all folders that lead to such a file to smallest possible names. Say one letter names. Go on renaming upwards in the folder hierarchy. By this u effectively reduce the path length. Now finally try deleting the file straight away.
Using Powershell 5.1
get-childitem *logs* -path .\ -directory -recurse | remove-item -confirm:$false -recurse -force
Replace logs with the directory name you want to delete.
get-childitem searches for the children directory with the name recursively from current path (.).
remove-item deletes the result.
via Powershell
Remove-Item -Recurse -Force "TestDirectory"
via Command Prompt
There is also deltree if you're on an older version of windows.
I really like this site for finding commands: SS64: Del - Delete Files
del /s /q directorytobedeleted
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format c:
then installation of Linux? I'm joking of course. – Basile Starynkevitch Mar 25 '15 at 13:12