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- What is the difference between rm -r and rm -f? - Super User
What do you mean they give the same result? rm -r emptydir removes that directory, rm -f emptydir does not These are two completely different command line options, each doing whatever its documentation says is doing
- Is it possible to remove the root directory? - Super User
The --preserve-root option was added to GNU rm in 2003 (commit 9be74f6f125b2be), and was made the default behavior in 2006 (commit aff5a4f2ab86f) Some say it is because pranksters in #ubuntu kept telling newbies to run rm -rf – and many did Some say it is because it is too easy to mistype rm -rf tmp junk
- What is the equivalent of rm -rf in Powershell? - Super User
As we all know, on a *nix system, rm -rf some_directory removes some_directory and all files beneath it recursively, without asking for confirmation What is the equivalent of this command in
- linux - Why does it take a long time to delete big files if `rm` can be . . .
I know that that it takes a long time to remove a big file because big files have larger number of blocks to be unlinked But when I interrupt an ongoing rm of a large file, the file is still gone
- rm: cannot remove `dir-name: Directory not empty - Super User
rm: cannot remove `dir-name': Directory not empty Ask Question Asked 1 year, 11 months ago Modified 1 year, 11 months ago
- bash - Delete files with regular expression - Super User
I Tried to delete files that starts with A and ends with 2 numbers but It doesn't do a thing What I tried: rm ^A*[0 9]2$ Where am I wrong?
- How do I make rm not give an error if a file doesnt exist?
So rm will warn you if you try to delete a file you don't have write permissions on This is allowed if you have write permissions on the directory but is a little weird, which is why rm normally warns you about it
- macos - Trying to delete directory with rm -rf, but get message that . . .
rm -rf dirname from a login on the network disk server properly removed the directory along with its contents So, there's another answer for what it's worth; another potential solution to this problem if it should appear for anyone in conjunction with a network disk
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