xref: /freebsd/bin/rm/rm.1 (revision 49b49cda41feabe3439f7318e8bf40e3896c7bf4)
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32.\"	@(#)rm.1	8.5 (Berkeley) 12/5/94
33.\" $FreeBSD$
34.\"
35.Dd November 7, 2015
36.Dt RM 1
37.Os
38.Sh NAME
39.Nm rm ,
40.Nm unlink
41.Nd remove directory entries
42.Sh SYNOPSIS
43.Nm
44.Op Fl f | i
45.Op Fl dIPRrvWx
46.Ar
47.Nm unlink
48.Ar file
49.Sh DESCRIPTION
50The
51.Nm
52utility attempts to remove the non-directory type files specified on the
53command line.
54If the permissions of the file do not permit writing, and the standard
55input device is a terminal, the user is prompted (on the standard error
56output) for confirmation.
57.Pp
58The options are as follows:
59.Bl -tag -width indent
60.It Fl d
61Attempt to remove directories as well as other types of files.
62.It Fl f
63Attempt to remove the files without prompting for confirmation,
64regardless of the file's permissions.
65If the file does not exist, do not display a diagnostic message or modify
66the exit status to reflect an error.
67The
68.Fl f
69option overrides any previous
70.Fl i
71options.
72.It Fl i
73Request confirmation before attempting to remove each file, regardless of
74the file's permissions, or whether or not the standard input device is a
75terminal.
76The
77.Fl i
78option overrides any previous
79.Fl f
80options.
81.It Fl I
82Request confirmation once if more than three files are being removed or if a
83directory is being recursively removed.
84This is a far less intrusive option than
85.Fl i
86yet provides almost the same level of protection against mistakes.
87.It Fl P
88Overwrite regular files before deleting them.
89Files are overwritten three times, first with the byte pattern 0xff,
90then 0x00, and then 0xff again, before they are deleted.
91Files with multiple links will not be overwritten nor deleted
92and a warning will be issued.
93If the
94.Fl f
95option is specified, files with multiple links will also be overwritten
96and deleted.
97No warning will be issued.
98.Pp
99Specifying this flag for a read only file will cause
100.Nm
101to generate an error message and exit.
102The file will not be removed or overwritten.
103.Pp
104N.B.: The
105.Fl P
106flag is not considered a security feature
107.Pq see Sx BUGS .
108.It Fl R
109Attempt to remove the file hierarchy rooted in each
110.Ar file
111argument.
112The
113.Fl R
114option implies the
115.Fl d
116option.
117If the
118.Fl i
119option is specified, the user is prompted for confirmation before
120each directory's contents are processed (as well as before the attempt
121is made to remove the directory).
122If the user does not respond affirmatively, the file hierarchy rooted in
123that directory is skipped.
124.It Fl r
125Equivalent to
126.Fl R .
127.It Fl v
128Be verbose when deleting files, showing them as they are removed.
129.It Fl W
130Attempt to undelete the named files.
131Currently, this option can only be used to recover
132files covered by whiteouts in a union file system (see
133.Xr undelete 2 ) .
134.It Fl x
135When removing a hierarchy, do not cross mount points.
136.El
137.Pp
138The
139.Nm
140utility removes symbolic links, not the files referenced by the links.
141.Pp
142It is an error to attempt to remove the files
143.Pa / ,
144.Pa .\&
145or
146.Pa .. .
147.Pp
148When the utility is called as
149.Nm unlink ,
150only one argument,
151which must not be a directory,
152may be supplied.
153No options may be supplied in this simple mode of operation,
154which performs an
155.Xr unlink 2
156operation on the passed argument.
157.Sh EXIT STATUS
158The
159.Nm
160utility exits 0 if all of the named files or file hierarchies were removed,
161or if the
162.Fl f
163option was specified and all of the existing files or file hierarchies were
164removed.
165If an error occurs,
166.Nm
167exits with a value >0.
168.Sh NOTES
169The
170.Nm
171command uses
172.Xr getopt 3
173to parse its arguments, which allows it to accept
174the
175.Sq Li --
176option which will cause it to stop processing flag options at that
177point.
178This will allow the removal of file names that begin
179with a dash
180.Pq Sq - .
181For example:
182.Pp
183.Dl "rm -- -filename"
184.Pp
185The same behavior can be obtained by using an absolute or relative
186path reference.
187For example:
188.Pp
189.Dl "rm /home/user/-filename"
190.Dl "rm ./-filename"
191.Pp
192When
193.Fl P
194is specified with
195.Fl f
196the file will be overwritten and removed even if it has hard links.
197.Sh EXAMPLES
198Recursively remove all files contained within the
199.Pa foobar
200directory hierarchy:
201.Pp
202.Dl $ rm -rf foobar
203.Pp
204Either of these commands will remove the file
205.Pa -f :
206.Bd -literal -offset indent
207$ rm -- -f
208$ rm ./-f
209.Ed
210.Sh COMPATIBILITY
211The
212.Nm
213utility differs from historical implementations in that the
214.Fl f
215option only masks attempts to remove non-existent files instead of
216masking a large variety of errors.
217The
218.Fl v
219option is non-standard and its use in scripts is not recommended.
220.Pp
221Also, historical
222.Bx
223implementations prompted on the standard output,
224not the standard error output.
225.Sh SEE ALSO
226.Xr chflags 1 ,
227.Xr rmdir 1 ,
228.Xr undelete 2 ,
229.Xr unlink 2 ,
230.Xr fts 3 ,
231.Xr getopt 3 ,
232.Xr symlink 7
233.Sh STANDARDS
234The
235.Nm
236command conforms to
237.St -p1003.1-2013 .
238.Pp
239The simplified
240.Nm unlink
241command conforms to
242.St -susv2 .
243.Sh HISTORY
244A
245.Nm
246command appeared in
247.At v1 .
248.Sh BUGS
249The
250.Fl P
251option assumes that the underlying storage overwrites file blocks
252when data is written to an existing offset.
253Several factors including the file system and its backing store could defeat
254this assumption.
255This includes, but is not limited to file systems that use a
256Copy-On-Write strategy (e.g. ZFS or UFS when snapshots are being used), Flash
257media that are using a wear leveling algorithm, or when the backing datastore
258does journaling, etc.
259In addition, only regular files are overwritten, other types of files are not.
260