You want to remove a directory tree recursively without using rm
-r
.
Use the finddepth
function from File::Find, shown in Example 9.3.
#!/usr/bin/perl # rmtree1 - remove whole directory trees like rm -r use File::Find qw(finddepth); die "usage: $0 dir ..\n" unless @ARGV; *name = *File::Find::name; finddepth \&zap, @ARGV; sub zap { if (!-l && -d _) { print "rmdir $name\n"; rmdir($name) or warn "couldn't rmdir $name: $!"; } else { print "unlink $name"; unlink($name) or warn "couldn't unlink $name: $!"; } }
Or use rmtree
from File::Path, as shown in Example 9.4.
#!/usr/bin/perl # rmtree2 - remove whole directory trees like rm -r use File::Path; die "usage: $0 dir ..\n" unless @ARGV; foreach $dir (@ARGV) { rmtree($dir); }
WARNING: These programs remove an entire directory tree. Use with extreme caution!
The File::Find module exports both a find
function, which traverses a tree in the (essentially random) order the files occur in the directory, as well as a finddepth
function, which is guaranteed to visit all the files underneath a directory before visiting the directory itself. This is exactly what we need to remove a directory and its contents.
We have to use two different functions, rmdir
and unlink
. The unlink
function deletes only files, and rmdir
only deletes empty directories. We need to use finddepth
to make sure that we've first removed the directory's contents before we rmdir
the directory itself.
Check first that the file isn't a symbolic link before determining if it's a directory. -d
returns true for both a directory and a symbol link to a directory. stat
, lstat
, and the file test operators like -d
all use the operating system call stat (2), which returns all the information kept about a file in an inode. These functions and operators retain that information and let you do more tests on the same file with the special underscore ( _
) filehandle. This avoids redundant system calls that would return the same information, slowly.
The unlink
, rmdir
, lstat
, and stat
functions in perlfunc (1) and in Chapter 3 of Programming Perl; the documentation for the standard File::Find module; your system's rm (1) and stat (2) manpages; the -
X section of perlfunc (1), and the "Named Unary and File Test Operators" section of Chapter 2 of Programming Perl
Copyright © 2002 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.