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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+

TylerH
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FlySwat
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    Does del /s (a) not work at all (it's only available in some versions) or (b) leave the top-level directory but delete everything under it or (c) leave all directories while deleting all files? – wnoise Sep 19 '08 at 02:59
  • @Aaron, answer c, you need to use rmdir /s to remove directories and files. – Wedge Sep 19 '08 at 10:38

21 Answers21

768

RMDIR or RD if you are using the classic Command Prompt (cmd.exe):

rd /s /q "path"

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

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"
Jim McKeeth
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Duncan Smart
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    It's worth pointing out that for large numbers of files, rmdir /s /q is typically significantly faster than the equivalent "select dir, shift + delete" operation in explorer. – Wedge Sep 19 '08 at 00:29
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    How about using flags to match directory names? If I want to drop all directories under foo\, `rmdir /s /q foo\*` gives an error for syntax incorrect. – Tom Mayfield Jun 07 '10 at 23:50
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    This doesn't delete files, like rm -rf does, and it also returns a non-zero value when the directory doesn't exist, so `rd /s /q foo && echo "yay"` will fail if directory "foo" doesn't exist. – Dirk Groeneveld Mar 31 '13 at 19:47
  • @Derek, Doskey could help you create aliases for ls=dir: http://devblog.point2.com/2010/05/14/setup-persistent-aliases-macros-in-windows-command-prompt-cmd-exe-using-doskey/ – alexey Sep 30 '13 at 16:59
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    What if dir. not empty and some files get `Access is denied` and others `The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process`? – Eugene Jan 13 '14 at 09:00
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    I just tried this in seven and you need to do /S and /Q (caps) – ford prefect Jul 02 '14 at 20:29
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    Mystified here. I *know* that I tried this command and it did not work if there were files in the directory tree; now I go back and . . . magically it seems to work. Does anyone else experience inconsistent behavior with this?! – Alex Hall Feb 01 '16 at 16:08
  • Yes, I experience inconsistent behavior all the time. It says it cannot delete the directory because it is blocked by some process. But there are no processes blocking the directory. – Brain Aug 16 '16 at 12:36
  • Use `if exist myfolder ( rmdir /s/q myfolder )` if you don't know whether the folder will exist or not – Clay Apr 12 '17 at 05:25
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    This doesn't seem to work in PowerShell? I'm getting "A positional parameter cannot be found that accepts argument '/q'." – Jon Gunter Jun 29 '17 at 22:21
  • @JonGunter for Powershell you use the Remove-Item cmdlet https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/powershell/reference/5.1/microsoft.powershell.management/remove-item – Duncan Smart Jul 05 '17 at 10:45
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    Maybe it worked in some older windows. But now it does not work at all. – Gangnus Jan 15 '18 at 22:34
  • `help rmdir` in windows 7 indicates `/S` should be used to remove the whole directory tree and `/Q` should be used for quiet mode. – Matt Hancock Jul 03 '18 at 15:12
147

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
wbkang
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    My hero! And one tip: You create your empty folder at C:\empty, then once inside each crazy folder, one can just do `robocopy /mir c:\empty .` – Léon Pelletier Nov 06 '15 at 04:56
  • The `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 06:29
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    Very nice answer. It works. (all other answers on the page don't). But cacls is deprecated. Is it possible to make a contemporary answer, please? The second variant already works and is not deprecated. – Gangnus Jan 15 '18 at 22:31
  • This doesn't do anything for me. Could someone please explain how it is supposed to work? (robocopy) - It might delete contents of folders, but not folders themselves – Ralf May 02 '19 at 07:05
  • @wbkang when I run `cacls "C:\B" /c /G "ADMINNAME":F /T` I get `No mapping between account names and security IDs was done.` – Bilal Jan 02 '21 at 08:02
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    @bilal substitute"adminname" with your actual account name. – wbkang Jan 02 '21 at 16:55
  • @wbkang For me rmdir was not working because few files were having long paths, actually your solution of copying empty folder to folder is a smart solution, thank you – Yerrapotu ManojKiran Mar 28 '21 at 05:14
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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

acdcjunior
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Jim McKeeth
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22

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.

Sireesh Yarlagadda
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19

You can install cygwin, which has rm as well as ls etc.

user17481
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12

For deleting a directory (whether or not it exists) use the following:

if exist myfolder ( rmdir /s/q myfolder )
Clay
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8

The accepted answer is great, but assuming you have Node installed, you can do this much more precisely with the node library "rimraf", which allows globbing patterns. If you use this a lot (I do), just install it globally.

yarn global add rimraf

then, for instance, a pattern I use constantly:

rimraf .\**\node_modules

or for a one-liner that let's you dodge the global install, but which takes slightly longer for the the package dynamic download:

npx rimraf .\**\node_modules
Artif3x
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7

via Powershell

 Remove-Item -Recurse -Force "TestDirectory"

via Command Prompt

https://stackoverflow.com/a/35731786/439130

cilerler
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6

rmdir /S /Q %DIRNAME%

Branan
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5

Try this command:

del /s foldername
Paige Ruten
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  • worked for me in combination w/ rmdir /s /q as some files were locked and rmdir would fail on those. del / foldername nuked the locked files which then allowed rmdir to get rid of root dir. Nice. – bbqchickenrobot Mar 18 '14 at 16:36
4

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:

  1. The specified path does not exist.
  2. The specified path exists and is a directory.
  3. The specified path exists and is a file.

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.

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binki
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4
rm -r -fo <path>

is the closest you can get in Windows PowerShell. It is the abbreviation of

Remove-Item -Recurse -Force -Path <path>

(more details).

stackprotector
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4

rmdir /s dirname

Brian Mitchell
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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

biegleux
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Louis
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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.

YNG
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USE AT YOUR OWN RISK. INFORMATION PROVIDED 'AS IS'. NOT TESTED EXTENSIVELY.

Right-click Windows icon (usually bottom left) > click "Windows PowerShell (Admin)" > use this command (with due care, you can easily delete all your files if you're not careful):

rd -r -include *.* -force somedir

Where somedir is the non-empty directory you want to remove.

Note that with external attached disks, or disks with issues, Windows sometimes behaves odd - it does not error in the delete (or any copy attempt), yet the directory is not deleted (or not copied) as instructed. (I found that in this case, at least for me, the command given by @n_y in his answer will produce errors like 'get-childitem : The file or directory is corrupted and unreadable.' as a result in PowerShell)

Roel Van de Paar
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LATE BUT IMPORTANT ANSWER to anyone who is having troubles installing npm packages on windows machine and if you are seeing error saying "rm -rf..." command not found. You can use the bash cli to run rm command on windows.

for npm users, you can change the npm's config to npm config set script-shell "C:\Program Files\Git\bin\bash.exe" this way if the npm package you are trying to install has a post install script that uses rm -rf command, you will be able to run that rm command without needing to change anything in the npm package or disabling the post install scripts config. (For example, styled-components uses rm command in their post install scripts)

If you want to just use the rm command, you can easily use the bash and pass the arguments.

So yes, you can use the 'rm' command on windows.

Abhishek
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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. :)

epochwolf
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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.

Gaurav Deochakke
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-2

There is also deltree if you're on an older version of windows.

You can learn more about it from here: SS64: DELTREE - Delete all subfolders and files.

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Jason Wadsworth
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del /s /q directorytobedeleted

joe
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