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Full Discussion: Delete large number of files
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Delete large number of files Post 302515740 by inakajin on Wednesday 20th of April 2011 06:46:48 PM
Old 04-20-2011
Delete large number of files

Hi. I need to delete a large number of files listed in a txt file. There are over 90000 files in the list. Some of the directory names and some of the file names do have spaces in them.

In the file, each line is a full path to a file:
/path/to/the files/file1
/path/to/some other/files/file 2

I have a couple questions.

1. To remedy the spaces in the directory and file names I added " to the beginning and end of each line.
The file now looks like this:
"/path/to/the files/file1"
"/path/to/some other/files/file 2"

Would this solve the problem of the spaces in the file and directory names? Would single quotes be preferable?

2.
Code:
xargs rm -f < listoffiles.txt

xargs is a command I am familiar with. Would the number of files (90000+) cause an issue using xargs?

If so, would a do loop of kind overcome that? I saw the code below posted on another thread here. Could this be executed from the shell directly or would it need to be wrapped in a script?
Code:
while read file; do rm "$file"; done < listoffiles.txt

Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
 

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FASTRM(8)						      System Manager's Manual							 FASTRM(8)

NAME
fastrm - quickly remove a set of files SYNOPSIS
fastrm [ -d ] [ -e ] [ -uN ] [ -sM ] [ -cI ] base_directory DESCRIPTION
Fastrm reads a list of files, one per line, from its standard input and removes them. If a file is not an absolute pathname, it is taken relative to the directory specified on the command line. The base_directory parameter must be a simple absolute pathname -- that is, it must not contain any ``/./'' or ``/../'' references. Fastrm is designed to be faster than the typical ``| xargs rm'' pipeline. For example, fastrm will usually chdir(2) into a directory before removing files from it. If the input is sorted, this means that most files to be removed will be simple names. Fastrm assumes that its input is valid and that it is safe to just do an unlink(2) call for each item to be removed. As a safety measure, if fastrm is run by root it will first stat(2) the item to make sure that it is not a directory before unlinking it. OPTIONS
-d If the ``-d'' flag is used then no files are removed. Instead a list of the files to be removed, in debug form, is printed on the standard output. Each line contains either the current directory of fastrm at the time it would do the unlink, and then the path name it would pass to unlink(2) as two fields separated by white space and a ``/'', or the absolute path name (a single field) of files it would unlink using the absolute path name. -e If the ``-e'' flag is used, fastrm will treat an empty input file (stdin) as an error. This is most useful when fastrm is last in a pipeline after a preceding sort(1) as if the sort fails, there will usually be no output to become input of fastrm. -u If the ``-u'' flag is used, then fastrm makes further assumptions about its work environment; in particular, that there are no sym- bolic links in the target tree. This flag also suggests that it is probably faster to reference the path ``../../../'' rather than start from the root and come down. (Note that this probably isn't true on systems that have a namei cache, which usually holds everything except ``..''). The optional N is an integer that specifies the maximum number of ``..'' segments to use -- paths that would use more than this use the absolute path name (from the root) instead. If the ``-u'' flag is given without a value, ``-u1'' is assumed. -s If the ``-s'' flag is used, then fastrm will perform the unlinks from one directory -- that is when a group of files in one direc- tory appear in the input consecutively -- in the order that the files appear in the directory from which they are to be removed. The intent of this flag is that on systems that have a per-process directory cache, finding files in the directory should be faster. It can have smaller benefits on other systems. The optional M is an integer that specifies the number of files that must be going to be removed from one directory before the files will be ordered. If the ``-s'' flag is given without a value, ``-s5'' is assumed. When the directory reordering is in use fastrm will avoid attempting to unlink files that it can't see in the directory, which can speed it appreciably when many of the file names have already been removed. -c The ``-c'' flag may be given to instruct fastrm when it should chdir(2). If the number of files to be unlinked from a directory is at least I then fastrm will chdir and unlink the files from in the directory. Otherwise it will build a path relative to its cur- rent directory. If ``-c'' is given without the optional integer I then ``-c1'' is assumed, which will cause fastrm to always use chdir. If ``-c'' is not used at all, then ``-c3'' is assumed. Use ``-c0'' to prevent fastrm from ever using chdir(2). -a -r There are also ``-a'' and ``-r'' options, which do nothing at all, except allow you to say ``fastrm -usa'' ``fastrm -ussr'' or ``fastrm -user''. These happen to often be convenient sets of options to use. EXIT STATUS
Fastrm exits with a status of zero if there were no problems, or one if something went wrong. Attempting to remove a file that does not exist is not considered a problem. If the program exits with a non-zero status, it is probably a good idea to feed the list of files into an ``xargs rm'' pipeline. HISTORY
This is revision 1.3, dated 1996/10/29. FASTRM(8)
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