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Operating Systems Solaris Solaris 10 - 'ls' green for root user only Post 302930110 by achenle on Tuesday 30th of December 2014 10:31:14 AM
Old 12-30-2014
Also:
Code:
rm *Desktop*

would have deleted just the bad file and left the Desktop directory alone - rm won't remove directories without the proper options. Or you could just do
Code:
rm *?Desktop?*

and only files with the string "Desktop" and at least one other character before and after would have been deleted.
 

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GVFS-TRASH(1)							   User Commands						     GVFS-TRASH(1)

NAME
gvfs-trash - Move files or directories to the trash SYNOPSIS
gvfs-trash [OPTION...] [LOCATION...] DESCRIPTION
gvfs-trash sends files or directories to the "Trashcan". This can be a different folder depending on where the file is located, and not all file systems support this concept. In the common case that the file lives inside a users home directory, the trash folder is $XDG_DATA_HOME/Trash. Note that moving files to the trash does not free up space on the file system until the "Trashcan" is emptied. If you are interested in deleting a file irreversibly, see gvfs-rm. Inspecting and emptying the "Trashcan" is normally supported by graphical file managers such as nautilus, but you can also see the trash with the command gvfs-ls trash://. OPTIONS
The following options are understood: -h, --help Prints a short help text and exits. -f, --force Ignore nonexistent and non-deletable files. --empty Empty the trash. EXIT STATUS
On success 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. SEE ALSO
ls(1), gvfs-rm(1), Desktop Trash Can specification[1] NOTES
1. Desktop Trash Can specification http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/trash-spec gvfs GVFS-TRASH(1)
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