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RM(1)			    General Commands Manual			 RM(1)

NAME
       rm, unlink -- remove directory entries

SYNOPSIS
       rm [-f |	-i] [-dIPRrvW] file ...
       unlink file

DESCRIPTION
       The  rm	utility	attempts to remove the non-directory type files	speci-
       fied on the command line.  If the permissions of	the file do not	permit
       writing,	and the	standard input device  is  a  terminal,	 the  user  is
       prompted	(on the	standard error output) for confirmation.

       The options are as follows:

       -d      Attempt to remove directories as	well as	other types of files.

       -f      Attempt to remove the files without prompting for confirmation,
	       regardless of the file's	permissions.  If the file does not ex-
	       ist,  do	 not  display  a diagnostic message or modify the exit
	       status to reflect an error.  The	-f option overrides any	previ-
	       ous -i options.

       -i      Request confirmation before attempting to remove	each file, re-
	       gardless	of the file's permissions, or whether or not the stan-
	       dard input device is a terminal.	 The -i	option	overrides  any
	       previous	-f options.

       -I      Request	confirmation  once  if more than three files are being
	       removed or if a directory is being recursively  removed.	  This
	       is  a far less intrusive	option than -i yet provides almost the
	       same level of protection	against	mistakes.

       -P      Overwrite regular files before deleting them.  Files are	 over-
	       written	three  times,  first  with the byte pattern 0xff, then
	       0x00, and then 0xff again, before they are deleted.  Files with
	       multiple	links will not be overwritten nor deleted unless -f is
	       specified, a warning is generated instead.

	       Specifying this flag for	a read only file will cause rm to gen-
	       erate an	error message and exit.	 The file will not be  removed
	       or overwritten.

       -R      Attempt	to remove the file hierarchy rooted in each file argu-
	       ment.  The -R option implies the	-d option.  If the  -i	option
	       is specified, the user is prompted for confirmation before each
	       directory's  contents  are processed (as	well as	before the at-
	       tempt is	made to	remove the directory).	If the user  does  not
	       respond affirmatively, the file hierarchy rooted	in that	direc-
	       tory is skipped.

       -r      Equivalent to -R.

       -v      Be  verbose  when  deleting files, showing them as they are re-
	       moved.

       -W      Attempt to undelete the named files.   Currently,  this	option
	       can  only  be  used  to recover files covered by	whiteouts in a
	       union file system (see undelete(2)).

       The rm utility removes symbolic links, not the files referenced by  the
       links.

       It is an	error to attempt to remove the files /,	. or ...

       When the	utility	is called as unlink, only one argument,	which must not
       be  a  directory,  may be supplied.  No options may be supplied in this
       simple mode of operation, which performs	an unlink(2) operation on  the
       passed argument.

EXIT STATUS
       The  rm	utility	 exits 0 if all	of the named files or file hierarchies
       were removed, or	if the -f option was specified and all of the existing
       files or	file hierarchies were removed.	If an error occurs,  rm	 exits
       with a value >0.

NOTES
       The  rm	command	uses getopt(3) to parse	its arguments, which allows it
       to accept the `--' option which will cause it to	stop  processing  flag
       options	at that	point.	This will allow	the removal of file names that
       begin with a dash (`-').	 For example:

	     rm	-- -filename

       The same	behavior can be	obtained by using an absolute or relative path
       reference.  For example:

	     rm	/home/user/-filename
	     rm	./-filename

       When -P is specified with -f the	file will be overwritten  and  removed
       even if it has hard links.

COMPATIBILITY
       The  rm	utility	differs	from historical	implementations	in that	the -f
       option only masks attempts to  remove  non-existent  files  instead  of
       masking	a  large variety of errors.  The -v option is non-standard and
       its use in scripts is not recommended.

       Also, historical	BSD implementations prompted on	the  standard  output,
       not the standard	error output.

SEE ALSO
       chflags(1),   rmdir(1),	 undelete(2),  unlink(2),  fts(3),  getopt(3),
       symlink(7)

STANDARDS
       The rm command conforms to IEEE Std 1003.2 ("POSIX.2").

       The simplified unlink command conforms to Version 2 of the Single  UNIX
       Specification ("SUSv2").

HISTORY
       A rm command appeared in	Version	1 AT&T UNIX.

BUGS
       The  -P option assumes that the underlying file system is a fixed-block
       file system.  UFS is a fixed-block file system, LFS is not.   In	 addi-
       tion, only regular files	are overwritten, other types of	files are not.

FreeBSD	7.0		       December	26, 2006			 RM(1)

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