fastrm (1) - Linux Manuals
fastrm: Quickly remove a list of files
NAME
fastrm - Quickly remove a list of files
SYNOPSIS
fastrm [-de] [-c|-cI] [-s|-sM] [-u|-uN] base-directoryDESCRIPTION
fastrm reads a list of either file names or storage API tokens, one per line, from its standard input and removes them. Storage API tokens are removed via the SMcancel() interface. fastrm does not delete files safely or with an eye to security, but rather cuts every corner it can to delete files as fast as it can. It should therefore never be run on publically writable directories, or in any other environment where a hostile party may control the directory structure in which it is working.If a file name is not an absolute path name, it is considered to be relative to base-directory as given on the command line. The base-directory parameter must be a simple absolute pathname (it must not contain multiple consecutive slashes or references to the special directories "." or "..").
fastrm is designed to be faster than the typical "| xargs rm" pipeline when given a sorted list of file names as input. For example, fastrm will usually chdir(2) into a directory before removing files from it, meaning that if its input is sorted, most names passed to unlink(2) will be simple names. This can substantially reduce the operating system overhead from directory lookups.
fastrm assumes that its input is valid and that it is safe to call unlink(2) on every file name it is given. As a safety measure, however, fastrm when running as root will check with stat(2) that a file name doesn't specify a directory before removing it. (In some operating systems, root is allowed to unlink directories, even directories which aren't empty, which can cause file system corruption.)
The input to fastrm should always be sorted -- or even better be in the
order file names are output by find(1)
Various additional optimizations for removing files can be turned on
and/or tuned with options (see below). Which options will be most
effective depends heavily on the underlying structure of the file system,
the way in which directories are stored and searched, and similar, often
underdocumented, operating system implementation details. The more
sophisticated the underlying operating system and file system, the more
likely that it will already perform the equivalent of these optimizations
internally.
When this option is in effect, fastrm won't attempt to remove files
that it doesn't see in the directory, possibly significantly speeding it
up if most of the files to be removed have already been deleted. However,
using this option requires fastrm to do more internal work and it also
assumes that the order of directory listings is stable in the presence of
calls to unlink(2) between calls to readdir(3). This may be a dangerous
assumption with some sophisticated file systems (and in general this
option is only useful with file systems that use unindexed linear searches
to find files in directories or when most of the files to be removed have
already been deleted).
This optimization is off by default.
When -u is given, fastrm will use at most N levels of ".."
segments to construct paths. N is optional; if just -u is given,
-u1 is assumed.
This optimization is off by default.
fastrm also accepts -a and -r options, which do nothing at all
except allow you to say "fastrm -usa", "fastrm -usr", or "fastrm
-user". These happen to often be convenient sets of options to use.
To enable all optimizations and see the affect on the order of removal
caused by -s, use:
If your file system has indexed directory lookups, but you have a deeply
nested directory structure, you may want to use a set of flags like:
to strongly prefer relative paths but not to use readdir(2) to order the
calls to unlink(2).
You may want to edit expirerm(8) to change the flags passed to fastrm.
$Id: fastrm.pod 9768 2014-12-07 21:22:57Z iulius $
OPTIONS
EXIT STATUS
fastrm exits with a status of zero if there were no problems, and an
exit status of 1 if something went wrong. Attempting to remove a file
that does not exist is not considered a problem.
EXAMPLES
fastrm is typically invoked by INN via expirerm(8) using a command
like:
fastrm -e <patharticles in inn.conf> < expire.list
fastrm -d -s -e -u <patharticles> < expire.list
fastrm -e -u3 <patharticles> < expire.list
WARNINGS
fastrm cuts corners and does not worry about security, so it does not
use chdir(2) safely and could be tricked into removing files other than
those that were intended if run on a specially constructed file tree or a
file tree that is being modified while it is running. It should therefore
never be used with world-writable directories or any other directory that
might be controlled or modified by an attacker.
NOTES
fastrm defers opening the storage subsystem or attempting to parse any
INN configuration files until it encounters a token in the list of files
to remove. It's therefore possible to use fastrm outside of INN as a
general fast file removal program.
HISTORY
fastrm was originally written by <kre [at] munnari.oz.au>. This manual page
was rewritten in POD by Russ Allbery <eagle [at] eyrie.org> for InterNetNews.