Delete multiple files older then 30 days batch script with wildcard - batch-file

i would like to know how you can delete multiple files in different folders with batch commands.
I have the following code, this code works fine for 1 map but i need to do it for multiple maps :
forfiles /p "D:\CHILI_Publisher\Data\Environments\Adecco\Cache_Data\Assets" /s /d -10 /c "cmd /c echo #file"
PAUSE
This is the code for the various maps and various file types with wildcards (this one gives an error : The directory name is invalid:
forfiles /p "D:\CHILI_Publisher\Data\Environments\*.*\Cache_Data\*.*" /s /d -10 /c "cmd /c echo #file"
PAUSE
Tl;DR : I have an error and would like to know how to use a wildcard correctly in batch files.

You can wrap FORFILES in a FOR loop:
for /d %D in (c:\temp\a*;c:\temp\b*;c:\temp\c*) do forfiles /p %D /s /c "cmd /c echo #file" /d -10
If you need to find all folders named CACHE_DATA under a super folder you can navigate to the super folder (cd D:\CHILI_Publisher\Data\Environments) and run this:
for /f %F in ('dir /B /S /AD cache_data') do for /d %D in (%F) do forfiles /p %D /s /c "cmd /c echo #file" /d -10
If you put the script in a BATCH file remember to escape % with %%.

Related

Batch Delete excluding files under specific folder (or file names with specific pattern /wildcard e.g. Test123.csv, Test623.csv, Test854.csv)

FORFILES /P "C:\Temp\" /D -3 /S /C "cmd /c if #isdir==FALSE del /F /Q #path"
above script is working fine and delete all files under Temp and its subdirectory older than 3 days.
I want to exclude all files from specific folder say all files from folder XYZ or full path-> C:\Temp\ABC\XYZ
Note : all files under XYZ folders are having pattern say Test*.*.csv
forfiles does not have an exclude option. You have to use something like findstr /V to exclude the results, but that will not form part of the forfiles command in itself. We simply incorporate a for loop and ecxlude using findstr /V, then delete:
#echo off
for /f "delims=" %%i in ('FORFILES /P "%temp%" /D -3 /S /C "cmd /c if #isdir==FALSE echo #path"^| findstr /VI "C:\Temp\ABC\XYZ"') do del /F /Q "%%~i"

Batch File path with an [at] # sign

I am trying to run a script to clear out the recycle bin on a QNAP NAS periodically.
The problem is the path for the recycle bin on the NAS includes an [at] sign:
"\nas01\SQLBackup\#Recycle" (Had to use double slash here to get it to display correctly)
Can someone please point me in the right direction as to what I'm doing wrong?
Thanks in advance for your help.
Batch File Code
#ECHO ON
NET USE X: "\\nas01\SQLBackup\#Recycle"
forfiles /p "X:\" /s /m * /c "cmd /c del #path"
NET USE X: /delete
PAUSE
Output
C:\Windows\system32>NET USE X: "\\nas01\SQLBackup\#Recycle"
The command completed successfully.
C:\Windows\system32>forfiles /p "X:\" /s /m * /c "cmd /c del #path"
ERROR: Invalid argument/option - '#path'.
Type "FORFILES /?" for usage.
C:\Windows\system32>NET USE X: /delete
X: was deleted successfully.
C:\Windows\system32>PAUSE
Press any key to continue . . .
The reason you get the error is due to the double quotes around the path, where backslash is present. The backslash escapes the last double quote. You should either use:
forfiles /p "X:" /s /m * /c "cmd /c del #path"
or
forfiles /p X:\ /s /m * /c "cmd /c del #path"
anyway, I would not use forfiles at all here. You can quite simply use del /s:
net use X: "\\nas01\SQLBackup\#Recycle"
pushd "x:\">nul 2>&1 && del /Q /S *.* || echo X:\ Not available.
popd
net use X: /delete
pause
Quite simply, we attempt pushd to x:\ if not available, it will fail with a message, if available it will del /s everything on X:\ where /s is basically recursive search throughout the root of X:\ in this instance.
The #-symbol in your path does not cause the error. It is the backslash in:
forfiles /p "X:\" /s /m * /c "cmd /c del #path"
that unintentionally escapes the closing quote (this is specific to forfiles!). To avoid that, simply append a . to the path, like:
forfiles /p "X:\." /s /m * /c "cmd /c del #path"
The . means current directory, so in a path it does not change anything, hence X:\ equals X:\., and D:\some\.\path equals D:\some\path. Of course, you could just remove the quotes around X:\ in your particular situation, but appending . is a general solution that even works with a relative path like X: (meaning the current directory of drive X:), and removal of quotes introduces problems with paths containing SPACEs.
By the way, are you aware that forfiles returns both files and directories, and that del is there to delete just files, and there is rd to delete directories?
So to ensure to handle only files, use this:
forfiles /S /P "X:\." /M * /C "cmd /C if #isdir==FALSE del #path"
And to ensure to handle only directories, use this:
forfiles /S /P "X:\." /M * /C "cmd /C if #isdir==TRUE rd /S /Q #path"
Of course you can handle both, if you want:
forfiles /S /P "X:\." /M * /C "cmd /C if #isdir==TRUE (rd /S /Q #path) else (del #path)"
When you use PushD, it will create a temporary drive map, (allocated in available reverse alphabetical order, Z:..A:), and will then use that new drive. For that reason you should be able to do this without using net.exe.
Example:
#PushD "\\nas01\SQLBackup\#Recycle" 2> NUL && (RD /S /Q . 2> NUL & PopD)
This example uses RD to Remove the Directory instead of your used Del command. When the target directory is the current working directory, it cannot be removed, (returning an error message), however its contents will be. The code above redirects the error message to the NUL device, so that it is not output.

Batch File: Deleting .File Extension Type Files

I'm working with an application that creates a generic file type extension for data log information. I'm trying to create a batch file script that would delete data log files that are 5 days or older. I don't have the most Batch File experience, but I have found the following script below works correctly for many file types, except for the generic .File type extension.
forfiles /p "C:\SOAP_Data" /s /m *.* /d -5 /c "cmd /c del #path" &
forfiles /p "C:\HL7_Data" /s /m *.* /d -5 /c "cmd /c del #path"
Is there some tweak I can do to the script to make it include the deletion of the .File extension files as well? I've tried to add *.file to the folder path, but that didn't seem to work.
Through troubleshooting using the ECHO of the delete path, I was able to find the following solution:
forfiles /p "C:\SOAP_Data" /d -5 /c "cmd /c DEL #path" &
forfiles /p "C:\HL7_Data" /d -5 /c "cmd /c DEL #path"

Batch file to delete folders older than 10 days in Windows 7

I want to create a batch file which should delete all subfolders of a folder which are older than 10 days, using Windows 7
Any help would be appreciated.
Adapted from this answer to a very similar question:
FORFILES /S /D -10 /C "cmd /c IF #isdir == TRUE rd /S /Q #path"
You should run this command from within your d:\study folder. It will delete all subfolders which are older than 10 days.
The /S /Q after the rd makes it delete folders even if they are not empty, without prompting.
I suggest you put the above command into a .bat file, and save it as d:\study\cleanup.bat.
FORFILES /S /D -10 /C "cmd /c IF #isdir == TRUE rd /S /Q #path"
I could not get Blorgbeard's suggestion to work, but I was able to get it to work with RMDIR instead of RD:
FORFILES /p N:\test /S /D -10 /C "cmd /c IF #isdir == TRUE RMDIR /S /Q #path"
Since RMDIR won't delete folders that aren't empty so I also ended up using this code to delete the files that were over 10 days and then the folders that were over 10 days old.
FOR /d %%K in ("n:\test*") DO (
FOR /d %%J in ("%%K*") DO (
FORFILES /P %%J /S /M . /D -10 /C "cmd /c del #file"
)
)
FORFILES /p N:\test /S /D -10 /C "cmd /c IF #isdir == TRUE RMDIR /S /Q #path"
I used this code to purge out the sub folders in the folders within test (example n:\test\abc\123 would get purged when empty, but n:\test\abc would not get purged
If you want using it with parameter (ie. delete all subdirs under the given directory), then put this two lines into a *.bat or *.cmd file:
#echo off
for /f "delims=" %%d in ('dir %1 /s /b /ad ^| sort /r') do rd "%%d" 2>nul && echo rmdir %%d
and add script-path to your PATH environment variable. In this case you can call your batch file from any location (I suppose UNC path should work, too).
Eg.:
YourBatchFileName c:\temp
(you may use quotation marks if needed)
will remove all empty subdirs under c:\temp folder
YourBatchFileName
will remove all empty subdirs under the current directory.

Forfiles - spaces in folder path

I am running a batch file and I have one forfiles command in it
FORFILES -p%spinputarchrootpath% -m*.csv -d-365 -c"CMD /C DEL #FILE"
%spinputarchrootpath% variable maps to a folder location (Y:\Temp Documents\testfolder).
Now the above command is throwing an error because of the space in the folder name (Temp Documents).
How to handle this space? I have tried putting quotes around %spinputarchrootpath% variable but it is not working.
I'd the same problem and found the solution.
I think your folder-variable of the folder you wish to empty has a backslash at the end.
This will NOT work:
echo J|forfiles /P "C:\temp files\" /S /M * /D -7 /C "cmd /c del /F /S /Q #path"
... but this works (without backslash)
echo J|forfiles /P "C:\temp files" /S /M * /D -7 /C "cmd /c del /F /S /Q #path"
Regards
Tino
Enclose the path in quotes:
FORFILES -p "%spinputarchrootpath%" -m *.csv -d -365 -c "CMD /C DEL #FILE"
Note, there's a space between -p and "%spinputarchrootpath%". Without a space in this case it won't work.
As a work around first change directories to the folder you want, and then execute forfiles without the /p parameter.
CD %spinputarchrootpath%
FORFILES -m*.csv -d-365 -c"CMD /C DEL #FILE"
Check post:
How to Tell FORFILES to Execute Command on Path?
The problem lies in the part:
-c"CMD /C DEL #FILE"
Use:
-c"CMD /C DEL ^0x22#FILE^0x22"
to put extra double quotes around the file

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