_______ _______ _______ _______ ______ __ __
| || _ || || | | _ | | |_| |
| _____|| |_| || ___|| ___| ____ | | || | |
| |_____ | || |___ | |___ |____| | |_||_ | |
|_____ || || ___|| ___| | __ || |
_____| || _ || | | |___ | | | || ||_|| |
|_______||__| |__||___| |_______| |___| |_||_| |_|
A much safer replacement of bash rm
with ALMOST FULL features of the origin rm
command.
Initially developed on Mac OS X, then tested on Linux.
Using safe-rm
, the files or directories you choose to remove will move to $HOME/.Trash
instead of simply deleting them. You could put them back whenever you want manually.
If a file or directory with the same name already exists in the Trash, the name of newly-deleted items will be ended with the current date and time.
For those implemented options, safe-rm will act exactly the same as the original rm
command
-i
, --interactive
-f
, --force
-r
, -R
, --recursive
, --Recursive
-v
, --verbose
--
Combined short options are also supported, such as
-rf
, -riv
, etc
Add an alias to your ~/.bashrc
script,
alias rm='/path/to/bin/rm.sh'
and /path/to
is where you git clone shell-safe-rm
in your local machine.
If you have NPM (node) installed (RECOMMENDED):
npm i -g safe-rm
Or normally with make
:
make && sudo make install
# and enjoy
For those who have no make
command:
sudo sh install.sh
Installing safe-rm will put safe-rm
in your /bin
directory. In order to use
safe-rm
, you need to add an alias to your ~/.bashrc
script and in all yours
currently open terminals, like this:
alias rm='safe-rm'
After installation and alias definition, when you execute rm
command in the Terminal, lines of below will be printed:
> rm
safe-rm
usage: rm [-f | -i] [-dPRrvW] file ...
unlink file
which helps to tell safe-rm from the original rm.
First remove the alias
line from your ~/.bashrc
file, then
npm uninstall -g safe-rm
Or
make && sudo make uninstall
Or
sudo sh uninstall.sh