Java.nio: most concise recursive directory delete

怎甘沉沦 提交于 2019-11-29 23:37:08

You can combine NIO 2 and the Stream API.

Path rootPath = Paths.get("/data/to-delete");
// before you copy and paste the snippet
// - read the post till the end
// - read the javadoc to understand what the code will do 
//
// a) to follow softlinks (removes the linked file too) use
// Files.walk(rootPath, FileVisitOption.FOLLOW_LINKS)
//
// b) to not follow softlinks (removes only the softlink) use
// the snippet below
Files.walk(rootPath)
    .sorted(Comparator.reverseOrder())
    .map(Path::toFile)
    .peek(System.out::println)
    .forEach(File::delete);
  • Files.walk - return all files/directories below rootPath including
  • .sorted - sort the list in reverse order, so the directory itself comes after the including subdirectories and files
  • .map - map the Path to File
  • .peek - is there only to show which entry is processed
  • .forEach - calls the .delete() method on every File object

EDIT

Here are some figures.
The directory /data/to-delete contained the unpacked rt.jar of jdk1.8.0_73 and a recent build of activemq.

files: 36,427
dirs :  4,143
size : 514 MB

Times in milliseconds

                    int. SSD     ext. USB3
NIO + Stream API    1,126        11,943
FileVisitor         1,362        13,561

Both version were executed without printing file names. The most limiting factor is the drive. Not the implementation.

EDIT

Some addtional information about tthe option FileVisitOption.FOLLOW_LINKS.

Assume following file and directory structure

/data/dont-delete/bar
/data/to-delete/foo
/data/to-delete/dont-delete -> ../dont-delete

Using

Files.walk(rootPath, FileVisitOption.FOLLOW_LINKS)

will follow symlinks and the file /tmp/dont_delete/bar would be deleted as well.

Using

Files.walk(rootPath)

will not follow symlinks and the file /tmp/dont_delete/bar would not be deleted.

NOTE: Never use code as copy and paste without understanding what it does.

The following solution doesn't need the conversion from Path to File objects:

Path rootPath = Paths.get("/data/to-delete");     
final List<Path> pathsToDelete = Files.walk(rootPath).sorted(Comparator.reverseOrder()).collect(Collectors.toList());
for(Path path : pathsToDelete) {
    Files.deleteIfExists(path);
}

If you must use only Java 7 with NIO

Path path = Paths.get("./target/logs");
Files.walkFileTree(path, new SimpleFileVisitor<Path>() {
  @Override
  public FileVisitResult visitFile(Path file, BasicFileAttributes attrs) throws IOException {
    Files.delete(file);
    return FileVisitResult.CONTINUE;
  }

  @Override
  public FileVisitResult postVisitDirectory(Path dir, IOException exc)
      throws IOException {
    Files.delete(dir);
    return FileVisitResult.CONTINUE;
  }
});

If you already have Spring Core as part of your project, here is an easy way to do it:

FileSystemUtils.deleteRecursively(file);

Source:http://www.baeldung.com/java-delete-directory

Files.walk(pathToBeDeleted).sorted(Comparator.reverseOrder()).forEach(Files::delete);

You'll need the "try with resources" pattern to close the stream if "timely disposal of file system resources is required".

Also, probably an unwelcome comment, but it would be much cleaner and more readable to use a library. With the code in a shared function, it won't take up much space. Every person who looks at your code must validate that this code does a proper delete, and its by no means obvious.

FileUtils.deleteDirectory from Apache Commons IO deletes a directory recursively.

Example:

Path pathToBeDeleted = TEMP_DIRECTORY.resolve(DIRECTORY_NAME);

boolean result = FileUtils.deleteDirectory(pathToBeDeleted.toFile());

For more information see Delete a Directory Recursively in Java.

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