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rm(1)

rmdir(1)

bif(4)

bifrm(1)  —  Series 300/400 Only

NAME

bifrm, bifrmdir − remove BIF files or directories

SYNOPSIS

bifrm [-fri] device:file ... 

bifrmdir device:dir ... 

DESCRIPTION

bifrm and bifrmdir are intended to mimic rm(1) and rmdir(1).

A BIF file name is recognized by the embedded colon (:) delimiter (see bif(4) for BIF file naming conventions). 

bifrm removes the entries for one or more files from a directory.  If an entry was the last link to the file, the file is destroyed. 

If a designated file is a directory, an error comment is printed (unless the optional argument -r has been used, see below). 

Recognized options are:

-f Remove file with no questions asked, even if the file has no write permission. 

-r Recursively delete the entire contents of a directory, then the directory itself.  bifrm can recursively delete up to 17 levels of directories. 

-i Causes bifrm to ask whether or not to delete each file.  If -r is also specified, bifrm asks whether to examine each directory encountered. 

bifrmdir removes entries for the named directories, which must be empty. 

EXAMPLES

The following examples assume that a BIF directory structure exists on the HP-UX device file /dev/rdsk/1s0. 

Recursively comb through the BIF directory /tmp and ask if each BIF file should be removed (forced, with no file mode checks):

bifrm -irf /dev/rdsk/1s0:/tmp

Remove BIF directory /users/doug:

bifrmdir /dev/rdsk/1s0:/users/doug

AUTHOR

bifrm was developed by HP. 

SEE ALSO

rm(1), rmdir(1), bif(4). 

Hewlett-Packard Company  —  HP-UX Release 9.0: August 1992

Typewritten Software • bear@typewritten.org • Edmonds, WA 98026