I should’ve […] used trash
For those who don’t know: trash-cli
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I should’ve […] used trash
For those who don’t know: trash-cli
It upsets me to no end that this isn't a standard package 😭
What an awesome tool that I wish I knew sooner. Also the && operator in sh. I think you can figure out what happened.
Also the && operator in sh. I think you can figure out what happened.
I'm guessing something like... Copy file/dir from location A to location B and then delete from A, but the copy had failed (and the delete unfortunately worked fine)?
I left the last sentence open ended, for comedic effect, but if you really wanna know:
I transcoded videos with ffmpeg, and tried to exit out of the bash script with ctrl C. the script was something like:
for
ffmpeg file finishedFile;
rm file;
my ^C broke out only from ffmpeg and before I realized what happened the file got removed and the next ffmpeg call filled my terminal. I tought the key didn't register, or something was stuck, so I pressed it again.. and again.. it cost like 45minutes of footage, wasn't that important tho.
I’m a complete moron,
You are not,
Every person learning with the hardway isnt a moron,
You have to do, to really learn,
If you do it again though...
🫢 🤷♀️ I would say, that depend the personnal situation,
But i think, OP learned :)
Here's a rule I learned the hard way a few decades ago:
I'm a big fan of starting the command with a #
, then removing it once I'm happy with the command to defend against accidentally hitting enter
Putting ~
next to the enter key on keyboards (at least UK ones) was an evil villain level decision
When I'm unsure, I ls <the-glob>
, chek, then replace ls
with rm
.
This. When the ls command works, hit ctrl-a, meta-d, type rm, enter.
Oh, didn't knew about Alt d
. Thx
I really like this # idea. I've also taken to holding off on adding sudo when deleting privileged files
I never thought of doing that in 40 years. It's a great idea actually. Thanks!
Also, triple-check which machine you're actually logged into.
if your session is still running you can use env
to help reconstruct it
I once had a directory in /tmp
called etc
which contained subdirectories for something I was migrating.
I thought that I was in /tmp
when I ran rm -rf etc
... I was actually in /
That's why I always:
Type a space before rm to prevent it from being added to your history to be a extra careful.
Holy shit, I never knew you could do that! I've always really wanted a feature to stop random commands from being added to my history.
For which shell? I just tried that on a bash system and the command was still stored in .bash_history 😔
Set the HISTCONTROL
variable. If it is set to ignorespace
then commands entered with a leading-space will not be stored in the history.
Tipps to prevent future accidents:
Mistakes are unpreventable due to our error-prone brains, but it is a choice to repeat them.
ZFS and dotfiles are your friend. Sorry for your loss.
You're just the latest member of a long and storied fraternity of the best worst operating system architecture.
https://web.mit.edu/~simsong/www/ugh.pdf
One of us...
Sorry for your loss. I did something similar recently. A script was creating a "~" folder in my notes folder. I wanted to delete it... Thankfully it stopped at some file it couldn't remove and my dotfiles are in git.
A tip, to delete files that have names similar to variables or other expandables, put the filename in between single ticks like this 'filename'. Single ticks prevent expansion.
I should’ve had that backed up
Absolutely! IT's time to check out Stow now. With this you can easily manage your configuration and dotfiles (and all other data) in a single location.
https://venthur.de/2021-12-19-managing-dotfiles-with-stow.html
I've started adopting the habit of putting "-rf" as the last argument to avoid accidentally deleting something before I've double-checked my input. Good luck, and may this never happen again.
Reason's I never use auto-complete in the terminal. Sadly, that's sometimes not enough.
just be careful and review what tab-suggest shows.
I should have had backups of important files in my home directory
Lessons learned the hard way
But... why?
I was in a rush to free up space. Rust's binary sized can be really huge and they were taking up like 20GB at the time, but I was unaware of this.
Can you say why were you trying to rm -r your .cache anyway? Also RIP.
Save space probably
Yeah my system was running out of space and I wanted to free a bit quickly. Turns out the issue was Rust building 20GB of binaries and I should have deleted those instead.
Probably the number one cause of borked Linux systems - trying to "de-bloat".
womp womp
i have rm
aliased to rm -i
, it's basically the closest to PowerShell's -WhatIf
that a posix shell gets
Ow.