I have the following script to recursive copy data and create a log file of the destination, could any assist please, I would like to pause for 10 seconds after each file is copied so each file allocated a different created time stamp.
$Logfile ='File_detaisl.csv'
$SourcePath = Read-Host 'Enter the full path containing the files to copy'
""
""
$TargetPath = Read-Host 'Enter the destination full path to copy the files'
""
#$str1FileName = "File_Details.csv"
Copy-Item -Path $SourcePath -Destination $TargetPath -recurse -Force
Get-ChildItem -Path $TargetPath -Recurse -Force -File | Select-Object Name,DirectoryName,Length,CreationTime,LastWriteTime,#{N='MD5 Hash';E={(Get-FileHash -Algorithm MD5 $_.FullName).Hash}},#{N='SHA-1 Hash';E={(Get-FileHash -Algorithm SHA1 $_.FullName).Hash}} | Sort-Object -Property Name,DirectoryName | Export-Csv -Path $TargetPath$Logfile
Copy-Item has a -PassThru parameter that outputs each item that is currently processed. By piping to ForEach-Object you can add a delay after each file.
Copy-Item -Path $SourcePath -Destination $TargetPath -recurse -Force -PassThru |
Where-Object PSIsContainer -eq $false |
ForEach-Object { Start-Sleep 10 }
The Where-Object is there to exclude folders from the ForEach-Object processing. For folder items the PSIsContainer property is $true and for files it is $false.
You would lose the integrity of the folder structure, but one way to do this is using Get-ChildItem then piping to Foreach-Object, or using a loop to iterate through the items one at time.
Get-ChildItem -Path $SourcePath -Recurse -Force |
ForEach-Object -Process {
Copy-Item -LiteralPath $_.FullName -Destination $TargetPath -Force
Start-Sleep -Seconds 10
}
The purpose is to get the files processed one after another using a loop in order to place our Start-Sleep after the file has been copied.
I am trying to come up with a script to copy folders from one server to another. I might be going about this wrong, but I'm try to copy the directories from one server into an array, copy the directories from the second server into an array, compare them and then create the folders needed in the server that doesn't have them:
[array]$folders = Get-ChildItem -Path \\spesety01\TGT\TST\XRM\Test -Recurse -Directory -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue | Select-Object -ExpandProperty FullName
[array]$folders2 = Get-ChildItem -Path \\sutwove02\TGT\TST\XRN -Recurse -Directory -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue | Select-Object -ExpandProperty FullName
$folders | ForEach-Object {
if ($folders2 -notcontains "$_") {
New-Item "$_" -type directory
}
}
The issue is that the "$_" (in the ForEach loop)refers to the server in "$folders" and when I run the script, I get an error that the folder already exists. Is there some way to specify to copy the folders to the new server? I accept that my approach might be completely off on this and I might be making it harder than it needs to be.
<#
.SYNOPSIS
using path A as reference, make any sub directories that are missing in path B
#>
Param(
[string]$PathA,
[string]$PathB
)
$PathADirs = (Get-ChildItem -Path $PathA -Recurse -Directory).FullName
$PathBDirs = (Get-ChildItem -Path $PathB -Recurse -Directory).FullName
$PreList = Compare-Object -ReferenceObject $PathADirs -DifferenceObject $PathBDirs.replace($PathB,$PathA) |
Where-Object -Property SideIndicator -EQ "<=" |
Select-Object -ExpandProperty 'InputObject'
$TargetList = $PreList.Replace($PathA,$PathB)
New-Item -Path $TargetList -ItemType 'Directory'
I have a powershell script that will search through the sub folders of a directory and copy any files that contain a specific string in the name and then move those into a different folder that it creates. The problem I am having is that the script is not creating and new folder but just a new file without an extension. Here is my script.
Get-ChildItem -Path 'C:\users\user1\Documents\q3\' -Recurse | Where-Object { $_.Name -like "*test2*" -and $_.FullName -notmatch 'newfolder' } | Copy-Item -Destination 'C:\Users\user1\Documents\Q3\test'
There is no parameter with a behavior like: "createifnotexist" for directories in powershell's copy-item() function. (I'm using powershell 5.1 and could not find one)
This is a way to achieve your goal with a one liner
New-Item -ItemType Directory -Name "test" -Path 'C:\Users\user1\Documents\Q3' -Force; Get-ChildItem -Path 'C:\users\user1\Documents\q3\' -Recurse | Where-Object { $_.Name -like "*test2*" -and $_.FullName -notmatch 'newfolder' } | % { Copy-Item -Path "C:\Users\user1\Documents\Q3\test\"}
The New-Item will override the latest created folder with the -Force
I am wondering if there is better way to make a script on PowerShell these instructions:
Search on 3 paths. Ex.
$LOGDIRS="C:\NETiKA\GED\Production\RI\log";"C:\NETiKA\GED\Test\RI\log";"C:\NETiKA\Tomcat-8.0.28\logs"
Find all files that are older than 7 days and copy on a file that I will call file.list . EX. > C:\Test\file.list
When I copied on my file.list, I need to search all the name of the files and delete them.
Apparently when you have more than thousands of file, this is the
fastest way to delete.
$LOGDIRS=C:/NETiKA/GED/Production/RI/log;C:/NETiKA/GED/Test/RI/log;C:/NETiKA/Tomcat-8.0.28/logs
$KEEP=-7
Get-ChildItem -Path $LOGDIRS -Recurse -Directory -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue |
Select-Object FullName > files.list |
Foreach-Object {
if ($_.LastAccessTime -le (get-date).adddays($KEEP)) {
remove-item -recurse -force $_
}
};
Something like this should help you get started.
$path1 = "E:\Code\powershell\myPS\2018\Jun"
$path2 = "E:\Code\powershell\myPS\2018\Jun\compareTextFiles"
$path3 = "E:\Code\powershell\myPS\2018\May"
$allFiles = dir $path1, $path2, $path3 -File
$fileList = New-Item -type file file.list -Force
$keep = -7
$allFiles | foreach {
if ($_.LastAccessTime -le (Get-Date).AddDays($keep)) {
"$($_.FullName) is older than 7 days"
$_.FullName.ToString() | Out-File $fileList -Append
}
else {
"$($_.FullName) is new"
}
}
You can add deletion in the code in IF Block if you wish or check the file and do it later on. Your code has many issues which are very basic to PowerShell, e.g: once you use Select-Object the next pipeline will only receive the property you selected. You have tried using LastAccessTime in later pipe when you only selected to go ahead with FullName property.
Also, redirecting to a file and again using pipeline looks very messy.
Remove-Item accepts piped input and a
Where will filter the age
to first check what would be deleted I appended a -WhatIf to the Remove-Item
$LOGDIRS="C:\NETiKA\GED\Production\RI\log","C:\NETiKA\GED\Test\RI\log","C:\NETiKA\Tomcat-8.0.28\logs"
$KEEP=-7
Get-ChildItem -Path $LOGDIRS -Recurse -Directory -Force -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue |
Where-Object LastAccessTime -le ((get-date).AddDays($KEEP))
Remove-Item -Recurse -Force $_ -Whatif
I need to recursively remove all empty folders for a specific folder in PowerShell (checking folder and sub-folder at any level).
At the moment I am using this script with no success.
Could you please tell me how to fix it?
$tdc='C:\a\c\d\'
$a = Get-ChildItem $tdc -recurse | Where-Object {$_.PSIsContainer -eq $True}
$a | Where-Object {$_.GetFiles().Count -eq 0} | Select-Object FullName
I am using PowerShell on Windows 8.1 version.
You need to keep a few key things in mind when looking at a problem like this:
Get-ChildItem -Recurse performs head recursion, meaning it returns folders as soon as it finds them when walking through a tree. Since you want to remove empty folders, and also remove their parent if they are empty after you remove the empty folders, you need to use tail recursion instead, which processes the folders from the deepest child up to the root. By using tail recursion, there will be no need for repeated calls to the code that removes the empty folders -- one call will do it all for you.
Get-ChildItem does not return hidden files or folders by default. As a result you need to take extra steps to ensure that you don't remove folders that appear empty but that contain hidden files or folders. Get-Item and Get-ChildItem both have a -Force parameter which can be used to retrieve hidden files or folders as well as visible files or folders.
With those points in mind, here is a solution that uses tail recursion and that properly tracks hidden files or folders, making sure to remove hidden folders if they are empty and also making sure to keep folders that may contain one or more hidden files.
First this is the script block (anonymous function) that does the job:
# A script block (anonymous function) that will remove empty folders
# under a root folder, using tail-recursion to ensure that it only
# walks the folder tree once. -Force is used to be able to process
# hidden files/folders as well.
$tailRecursion = {
param(
$Path
)
foreach ($childDirectory in Get-ChildItem -Force -LiteralPath $Path -Directory) {
& $tailRecursion -Path $childDirectory.FullName
}
$currentChildren = Get-ChildItem -Force -LiteralPath $Path
$isEmpty = $currentChildren -eq $null
if ($isEmpty) {
Write-Verbose "Removing empty folder at path '${Path}'." -Verbose
Remove-Item -Force -LiteralPath $Path
}
}
If you want to test it here's code that will create interesting test data (make sure you don't already have a folder c:\a because it will be deleted):
# This creates some test data under C:\a (make sure this is not
# a directory you care about, because this will remove it if it
# exists). This test data contains a directory that is hidden
# that should be removed as well as a file that is hidden in a
# directory that should not be removed.
Remove-Item -Force -Path C:\a -Recurse
New-Item -Force -Path C:\a\b\c\d -ItemType Directory > $null
$hiddenFolder = Get-Item -Force -LiteralPath C:\a\b\c
$hiddenFolder.Attributes = $hiddenFolder.Attributes -bor [System.IO.FileAttributes]::Hidden
New-Item -Force -Path C:\a\b\e -ItemType Directory > $null
New-Item -Force -Path C:\a\f -ItemType Directory > $null
New-Item -Force -Path C:\a\f\g -ItemType Directory > $null
New-Item -Force -Path C:\a\f\h -ItemType Directory > $null
Out-File -Force -FilePath C:\a\f\test.txt -InputObject 'Dummy file'
Out-File -Force -FilePath C:\a\f\h\hidden.txt -InputObject 'Hidden file'
$hiddenFile = Get-Item -Force -LiteralPath C:\a\f\h\hidden.txt
$hiddenFile.Attributes = $hiddenFile.Attributes -bor [System.IO.FileAttributes]::Hidden
Here's how you use it. Note that this will remove the top folder (the C:\a folder in this example, which gets created if you generated the test data using the script above) if that folder winds up being empty after deleting all empty folders under it.
& $tailRecursion -Path 'C:\a'
You can use this:
$tdc="C:\a\c\d"
$dirs = gci $tdc -directory -recurse | Where { (gci $_.fullName).count -eq 0 } | select -expandproperty FullName
$dirs | Foreach-Object { Remove-Item $_ }
$dirs will be an array of empty directories returned from the Get-ChildItem command after filtering. You can then loop over it to remove the items.
Update
If you want to remove directories that contain empty directories, you just need to keep running the script until they're all gone. You can loop until $dirs is empty:
$tdc="C:\a\c\d"
do {
$dirs = gci $tdc -directory -recurse | Where { (gci $_.fullName).count -eq 0 } | select -expandproperty FullName
$dirs | Foreach-Object { Remove-Item $_ }
} while ($dirs.count -gt 0)
If you want to ensure that hidden files and folders will also be removed, include the -Force flag:
do {
$dirs = gci $tdc -directory -recurse | Where { (gci $_.fullName -Force).count -eq 0 } | select -expandproperty FullName
$dirs | Foreach-Object { Remove-Item $_ }
} while ($dirs.count -gt 0)
Get-ChildItem $tdc -Recurse -Force -Directory |
Sort-Object -Property FullName -Descending |
Where-Object { $($_ | Get-ChildItem -Force | Select-Object -First 1).Count -eq 0 } |
Remove-Item -Verbose
The only novel contribution here is using Sort-Object to reverse sort by the directory's FullName. This will ensure that we always process children before we process parents (i.e., "tail recursion" as described by Kirk Munro's answer). That makes it recursively remove empty folders.
Off hand, I'm not sure if the Select-Object -First 1 will meaningfully improve performance or not, but it may.
Just figured I would contribute to the already long list of answers here.
Many of the answers have quirks to them, like needing to run more than once. Others are overly complex for the average user (like using tail recursion to prevent duplicate scans, etc).
Here is a very simple one-liner that I've been using for years, and works great...
It does not account for hidden files/folders, but you can fix that by adding -Force to the Get-ChildItem command
This is the long, fully qualified cmdlet name version:
Get-ChildItem -Recurse -Directory | ? { -Not ($_.EnumerateFiles('*',1) | Select-Object -First 1) } | Remove-Item -Recurse
So basically...here's how it goes:
Get-ChildItem -Recurse -Directory - Start scanning recursively looking for directories
$_.EnumerateFiles('*',1) - For each directory...Enumerate the files
EnumerateFiles will output its findings as it goes, GetFiles will output when it is done....at least, that's how it is supposed to work in .NET...for some reason in PowerShell GetFiles starts spitting out immediately. But I still use EnumerateFiles because in testing it was reliably faster.
('*',1) means find ALL files recursively.
| Select-Object -First 1 - Stop at the first file found
This was difficult to test how much it helped. In some cases it helped tremendously, other times it didn't help at all, and in some cases it slowed it down by a small amount. So I really don't know. I guess this is optional.
| Remove-Item -Recurse - Remove the directory, recursively (ensures directories that contain empty sub directories gets removed)
If you're counting characters, this could be shortened to:
ls -s -ad | ? { -Not ($_.EnumerateFiles('*',1) | select -First 1) } | rm -Recurse
-s - alias for -Recurse
-ad - alias for -Directory
If you really don't care about performance because you don't have that many files....even more so to:
ls -s -ad | ? {!($_.GetFiles('*',1))} | rm -Recurse
Side note:
While playing around with this, I started testing various versions with Measure-Command against a server with millions of files and thousands of directories.
This is faster than the command I've been using (above):
(gi .).EnumerateDirectories('*',1) | ? {-Not $_.EnumerateFiles('*',1) } | rm -Recurse
ls c:\temp -rec |%{ if ($_.PSIsContainer -eq $True) {if ( (ls $_.fullname -rec | measure |select -expand count ) -eq "0" ){ ri $_.fullname -whatif} } }
Assuming you're inside the parent folder of interest
gci . -Recurse -Directory | % { if(!(gci -Path $_.FullName)) {ri -Force -Recurse $_.FullName} }
For your case with $tdc it'll be
gci $tdc -Recurse -Directory | % { if(!(gci -Path $_.FullName)) {ri -Force -Recurse $_.FullName} }
If you just want to make sure, that you delete only folders that may contain subfolders but no files within itself and its subfolders, this may be an easier an quicker way.
$Empty = Get-ChildItem $Folder -Directory -Recurse |
Where-Object {(Get-ChildItem $_.FullName -File -Recurse -Force).Count -eq 0}
Foreach ($Dir in $Empty)
{
if (test-path $Dir.FullName)
{Remove-Item -LiteralPath $Dir.FullName -recurse -force}
}
Recursively removing empty subdirectories can also be accomplished using a "For Loop".
Before we start, let's make some subdirectories & text files to work with in $HOME\Desktop\Test
MD $HOME\Desktop\Test\0\1\2\3\4\5
MD $HOME\Desktop\Test\A\B\C\D\E\F
MD $HOME\Desktop\Test\A\B\C\DD\EE\FF
MD $HOME\Desktop\Test\Q\W\E\R\T\Y
MD $HOME\Desktop\Test\Q\W\E\RR
"Hello World" > $HOME\Desktop\Test\0\1\Text1.txt
"Hello World" > $HOME\Desktop\Test\A\B\C\D\E\Text2.txt
"Hello World" > $HOME\Desktop\Test\A\B\C\DD\Text3.txt
"Hello World" > $HOME\Desktop\Test\Q\W\E\RR\Text4.txt
First, store the following Script Block in the variable $SB. The variable can be called later using the &SB command. The &SB command will output a list of empty subdirectories contained in $HOME\Desktop\Test
$SB = {
Get-ChildItem $HOME\Desktop\Test -Directory -Recurse |
Where-Object {(Get-ChildItem $_.FullName -Force).Count -eq 0}
}
NOTE: The -Force parameter is very important. It makes sure that directories which contain hidden files and subdirectories, but are otherwise empty, are not deleted in the "For Loop".
Now use a "For Loop" to recursively remove empty subdirectories in $HOME\Desktop\Test
For ($Empty = &$SB ; $Empty -ne $null ; $Empty = &$SB) {Remove-Item (&$SB).FullName}
Tested as working on PowerShell 4.0
I have adapted the script of RichardHowells.
It doesn't delete the folder if there is a thumbs.db.
##############
# Parameters #
##############
param(
$Chemin = "" , # Path to clean
$log = "" # Logs path
)
###########
# Process #
###########
if (($Chemin -eq "") -or ($log-eq "") ){
Write-Error 'Parametres non reseignes - utiliser la syntaxe : -Chemin "Argument" -log "argument 2" ' -Verbose
Exit
}
#loging
$date = get-date -format g
Write-Output "begining of cleaning folder : $chemin at $date" >> $log
Write-Output "------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------" >> $log
<########################################################################
define a script block that will remove empty folders under a root folder,
using tail-recursion to ensure that it only walks the folder tree once.
-Force is used to be able to process hidden files/folders as well.
########################################################################>
$tailRecursion = {
param(
$Path
)
foreach ($childDirectory in Get-ChildItem -Force -LiteralPath $Path -Directory) {
& $tailRecursion -Path $childDirectory.FullName
}
$currentChildren = Get-ChildItem -Force -LiteralPath $Path
Write-Output $childDirectory.FullName
<# Suppression des fichiers Thumbs.db #>
Foreach ( $file in $currentchildren )
{
if ($file.name -notmatch "Thumbs.db"){break}
if ($file.name -match "Thumbs.db"){
Remove-item -force -LiteralPath $file.FullName}
}
$currentChildren = Get-ChildItem -Force -LiteralPath $Path
$isEmpty = $currentChildren -eq $null
if ($isEmpty) {
$date = get-date -format g
Write-Output "Removing empty folder at path '${Path}'. $date" >> $log
Remove-Item -Force -LiteralPath $Path
}
}
# Invocation of the script block
& $tailRecursion -Path $Chemin
#loging
$date = get-date -format g
Write-Output "End of cleaning folder : $chemin at $date" >> $log
Write-Output "------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------" >> $log
Something like this works for me. The script delete empty folders and folders containing only folder (no files, no hidden files).
$items = gci -LiteralPath E:\ -Directory -Recurse
$dirs = [System.Collections.Generic.HashSet[string]]::new([string[]]($items |% FullName))
for (;;) {
$remove = $dirs |? { (gci -LiteralPath $_ -Force).Count -eq 0 }
if ($remove) {
$remove | rm
$dirs.ExceptWith( [string[]]$remove )
}
else {
break
}
}
I wouldn't take the comments/1st post to heart unless you also want to delete files that are nested more than one folder deep. You are going to end up deleting directories that may contain directories that may contain files. This is better:
$FP= "C:\Temp\"
$dirs= Get-Childitem -LiteralPath $FP -directory -recurse
$Empty= $dirs | Where-Object {$_.GetFiles().Count -eq 0 **-and** $_.GetDirectories().Count -eq 0} |
Select-Object FullName
The above checks to make sure the directory is in fact empty whereas the OP only checks to make sure there are no files. That in turn would result in files nexted a few folders deep also being deleted.
You may need to run the above a few times as it won't delete Dirs that have nested Dirs. So it only deletes the deepest level. So loop it until they're all gone.
Something else I do not do is use the -force parameter. That is by design. If in fact remove-item hits a dir that is not empty you want to be prompted as an additional safety.
$files = Get-ChildItem -Path c:\temp -Recurse -Force | where psiscontainer ; [array]::reverse($files)
[Array]::reverse($files) will reverse your items, so you get the lowest files in hierarchy first.
I use this to manipulate filenames that have too long filepaths, before I delete them.
This is a simple approach
dir -Directory | ? { (dir $_).Count -eq 0 } | Remove-Item
This will remove up all empty folders in the specified directory $tdc.
It is also a lot faster since there's no need for multiple runs.
$tdc = "x:\myfolder" # Specify the root folder
gci $tdc -Directory -Recurse `
| Sort-Object { $_.FullName.Length } -Descending `
| ? { $_.GetFiles().Count -eq 0 } `
| % {
if ($_.GetDirectories().Count -eq 0) {
Write-Host " Removing $($_.FullName)"
$_.Delete()
}
}
#By Mike Mike Costa Rica
$CarpetasVacias = Get-ChildItem -Path $CarpetaVer -Recurse -Force -Directory | Where {(gci $_.fullName).count -eq 0} | select Fullname,Name,LastWriteTime
$TotalCarpetas = $CarpetasVacias.Count
$CountSu = 1
ForEach ($UnaCarpeta in $CarpetasVacias){
$RutaCarp = $UnaCarpeta.Fullname
Remove-Item -Path $RutaCarp -Force -Confirm:$False -ErrorAction Ignore
$testCar = Test-Path $RutaCarp
if($testCar -eq $true){
$Datem = (Get-Date).tostring("MM-dd-yyyy HH:mm:ss")
Write-Host "$Datem ---> $CountSu de $TotalCarpetas Carpetas Error Borrando Directory: $RutaCarp" -foregroundcolor "red"
}else{
$Datem = (Get-Date).tostring("MM-dd-yyyy HH:mm:ss")
Write-Host "$Datem ---> $CountSu de $TotalCarpetas Carpetas Correcto Borrando Directory: $RutaCarp" -foregroundcolor "gree"
}
$CountSu += 1
}