I have a batch script that checks out any project from the SVN when typed. I have to extend the functionality so that multiple files that user decides can be checked out and a simple approach to it. Right now, my script lists the files from SVN, gives user the choice of entering any name and checks out the trunk of every project using a very basic navigation method. The code is provided below :
echo ============================================================
echo This batch file will automate checking out a project from eclipse
echo ============================================================ %NL%
set svnroot= svn://some_dir
set svnroot_temp= %svnroot%
svn ls !svnroot_temp!
:top
set /p direct=Enter directory..press 1 at anytime to return to root directory and type checkout at anytime to checkout the project :
if /i !direct!==checkout ( cls
set loc=!svnroot_temp!
set proj=!dir!
if /i !direct!==1 (cls
set svnroot_temp=%svnroot%
svn ls !svnroot_temp!
goto :top
)
set svnroot_temp= !svnroot_temp!/!direct!
svn ls !svnroot_temp!
set dir=!direct!
goto :top
)
if exist "%javawork%/%proj%/" ( echo %NL%project already exists...
PING 1.1.1.1 -n 1 -w 3000 >NUL
echo %NL%updating the folder%NL%
svn update %javawork%/%proj%/*
goto :correct
)
set CheckOutLocation= user_preferred_location
svn checkout %loc%/trunk %CheckOutLocation%/%proj%/trunk/
echo %NL%%NL% Copying was successful! %NL%
PING 1.1.1.1 -n 1 -w 2000 >NUL
I wanted help in knowing if there is an easier way so that more projects can be checked out from SVN. Like setting numbers to the svn ls list and then choosing numbers for the projects to checkout. Or any way of making checking out many projects more convenient. Any help will be appreciated . Thanks!
Add numbers to svn ls by piping it to findstr /n and then input a space-delimited sequence of project numbers to checkout:
svn ls !svnroot_temp! | findstr /n .
set /p checkout=Enter space-delimited numbers of projects to checkout
set projNo=0
for /f "tokens=*" %%a in ('svn ls !svnroot_temp!') do (
set /a projNo+=1
for %%b in (!checkout!) do if %%b==!projNo! (
svn checkout %%a/trunk %CheckOutLocation%/%%a/trunk/
)
)
Related
I often want to return to the previous directory I was just in in cmd.exe, but windows does not have the "cd -" functionality of Unix. Also typing cd ../../.. is a lot of typing.
Is there a faster way to go up several directory levels?
And ideally return back afterwards?
This worked for me in powershell
cd ..
Steps:
pushd . (Keep old folder path on the stack)
cd ..\.. (Move to the folder whare you like to)
popd (Pop it from the stack. Meaning, Come back to the old folder)
On Windows CMD, I got used to using pushd and popd. Before changing directory I use pushd . to put the current directory on the stack, and then I use cd to move elsewhere. You can run pushd as often as you like, each time the specified directory goes on the stack. You can then CD to whatever directory, or directories , that you want. It does not matter how many times you run CD. When ready to return , I use popd to return to whatever directory is on top of the stack. This is suitable for simple use cases and is handy, as long as you remember to push a directory on the stack before using CD.
Run cmd.exe using the /k switch and a starting batch file that invokes doskey to use an enhanced versions of the cd command.
Here is a simple batch file to change directories to the first parameter (%1) passed in, and to remember the initial directory by calling pushd %1.
md_autoruns.cmd:
#echo off
cd %1
pushd %1
title aliases active
cls
%SystemRoot%\System32\doskey.exe /macrofile=c:\tools\aliases
We will also need a small helper batch file to remember the directory changes and to ignore changes to the same directory:
mycd.bat:
#echo off
if '%*'=='' cd & exit /b
if '%*'=='-' (
cd /d %OLDPWD%
set OLDPWD="%cd%"
) else (
cd /d %*
if not errorlevel 1 set OLDPWD="%cd%"
)
And a small aliases file showing what to do to make it all work:
aliases:
cd=C:\tools\mycd.bat $*
cd\=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..
A:=c:\tools\mycd.bat A:
B:=c:\tools\mycd.bat B:
C:=c:\tools\mycd.bat C:
...
Z:=c:\tools\mycd.bat Z:
.=cd
..=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..
...=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..\..
....=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..\..\..
.....=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..\..\..\..
......=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..\..\..\..\..
.......=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..\..\..\..\..\..
........=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..\..\..\..\..\..\..
.........=c:\tools\mycd.bat ..\..\..\..\..\..\..\..
tools=c:\tools\mycd.bat C:\tools
wk=c:\tools\mycd.bat %WORKSPACE%
Now you can go up a directory level by typing ..
Add another . for each level you want to go up.
When you want to go back, type cd - and you will be back where you started.
Aliases to jump to directories like wk or tools (shown above) swiftly take you from location to location, are easy to create, and can really help if you work in the command line frequently.
You could use the command:
cd ..\ -> To go up one level
cd ..\..\ -> To go up two levels
Note the space after cd
I am looking for a way to reject commits that lack a bug issue number in their comments. The system I am setting up uses VisualSVN Server on Windows Server 2012 and MantisBT on a LAMP server for bug tracking. This question has been asked before, but the repository in that case was on a LAMP server. I am looking for a batch or PowerShell script which does not depend on PHP or compiling code. Ideally, the hook would require "issue #1234" or "issues #12 and #34" to be present somewhere in the commit message.
Based on this batch file:
After this block:
setlocal enabledelayedexpansion
set REPOS=%1
set TXN=%2
set SVNLOOK="%VISUALSVN_SERVER%\bin\svnlook.exe"
REM Concatenate all the lines in the commit message
FOR /F "usebackq delims==" %%g IN (`%SVNLOOK% log -t %TXN% %REPOS%`) DO SET M=!M!%%g
add the check:
echo !M! | findstr /i /r /c:"issues* *#[0-9][0-9]*" >nul
if errorlevel 1 (
echo "Sorry, commit message should reference an issue" >&2
exit /b 1
)
I need to know that before any attempt to do anything with such file.
Not sure about locked directories (does Windows have that?)
But detecting if a file is being written to by another process is not difficult.
#echo off
2>nul (
>>test.txt echo off
) && (echo file is not locked) || (echo file is locked)
I use the following test script from another window to place a lock on the file.
(
>&2 pause
) >> test.txt
When I run the 2nd script from one window and then run the 1st script from a second window, I get my "locked" message. Once I press <Enter> in the 1st window, I get the "unlocked" message if I rerun the 1st script.
Explanation
Whenever the output of a command is redirected to a file, the file of course must be opened for write access. The Windows CMD session will attempt to open the file, even if the command does not produce any output.
The >> redirection operator opens the file in append mode.
So >>test.txt echo off will attempt to open the file, it writes nothing to the file (assuming echo is already off), and then it closes the file. The file is not modified in any way.
Most processes lock a file whenever they open a file for write access. (There are OS system calls that allow opening a file for writing in a shared mode, but that is not the default). So if another process already has "test.txt" locked for writing, then the redirection will fail with the following error message sent to stderr - "The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process.". Also an error code will be generated upon redirection failure. If the command and the redirection succeed, then a success code is returned.
Simply adding 2>nul to the command will not prevent the error message because it redirects the error output for the command, not the redirection. That is why I enclose the command in parentheses and then redirect the error output to nul outside of the parens.
So the error message is effectively hidden, but the error code is still propagated outside of the parens. The standard Windows && and || operators are used to detect whether the command inside the parens was successful or failed. Presumably echo off will never fail, so the only possible reason for failure would be the redirection failed. Most likely it fails because of a locking issue, though technically there could be other reasons for failure.
It is a curious "feature" that Windows does not set the %ERRORLEVEL% dynamic variable to an error upon redirection failure unless the || operator is used. (See File redirection in Windows and %errorlevel%). So the || operator must read the returned error code at some low level, not via the %ERRORLEVEL% variable.
Using these techniques to detect redirection failure can be very useful in a batch context. It can be used to establish locks that allow serialization of multiple events in parallel processes. For example, it can enable multiple processes to safely write to the same log file at the "same" time. How do you have shared log files under Windows?
EDIT
Regarding locked folders. I'm not sure how Windows implements this, perhaps with a lock. But if a process has an active directory involving the folder, then the folder cannot be renamed. That can easily be detected using
2>nul ren folderName folderName && echo Folder is NOT locked || echo folder is LOCKED
EDIT
I have since learned that (call ) (with a space) is a very fast command without side effects that is guaranteed to succeed with ERRORLEVEL set to 0. And (call) (without a space) is a fast command without side effects that is guaranteed to fail with ERRORLEVEL 1.
So I now use the following to check if a file is locked:
2>nul (
>>test.txt (call )
) && (echo file is not locked) || (echo file is locked)
In addition to great answer from dbenham, the following form finally help me understand used technique:
( type nul >> file.txt ) 2>nul || echo File is locked!
type nul command gives an empty output and does not affect the current echo setting like echo off command in orginal.
If you want to use if–then–else condition remember of correct order - success statement (&&) is going first and alternate statement (||) is going second:
command && (echo Command is successful) || (echo Command has failed)
If you download and install the Windows Server 2003 Resource Kit Tools there is a utility called oh.exe that will list open file handles for a given file:
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=17657
Once you install it, reboot your machine and you'll be able to use the utility. You can see all the options in the Help and Support center as well as by typing oh /? in the command prompt.
(Info from : http://windowsxp.mvps.org/processlock.htm )
Note, the writing of a message stating the file status was less helpful than a batch command that set a return code. For example, return code 1 if file is locked.
#echo off
2>nul (
>>test.tmp echo off
) && (EXIT /B 0) || (EXIT /B 1)
Other answers resulted in side-effects for me. For instance, the following from this answer will cause file watchers to trigger:
COPY /B app.exe+NUL app.exe
And the following from the top answer here would overwrite any changes made to the target file:
2>nul (
>>test.txt (call )
) && (echo file is not locked) || (echo file is locked)
On modern version of Windows, you can call into Powershell to accomplish this task with zero side-effects:
powershell -Command "$FileStream = [System.IO.File]::Open('%FILE%', 'Open', 'Write'); $FileStream.Close(); $FileStream.Dispose()" && (echo File is not locked) || (echo File is locked)
This will not modify the file or its metadata at all, even when it isn't locked.
Example usage
I use this method in my custom git mergetool script for merging Excel files. The way a git mergetool works is that it waits for the script shell to exit, then checks if the target file was modified, prompting with "XX.yyy seems unchanged. Was the merge successful [y/n]?" if it wasn't. However, Excel (at least the version I'm using) does not spawn a new process for each file it opens. So if Excel is already open, the script will exit immediately, and git will detect no changes to the file, resulting in that prompt.
So I devised the method above, and I use it like below:
REM block until MERGED is closed
:loop
powershell -Command "$FileStream = [System.IO.File]::Open('%MERGED%', 'Open', 'Write'); $FileStream.Close(); $FileStream.Dispose()" >NUL 2>NUL || (goto :loop)
Incidentally, dbenham's solution also seems to be an effective way to find out if a process is running. It was the best solution I found for the following application:
start /b "job1.exe >> job1.out"
start /b /wait "job2.exe >> job2.out"
::wait for job1 to finish using dbenham's code to check if job1.out is in use
comparejobs.exe
Just i want to share with you an example of my script based on #dbenham's trick
Description of this script : Check_Locked_Files.bat :
This script can scan and check for locked files on a set of folders that can be modified into the script; for example, i have chosen those set of folders to be scanned :
Set Folders=^
^ "%ProgramData%\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup"^
^ "%UserProfile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup"^
^ "%ProgramFiles%\Internet Explorer"^
^ "%ProgramFiles%\Skype"^
^ "%ProgramFiles%\TeamViewer"^
^ "%WinDir%\system32\drivers"^
^ "%Temp%"
The output result is in HTML format for more readability.
If the file is locked we show it in red color otherwise we show it in green color.
And the whole script is : Check_Locked_Files.bat
#echo off
Rem This source is inspired from here
Rem hxxps://stackoverflow.com/questions/
Rem 10518151/how-to-check-in-command-line-if-a-given-file-or-directory-is-locked-used-by-any?answertab=active#tab-top
Rem Thanks for dbenham for this nice trick ;)
Mode con cols=90 lines=5 & color 9E
Title Scan and Check for Locked Files by Hackoo 2017
set "LogFile=%~dp0%~n0.html"
(
echo ^<html^>
echo ^<title^> Scan and Check for locked files by Hackoo 2017^</title^>
echo ^<body bgcolor^=#ffdfb7^>
echo ^<center^>^<b^>Log Started on %Date% # %Time% by the user : "%username%" on the computer : "%ComputerName%"^</b^>^</center^>
)> "%LogFile%"
echo(
echo --------------------------------------------------------------------------
echo Please Wait a while ....... Scanning for locked files is in progress
echo --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rem We Play radio just for fun and in order to let the user be patient until the scan ended
Call :Play_DJ_Buzz_Radio
Timeout /T 3 /nobreak>nul
cls
Set Folders=^
^ "%ProgramData%\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup"^
^ "%UserProfile%\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Start Menu\Programs\Startup"^
^ "%ProgramFiles%\Internet Explorer"^
^ "%ProgramFiles%\Skype"^
^ "%ProgramFiles%\TeamViewer"^
^ "%WinDir%\system32\drivers"^
^ "%Temp%"
#For %%a in (%Folders%) Do (
( echo ^<hr^>^<font color^=DarkOrange^>^<B^>Folder : %%a^</B^>^</font^>^<hr^>) >> "%LogFile%"
#for /f "delims=" %%b in ('Dir /A-D /s /b "%%~a\*.*"') do (
Call :Scanning "%%~nxb"
Call:Check_Locked_File "%%~b" "%LogFile%"
)
)
(
echo ^<hr^>
echo ^<center^>^<b^>Log ended on %Date% # %Time% on the computer : "%ComputerName%"^</b^>^</center^>
echo ^</body^>
echo ^</html^>
)>> "%LogFile%"
Start "" "%LogFile%" & Call :Stop_Radio & exit
::***********************************************************************************
:Check_Locked_File <File> <LogFile>
(
2>nul (
>>%1 (call )
) && ( #echo ^<font color^=green^>file "%~1"^</font^>^<br^>
) || (
#echo ^<font color^=red^>file "%~1" is locked and is in use^</font^>^<br^>
)
)>>%2 2>nul
exit /b
::***********************************************************************************
:Scanning <file>
cls
echo(
echo --------------------------------------------------------------------------
echo Please Wait a while... Scanning for %1
echo --------------------------------------------------------------------------
exit /b
::***********************************************************************************
:Play_DJ_Buzz_Radio
Taskkill /IM "wscript.exe" /F >nul 2>&1
Set "vbsfile=%temp%\DJBuzzRadio.vbs"
Set "URL=http://www.chocradios.ch/djbuzzradio_windows.mp3.asx"
Call:Play "%URL%" "%vbsfile%"
Start "" "%vbsfile%"
Exit /b
::**************************************************************
:Play
(
echo Play "%~1"
echo Sub Play(URL^)
echo Dim Sound
echo Set Sound = CreateObject("WMPlayer.OCX"^)
echo Sound.URL = URL
echo Sound.settings.volume = 100
echo Sound.Controls.play
echo do while Sound.currentmedia.duration = 0
echo wscript.sleep 100
echo loop
echo wscript.sleep (int(Sound.currentmedia.duration^)+1^)*1000
echo End Sub
)>%~2
exit /b
::**************************************************************
:Stop_Radio
Taskkill /IM "wscript.exe" /F >nul 2>&1
If Exist "%vbsfile%" Del "%vbsfile%"
::**************************************************************
:: Create the file Running.tmp
ECHO %DATE% > Running.tmp
ECHO %TIME% >> Running.tmp
:: block it and do the work
(
>&2 CALL :Work 30
) >> Running.tmp
:: when the work is finished, delete the file
DEL Running.tmp
GOTO EOF
:: put here the work to be done by the batch file
:Work
ping 127.0.0.1 -n 2 -w 1000 > NUL
ping 127.0.0.1 -n %1 -w 1000 > NUL
:: when the process finishes, the execution go back
:: to the line after the CALL
In case you want to use this in a Cygwin Bash, here are the one-liners:
# To lock a file: (in a different window)
cmd.exe /C "( >&2 pause ) >> test.txt"
#Press any key to continue . . .
# To test if a file is locked (with text)
cmd.exe /C "2>nul ( >>test.txt (call ) ) && (echo ok) || (echo locked)"
#locked
# To test if a file is locked (with POSIX exit code)
cmd.exe /C "2>nul ( >>test.txt (call ) ) && (exit /b 0) || (exit /b 1)"
echo $?
#1
In case of windows network share you can try powershell command:
Get-SmbOpenFile
For example execute on file server command as administrator:
Get-SmbOpenFile | Where-Object -Property Path -match "file.txt"
I have this batch file
#ECHO OFF
ECHO Please Enter Path of the View, you want to update in double quotes.
SET /P variable=
SET ECLIPSE=C:\Users\gdeep\Desktop\TED-4.3.0.20110512190809.lnk
SET WORKSPACE=C:\Users\gdeep\DevCodebase_2
:LOOP
ECHO Press 'g' for Graphical Interface and 'c' for Command line.
SET /P answer=
IF /I "%answer%"=="g" GOTO GRAPHICAL
IF /I "%answer%"=="c" GOTO COMMANDLINE
ECHO Invalid Input. Please Try Again.
GOTO LOOP
:GRAPHICAL
cleartool update -graphical %variable%
GOTO CONTINUE
:COMMANDLINE
cleartool update %variable%
GOTO CONTINUE
:CONTINUE
FOR /D %%i IN (%WORSPACE%) DO RD /S /Q "%%i" DEL /Q "%WORSPACE%\*.*"
START %ECLIPSE% -data %WORSPACE%
D:
chdir "%variable%"\v4electronics
ECHO Please Ensure that Server is killed.
PAUSE
mvn clean install -Dmaven.test.skip=true -Dresource.minify.skip=true
For deleting all the projects i used
FOR /D %%i IN (%WORSPACE%) DO RD /S /Q "%%i" DEL /Q "%WORSPACE%\*.*"
Can anyone explain this to me? I copied it from somewhere and don't want to use it without understanding.
Problem with using above command is althout it seem to work, i see
The system cannot find the file specified.
The system cannot find the path specified.
as the output.
Also, the way i am deleting, will it be equivalent to if i delete them from the eclipse, by select all projects and deleting?
Another problem here is that when i have .
mvn clean install -Dmaven.test.skip=true -Dresource.minify.skip=true
in the end it works fine, otherwise, if there is any other command after it, those commands doesn't run.
After this, I then wanna import all maven projects from the Clearcase %Variable%.
And i want to do that by command line only. Can you help me with that?
Thanks for your help.
Appreciate your time.
Please correct me, If I'm wrong. I understand that you're in the MS-Windows environment.
Regarding to the question about if there is another command after the "mvn ...", they are ignored.
I use the "call" as the following: -
cd project1
call mvn clean install
cd project2
call mvn clean install
I hope this may help.
Regards,
Charlee Ch.
cleartool update -graphical %variable%
This will update a view, opening a GUI during the update (if -graphical is used) for displaying the number of files unchanged, new, modified, deleted or hijacked during this update.
See cleartool update man page.
The graphical update will let you specify how you want hijacked files and timestamps handled by said update:
Click the Advanced tab and change default options for the Update Tool.
If you need to resolve hijacked files, select a method. You have these choices:
Leave hijacked files in place
Rename the hijacked files and load the selected version from the VOB
Delete hijacked files and load the selected version from the VOB
You can also select a method for handling timestamps. You have these choices:
Set file times to current time
Set file times to version creation time
You need to enter the path of the root directory of a snapshot view: see "To update snapshot views"
FOR /D %%i IN (%WORSPACE%) DO RD /S /Q "%%i" DEL /Q "%WORSPACE%\*.*"
This will completely empty Eclipse workspace, projects and its .metadata folder, forcing Eclipse to recreate a workspace from scratch.
It seems a bit extreme, and would basically be the same as
RD /S /Q "%WORSPACE%"
(Eclipse would recreate "%WORSPACE%" when launched with -data %WORSPACE%)
I need to delete files of a certain type (.zip files, say) from a folder, and all of its sub-folders, using the command line. Ideally I am looking for something that can be run as a .bat file in Windows.
I know there is a /S switch for the DEL command to look in sub-folders, but to add to the challenge I need to exclude files of a certain name ("Backup.zip" as an example).
Is there a way to delete files recursively but exclude files of a certain name. It will not be practical in my situation to explicitly list all the file names I want to delete, only the files of the matching type I don't want to delete.
A nice trick: make the files you want to exclude read-only!
DEL /S will not delete read-only file.
The following script does not do exactly what you want (see my remarks below) but shows you how read-only files can be used to avoid deletion.
#ECHO OFF
:: This example supposes your first parameter is
:: the relative path to the folder to be deleted
:: and the second is the relative path (from the
:: the target folder) of the one to be excluded
:: Notice that this will only work if the folders
:: are in the working drive, if not, you ll
:: have to specify full paths
IF "%1"=="" GOTO ERROR
IF "%2"=="" GOTO ERROR
IF NOT EXIST %1\NUL GOTO ERROR
CD %1
IF NOT EXIST %2\NUL GOTO ERROR
ECHO Starting up the deletion process
ECHO. * Setting attributes
attrib %1\*.mp3 -r -s -h > NUL
attrib %2\*.mp3 +r > NUL
ECHO. * Deleting files
del /s %1\*.mp3
ECHO. * Reseting attributes
attrib %2\*.mp3 -r > NUL
ECHO.
ECHO Operation completed!
ECHO.
GOTO END
:ERROR
ECHO Parameters:
ECHO. Param1 -> target folder
ECHO. Param2 -> folder to be ignored
ECHO.
GOTO END
:END
Note: you can adapt this script in order to ignore not just a sub-folder but all files of given type:
attrib /S *.xxx +r > NUL
will in effect help you to exclude all 'xxx' files of the current directory and all sub-directories (hence the /S option).
Note: the "> NUL" part is a redirection often used to hide standard output, instead of displaying it on screen.
It can be dangerous if used too often (in a large loop with different paths involved, for instance) since it is a device, and like all devices (AUX, COMn, LPTn, NUL and PRN):
opening a device will claim one file handle. However, unlike files, devices will never be closed until reboot.
each device exists in every directory on every drive, so if you used redirection to NUL in, say, C:\ and after that you use it again in C:\TEMP, you'll lose another file handle.
Just do this, easy
windows button + r
type cmd and hit enter
Navigate to parent directory:
type c: or d: (or letter of the drive you want to navigate to)
type dir to see a list of that directory's contents ( dir /ah to see hidden files )
then to change directory, type cd xxxx ( xxxx = directory name )
Repeat 4&5 until you get to the directory where you want to run the batch delete
then type your pattern. Something like: del /S /ah *.jpg and hit enter. It will run through all sub-directories, and remove all visible and hidden files that are .jpg files
* is a wildcard
/S deletes from all subfolders
/ah a = select files based on attribute, h = hidden
Example: to delete those annoying .DS_Store files that appear when you copy from Mac to Windows, run:
del /S /ah .DS_Store
or
del /S /ah ._*
which will get all the 'duplicate' hidden files that are also created when copying from Mac to Windows.
You can easily loop a set of files and perform a command on each one, like this:
set match=D:\blah\M*.zip
for %%x in (%match%) do (
del %%x
)
Then I think you need to read this article on how to manipulate strings in DOS:
http://www.dostips.com/DtTipsStringManipulation.php
You can simply use below:
forfiles /p C:\temp-new /s /c "cmd /c if #isdir==FALSE del #file"
TechNet Referenceenter link description here
Perhaps the 'forfiles' command could be of use
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc753551.aspx
Hope that helps.
This script will delete all .zip files from a folder (and subfolders), BUT ONLY IF the file name does not contain the word "backup", or "Backup" or "BACKUP", etc.
# Script DeleteZip.txt
var str folder, filelist, file
cd $folder
lf -r -n "*.zip" > $filelist
while ($filelist <> "")
do
lex "1" $filelist > $file
# Does this $file contain the word "backup" ? Do case independent search (-c option).
if ( { sen -c "^backup^" $file } <= 0 )
system del ("\""+$file+"\"")
endif
done
Script is in biterscripting ( http://www.biterscripting.com ). Save the script in file C:/Scripts/DeleteZip.txt. Run the script as
script "C:/Scripts/DeleteZip.txt" folder("C:/testfolder")
Will do the delete operation on folder C:/testfolder and all its subfolders, at all levels.
A simple way that you need:
FORFILES /P "DIRECTORY" /S /M SEARCHMASK /C "cmd /c if #file neq \"FILE_TO_EXCLUDE\" del /f #file"
You still can adapt the command to your need to exclude specific files and/or by date. More details in the 'forfiles' documentation below.
https://learn.microsoft.com/pt-br/windows-server/administration/windows-commands/forfiles