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😎 Safe-rm: A drop-in and much safer replacement of bash rm with nearly full functionalities and options of the rm command! Safe-rm will act exactly the same as the original rm command.

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A much safer replacement of bash rm with ALMOST FULL features of the origin rm command.

Initially developed on Mac OS X, then tested on Linux.

Using safe-rm, the files or directories you choose to remove will move to $HOME/.Trash instead of simply deleting them. You could put them back whenever you want manually.

If a file or directory with the same name already exists in the Trash, the name of newly-deleted items will be ended with the current date and time.

Supported options

For those implemented options, safe-rm will act exactly the same as the original rm command

-i, --interactive

-f, --force

-r, -R, --recursive, --Recursive

-v, --verbose

--

Combined short options are also supported, such as

-rf, -riv, etc

Usual Installation

Add an alias to your ~/.bashrc script,

alias rm='/path/to/bin/rm.sh'

and /path/to is where you git clone shell-safe-rm in your local machine.

Permanent Installation

If you have NPM (node) installed (RECOMMENDED):

npm i -g safe-rm

Or normally with make:

make && sudo make install
# and enjoy

For those who have no make command:

sudo sh install.sh

Installing safe-rm will put safe-rm in your /bin directory. In order to use safe-rm, you need to add an alias to your ~/.bashrc script and in all yours currently open terminals, like this:

alias rm='safe-rm'

After installation and alias definition, when you execute rm command in the Terminal, lines of below will be printed:

> rm
safe-rm
usage: rm [-f | -i] [-dPRrvW] file ...
     unlink file

which helps to tell safe-rm from the original rm.

Uninstall

First remove the alias line from your ~/.bashrc file, then

npm uninstall -g safe-rm

Or

make && sudo make uninstall

Or

sudo sh uninstall.sh

About

😎 Safe-rm: A drop-in and much safer replacement of bash rm with nearly full functionalities and options of the rm command! Safe-rm will act exactly the same as the original rm command.

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