# rmw-0.7.05 ## Description rmw (ReMove to Waste) is a safe-remove utility for the command line. Its goal is to conform to [the FreeDesktop.org Trash specification](https://specifications.freedesktop.org/trash-spec/trashspec-latest.html) and therefore be compatible with KDE, GNOME, XFCE, and others. Desktop integration is optional however, and by default, rmw will only use a waste folder separated from your desktop trash. One of its unique features is the ability to purge files from your Waste/Trash directories after x number of days. Web site: ## Build Status * [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/theimpossibleastronaut/rmw.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/theimpossibleastronaut/rmw) * [![Build Status](https://semaphoreci.com/api/v1/andy5995/rmw-3/branches/master/badge.svg)](https://semaphoreci.com/andy5995/rmw-3) ## Screenshots ![rmw usage output](https://remove-to-waste.info/images/Screenshot_2020-04-11.png) [More Screenshots](https://remove-to-waste.info/screenshots.html) ## Contact / Support * [Bug Reports and Feature Requests](https://github.com/theimpossibleastronaut/rmw/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#bug-reports-and-feature-requests) * [General Help, Support, Discussion](https://remove-to-waste.info/#support) ## Required libraries * libncursesw (ncurses-devel on some systems, such as CentOS) * gettext (or use --disable-nls if you only need English language support) If you are building from source, you will need the libncursesw(5 or 6)-dev package from your operating system distribution. On some systems just the ncurses packages is needed, and it's often already installed. ## Compiling ### As a normal user: Use `../configure --help` to view available compile-time options. mkdir build cd build ../configure make ### Installing without superuser privileges If you would like to install rmw without superuser privileges, use a prefix that you have write access to. Example: ../configure --prefix=$HOME/usr make make install The rmw binary will be installed to `$HOME/usr/bin` and documentation to `$HOME/usr/doc`. ### If configure fails On **OSX**, ncursesw isn't provided by default but can be installed using `brew install ncurses`. Then precede `./configure` with `PKG_CONFIG_PATH="/usr/local/opt/ncurses/lib/pkgconfig"` Example: PKG_CONFIG_PATH="/usr/local/opt/ncurses/lib/pkgconfig" ../configure If you can't use [brew](https://brew.sh/), or install libncursesw or libmenuw some other way, rmw will use `ncurses` but you may experience [this minor bug](https://github.com/theimpossibleastronaut/rmw/issues/205). Note: rmw was built on **Windows** 2 years ago using Cygwin but it didn't use the proper directories. We have no Windows developers working on this project and are hoping that some will join soon!. As stated in the description, the goal of this project is a "cross-platform" utility; so getting rmw to work on Windows is still on the TODO list. ## Uninstall / Cleaning up * make uninstall (uninstalls the program if installed with 'make install`) * make distclean (removes files in the build directory created by `configure` and 'make') ## Usage ``` == First-time use == After rmw is installed, running `rmw` will create a configuration file (rmwrc) in $HOME/.config (or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME). Edit the file as desired. == Configuration File == Documentation explaining the configuration can be found in your config file. Waste folders will be created automatically; e.g. if '$HOME/.local/share/Waste' is uncommented in the config file, these 3 directories will be created: $HOME/.local/share/Waste $HOME/.local/share/Waste/files $HOME/.local/share/Waste/info If one of the WASTE folders is on removable media, then the user has the option of appending ',removable'. If a folder has ',removable' appended to it, rmw will not try to create it; it must be initially created manually. If the folder exists when rmw is run, it will be used; if not, it will be skipped. Once you create "example_waste", rmw will automatically create example_waste/info and example_waste/files e.g.: WASTE=/mnt/sda10000/example_waste, removable == Features and Options == Usage: rmw [OPTION]... FILE... ReMove the FILE(s) to a WASTE directory listed in configuration file or: rmw -s or: rmw -u or: rmw -z FILE... Restore FILE(s) from a WASTE directory -h, --help -c, --config filename use an alternate configuration -l, --list list waste directories -g, --purge run purge even if it's been run today -o, --orphaned check for orphaned files (maintenance) -f, --force allow purge to run -e, --empty completely empty (purge) all waste folders -r, -R, --recursive option used for compatibility with rm (recursive operation is enabled by default) -v, --verbose increase output messages -w, --warranty display warranty -V, --version display version and license information ===] Restoring [=== -z, --restore (e.g. ~/.local/share/Waste/files/foo*) -s, --select select files from list to restore -u, --undo-last undo last ReMove == Purging == If purging is 'on', rmw will permanently delete files from the folders specified in the configuration file after 'x' number of days. Purging can be disabled by using 'purge_after = 0' in configuration file. rmw will only check once per day if it's time to purge (use -g to check more often). The time of the last automatic purge check is stored in `purge-time`, located in $HOME/.local/share/rmw (or $XDG_DATA_HOME/rmw). == -e, --empty == Completely empty (purge) all waste folders == -u, --undo == Restores files that were last rmw'ed. No arguments for `-u` are necessary. The list of files that were last rmw'ed is stored in `mrl`, located in $HOME/.local/share/rmw (or $XDG_DATA_HOME/rmw). == -z, --restore == To restore a file, or multiple files, specify the path to them in the /files folder (wildcards ok). e.g. 'rmw -z ~/.local/share/Waste/files/foo*' == -f, --force == A change from previous versions, purge is allowed to run without the '-f' option. If you'd rather require the use of '-f', you can add the line 'force_required' in your configuration file. rmw will refuse to purge directories if they contain non-writable subdirectories. You can use -f 2 times if you ever see a message that tells you "permission denied; directory still contains files" (e.g. rwm -gff). ```