# -+- number -+- category -+- title -+- email -+- name -+- homepage -+- clickOnName -+- language -+- image -+- browser-used -+- security-cookie
=0 -+- 2000-03-01:2 -+- UNIX Basics -+- How to delete all files from /tmp? -+- katja@bearix.oche.de -+- Katja Socher -+- -+- email -+- English -+- -+- Mozilla/4.7 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.2.10 i586; Nav) -+- 8851
Simple question? Well, how do you delete
files in directories that start with a dot in the name?
Rm -r /tmp/.* WILL DELETE THE WHOLE DISK as it selects also the
file /tmp/.. Therefore never try this. The solution is to add two question
marks before the '*'-wildcard:
rm -rf /tmp/.??* /tmp/*
You can put this into /etc/rc.d/init.d/syslog into the "stop)"
section. This will clean up /tmp at every shutdown and keep your disk
tidy.
Do not run the above command while running X11 or before you
run startx. X11 needs the /tmp/.font-unix which is created by xfont server
and X11 it self creates the directory /tmp/.X11-unix which is needed
to talk to the X11 windows.