this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2024
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Why doesn’t rm -rf /* also require —no-preserve-root? That seems just as easy to type accidentally and will just nuke your system without asking
Can confirm. Accidentally did that a few weeks ago.
It's actually harder to detect that. The
*
is expanded before the arguments are sent torm
, so it just sees a list of directories like/bin /usr /dev /sbin /home
and so on.You could implement logic to detect that case, but at that point you're just playing whackamole.
I believe zsh catches this and makes you confirm.
Well, that or one of my plugins, I'm not sure.
If you try to put in safeguards for every possible system-nuking command someone with root rights might type, you'll never get done.
When you're typing "rm -rf" as root, you should immediately stop and triple-check what you're doing.
Cause either there's a safer way to do what you want to do, or what you're trying isn't a good idea in the first place.
(Even when you want to delete lots of stuff in root space, a better way is to use
find
. You can use it to look for and list the files you want to delete. After you've checked its output and verified that those are the correct files, just cursor-up to get the samefind
query again and add --delete at the end)