I am working on some stuff where I am storing data in a file. But each time I run the script it gets appended to the previous file.
I want help on how I can remove the file if it already exists.
I am working on some stuff where I am storing data in a file. But each time I run the script it gets appended to the previous file.
I want help on how I can remove the file if it already exists.
If you want to ignore the step to check if file exists or not, then you can use a fairly easy command, which will delete the file if exists and does not throw an error if it is non-existing.
You can use this:
Something like this would work
-f checks if it's a regular file
-e checks if the file exist
EDIT : -e used with -f is redundant, fo using -f alone should work too
if [ $( ls <file> ) ]; then rm <file>; fi
Also, if you redirect your output with
>
instead of>>
it will overwrite the previous fileDon't bother checking if the file exists, just try to remove it.
Note that the second command will fail (return a non-zero exit status) if the file did not exist, but the first will succeed owing to the
-f
(short for--force
) option. Depending on the situation, this may be an important detail.But more likely, if you are appending to the file it is because your script is using
>>
to redirect something into the file. Just replace>>
with>
. It's hard to say since you've provided no code.Note that you can do something like
test -f /p/a/t/h && rm /p/a/t/h
, but doing so is completely pointless. It is quite possible that the test will return true but the /p/a/t/h will fail to exist before you try to remove it, or worse the test will fail and the /p/a/t/h will be created before you execute the next command which expects it to not exist. Attempting this is a classic race condition. Don't do it.Another one line command I used is: