Delete a file named "NUL" on Windows

EM0 picture EM0 · Jul 26, 2013 · Viewed 17.6k times · Source

I ran a program on Windows 7 that was compiled under Cygwin and passed "NUL" as an output file name. Instead of suppressing output it actually created a file named "NUL" in the current directory. (Apparently it expects "/dev/null", even on Windows.) Now I'm stuck with this "NUL" file that I cannot delete!

I've already tried:

  • Windows Explorer - error: "Invalid MS-DOS function" (yes, that is seriously what it says!)
  • Command prompt using "del NUL" - error: "The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect."
  • Deleting the entire directory - same deal as just deleting the file
  • remove() in a C program - also fails

How can I get rid of these NUL files (I have several by now), short of installing the full Cygwin environment and compiling a C program under Cygwin to do it?

Answer

xxbbcc picture xxbbcc · Jul 26, 2013

Open a command prompt and use these commands to first rename and then delete the NUL file:

C:\> rename \\.\C:\..\NUL. deletefile.txt
C:\> del deletefile.txt

Using the \\.\ prefix tells the high-level file I/O functions to pass the filename unparsed to the device driver - this way you can access otherwise invalid names.

Read this article about valid file / path names in Windows and the various reserved names.