"rd" exits with errorlevel set to 0 on error when deletion fails, etc

etuardu picture etuardu · Jun 21, 2012 · Viewed 11.1k times · Source

I'm writing a batch (.bat) script and I need to handle the case in which the deletion of a folder fails. I'm using %errorlevel% to catch the exit code, but in the case of the rd command it seems not to work:

C:\Users\edo\Desktop>rd testdir
Directory is not empty

C:\Users\edo\Desktop>echo %errorlevel%
0

Why? What do you suggest?

Answer

dbenham picture dbenham · Jun 21, 2012

Wow, this is the 2nd case I've seen where ERRORLEVEL is not set properly! See File redirection in Windows and %errorlevel%.

The solution is the same as for detecting redirection failure. Use the || operator to take action upon failure.

rd testdir || echo The command failed!

The bizarre thing is, when you use the || operator, the ERRORLEVEL is then set properly to 145 if the folder was not empty, or 2 if the folder did not exist. So you don't even need to do anything. You could conditionally "execute" a remark, and the errorlevel will then be set properly.

rd testdir || rem
echo %errorlevel%

I thought the above gave a complete picture. But then a series of comments below demonstrated there are still potential problems when /RD /S is used. If a file or subfolder under the parent folder is locked (at any level under parent) then RD /S /Q PARENT && echo removed || echo failed will print out an error message, but the && branch fires instead of the || branch. Very unfortunate. If the command fails because the parent folder itself is locked, then || will properly fire and set the ERRORLEVEL.

It is possible to detect failure in all cases by swapping stderr with stdout and piping the result to FINDSTR "^". If a match is found, then there must have been an error.

3>&2 2>&1 1>&3 rd /s test | findstr "^" && echo FAILED

The swap of stderr and stdout is important when /q is missing because it allows the "Are you sure (Y/N)?" prompt to be visible on stderr, separate from the error message on stdout.