Provided by: datalad_0.17.1-1_all bug

NAME

       datalad remove - remove components from datasets

SYNOPSIS

       datalad       remove       [-h]       [-d       DATASET]      [--drop      {datasets|all}]
              [--reckless  {modification|availability|undead|kill}]  [-m  MESSAGE]   [-J   NJOBS]
              [--recursive] [--nocheck] [--nosave] [--if-dirty IF_DIRTY] [--version] [PATH ...]

DESCRIPTION

       Removing "unlinks" a dataset component, such as a file or subdataset, from a dataset. Such
       a removal advances the state of  a  dataset,  just  like  adding  new  content.  A  remove
       operation  can  be  undone,  by  restoring  a  previous  dataset  state, but might require
       re-obtaining file content and subdatasets from remote locations.

       This command relies on the 'drop' command  for  safe  operation.  By  default,  only  file
       content  from  datasets  which  will  be uninstalled as part of a removal will be dropped.
       Otherwise  file  content  is  retained,  such  that  restoring  a  previous  version  also
       immediately  restores  file  content  access,  just  as  it is the case for files directly
       committed to Git. This default behavior can  be  changed  to  always  drop  content  prior
       removal,  for  cases where a minimal storage footprint for local datasets installations is
       desirable.

       Removing a dataset component is  always  a  recursive  operation.  Removing  a  directory,
       removes  all  content  underneath  the  directory  too. If subdatasets are located under a
       to-be-removed path, they will be uninstalled entirely, and all their content  dropped.  If
       any subdataset can not be uninstalled safely, the remove operation will fail and halt.

       Changed in version 0.16
        More in-depth and comprehensive safety-checks are now performed by
        default.
        The ``--if-dirty`` argument is ignored, will be removed in
        a future release, and can be removed for a safe-by-default behavior. For
        other cases consider the ``--reckless`` argument.
        The ``--save`` argument is ignored and will be removed in a future
        release, a dataset modification is now always saved. Consider save's
        ``--amend`` argument for post-remove fix-ups.
        The ``--recursive`` argument is ignored, and will be removed
        in a future release. Removal operations are always recursive, and the
        parameter can be stripped from calls for a safe-by-default behavior.

       Deprecated in version 0.16
        The ``--check`` argument will be removed in a future release.
        It needs to be replaced with ``--reckless``.

   Examples
       Permanently  remove  a  subdataset  (and  all  further subdatasets contained in it) from a
       dataset::

        % datalad remove -d <path/to/dataset> <path/to/subds>

       Permanently remove a superdataset (with all subdatasets) from the filesystem::

        % datalad remove -d <path/to/dataset>

       DANGER-ZONE: Fast wipe-out a dataset and all its subdataset, bypassing all safety checks::

        % datalad remove -d <path/to/dataset> --reckless kill

OPTIONS

       PATH   path of a dataset or dataset component to be removed. Constraints: value must be  a
              string or value must be NONE

       -h, --help, --help-np
              show  this  help  message.  --help-np  forcefully  disables  the use of a pager for
              displaying the help message

       -d DATASET, --dataset DATASET
              specify the dataset to perform remove from. If no dataset  is  given,  the  current
              working  directory  is  used  as  operation  context.  Constraints: Value must be a
              Dataset or a valid identifier of a Dataset (e.g. a path) or value must be NONE

       --drop {datasets|all}
              which dataset components to drop prior removal. This parameter is passed on to  the
              underlying drop operation as its 'what' argument. Constraints: value must be one of
              ('datasets', 'all') [Default: 'datasets']

       --reckless {modification|availability|undead|kill}
              disable individual  or  all  data  safety  measures  that  would  normally  prevent
              potentially irreversible data-loss. With 'modification', unsaved modifications in a
              dataset will not be detected. This improves performance at the cost  of  permitting
              potential  loss  of  unsaved  or untracked dataset components. With 'availability',
              detection of dataset/branch-states that are only available in  the  local  dataset,
              and  detection  of  an insufficient number of file-content copies will be disabled.
              Especially the latter is a potentially expensive check which might involve numerous
              network  transactions.  With  'undead',  detection of whether a to-be-removed local
              annex is still known to exist in the network of dataset-clones  is  disabled.  This
              could  cause  zombie-records of invalid file availability. With 'kill', all safety-
              checks  are  disabled.  Constraints:  value  must  be   one   of   ('modification',
              'availability', 'undead', 'kill')

       -m MESSAGE, --message MESSAGE
              a  description  of  the  state or the changes made to a dataset. Constraints: value
              must be a string or value must be NONE

       -J NJOBS, --jobs NJOBS
              how many parallel jobs (where possible) to use. "auto" corresponds  to  the  number
              defined  by 'datalad.runtime.max-annex-jobs' configuration item. Constraints: value
              must be convertible to type 'int' or value must be NONE or value  must  be  one  of
              ('auto',)

       --recursive, -r
              DEPRECATED and IGNORED: removal is always a recursive operation.

       --nocheck
              DEPRECATED: use '--reckless availability'.

       --nosave
              DEPRECATED and IGNORED; use `save --amend` instead.

       --if-dirty IF_DIRTY
              DEPRECATED and IGNORED: use --reckless instead.

       --version
              show the module and its version which provides the command

AUTHORS

        datalad is developed by The DataLad Team and Contributors <team@datalad.org>.