Provided by: datalad_0.17.1-1_all bug

NAME

       datalad drop - drop content of individual files or entire (sub)datasets

SYNOPSIS

       datalad         drop        [-h]        [--what        {filecontent|allkeys|datasets|all}]
              [--reckless {modification|availability|undead|kill}] [-d DATASET] [-r] [-R  LEVELS]
              [-J NJOBS] [--nocheck] [--if-dirty IF_DIRTY] [--version] [PATH ...]

DESCRIPTION

       This  command  is  the antagonist of 'get'. It can undo the retrieval of file content, and
       the installation of subdatasets.

       Dropping is a safe-by-default operation. Before  dropping  any  information,  the  command
       confirms   the   continued   availability   of   file-content   (see  e.g.,  configuration
       'annex.numcopies'), and the state of all dataset branches from at least one known  dataset
       sibling.  Moreover, prior removal of an entire dataset annex, that it is confirmed that it
       is no longer marked as existing in the network of dataset siblings.

       Importantly,  all  checks  regarding  version  history  availability   and   local   annex
       availability  are  performed  using  the  current state of remote siblings as known to the
       local dataset. This is done for performance reasons and for resilience in case  of  absent
       network  connectivity.  To  ensure  decision making based on up-to-date information, it is
       advised to execute a dataset update before dropping dataset components.

   Examples
       Drop single file content::

        % datalad drop <path/to/file>

       Drop all file content in the current dataset::

        % datalad drop

       Drop all file content in a dataset and all its subdatasets::

        % datalad drop -d <path/to/dataset> -r

       Disable check to ensure the configured minimum number of remote sources for dropped data::

        % datalad drop <path/to/content> --reckless availability

       Drop (uninstall) an entire dataset (will fail with subdatasets present)::

        % datalad drop --what all

       Kill a dataset recklessly with any existing subdatasets too(this will be  fast,  but  will
       disable any and all safety checks)::

        % datalad drop --what all, --reckless kill --recursive

OPTIONS

       PATH   path  of a dataset or dataset component to be dropped. 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

       --what {filecontent|allkeys|datasets|all}
              select  what  type  of  items  shall  be dropped. With 'filecontent', only the file
              content (git-annex keys) of files in a dataset's worktree  will  be  dropped.  With
              'allkeys',  content  of  any  version of any file in any branch (including, but not
              limited to the worktree) will be dropped. This effectively empties the annex  of  a
              local  dataset.  With  'datasets',  only complete datasets will be dropped (implies
              'allkeys' mode for each such dataset), but no filecontent will be dropped  for  any
              files  in  datasets  that  are  not  dropped  entirely. With 'all', content for any
              matching file or dataset will be dropped entirely. Constraints: value must  be  one
              of ('filecontent', 'allkeys', 'datasets', 'all') [Default: 'filecontent']

       --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')

       -d DATASET, --dataset DATASET
              specify the dataset to perform drop 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

       -r, --recursive
              if set, recurse into potential subdatasets.

       -R LEVELS, --recursion-limit LEVELS
              limit recursion into subdatasets to the given number of levels. Constraints:  value
              must be convertible to type 'int' 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',)

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

       --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>.