I have a Visual Studio solution with several projects. I clean up the bin and obj folders as part of clean up using the following script.
Get-ChildItem -path source -filter obj -recurse | Remove-Item -recurse
Get-ChildItem -path source -filter bin -recurse | Remove-Item -recurse
This works perfectly. However, I have a file-based data folder that has about 600,000 sub folders in it and is located in a folder called FILE_DATA.
The above script takes ages because it goes through all these 600,000 folders.
I need to avoid FILE_DATA folder when I recursively traverse and remove bin and obj folders.
Here is a more efficient approach that does what you need--skip subtrees that you want to exclude:
function GetFiles($path = $pwd, [string[]]$exclude)
{
foreach ($item in Get-ChildItem $path)
{
if ($exclude | Where {$item -like $_}) { continue }
$item
if (Test-Path $item.FullName -PathType Container)
{
GetFiles $item.FullName $exclude
}
}
}
This code is adapted from Keith Hill's answer to this post; my contribution is one bug fix and minor refactoring; you will find a complete explanation in my answer to that same SO question.
This invocation should do what you need:
GetFiles -path source -exclude FILE_DATA
For even more leisurely reading, check out my article on Simple-Talk.com that discusses this and more: Practical PowerShell: Pruning File Trees and Extending Cmdlets.
If the FILE_DATA folder is a subfolder of $source (not deeper), try:
$source = "C:\Users\Frode\Desktop\test"
Get-Item -Path $source\* -Exclude "FILE_DATA" | ? {$_.PSIsContainer} | % {
Get-ChildItem -Path $_.FullName -Filter "obj" -Recurse | Remove-Item -Recurse
Get-ChildItem -Path $_.FullName -Filter "bin" -Recurse | Remove-Item -Recurse
}
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