29-01-2009, 11:49
sudo : te da acceso como root
El resto lo puedes consultar en tu Mac desde el terminal , simplemente escribe man rm y te saldra ...
Tambien puedes ver rmdir, que borra carpetas o directorios
El resto lo puedes consultar en tu Mac desde el terminal , simplemente escribe man rm y te saldra ...
Código:
NAME
  rm, unlink -- remove directory entries
SYNOPSIS
  rm [-dfiPRrvW] file ...
  unlink file
DESCRIPTION
  The rm utility attempts to remove the non-directory type files specified
  on the command line. If the permissions of the file do not permit writ-
  ing, and the standard input device is a terminal, the user is prompted
  (on the standard error output) for confirmation.
  The options are as follows:
  -d     Attempt to remove directories as well as other types of
        files.
  -f     Attempt to remove the files without prompting for confirma-
        tion, regardless of the file's permissions. If the file does
        not exist, do not display a diagnostic message or modify the
        exit status to reflect an error. The -f option overrides any
        previous -i options.
  -i     Request confirmation before attempting to remove each file,
        regardless of the file's permissions, or whether or not the
        standard input device is a terminal. The -i option overrides
        any previous -f options.
  -P     Overwrite regular files before deleting them. Files are
        overwritten three times, first with the byte pattern 0xff,
        then 0x00, and then 0xff again, before they are deleted.
  -R     Attempt to remove the file hierarchy rooted in each file
        argument. The -R option implies the -d option. If the -i
        option is specified, the user is prompted for confirmation
        before each directory's contents are processed (as well as
        before the attempt is made to remove the directory). If the
        user does not respond affirmatively, the file hierarchy
        rooted in that directory is skipped.
  -r     Equivalent to -R.
  -v     Be verbose when deleting files, showing them as they are
        removed.
  -W     Attempt to undelete the named files. Currently, this option
        can only be used to recover files covered by whiteouts.
  The rm utility removes symbolic links, not the files referenced by the
  links.
  It is an error to attempt to remove the files ``.'' or ``..''.
links.
  It is an error to attempt to remove the files ``.'' or ``..''.
  When the utility is called as unlink, only one argument, which must not
  be a directory, may be supplied. No options may be supplied in this sim-
  ple mode of operation, which performs an unlink(2) operation on the
  passed argument.
  The rm utility exits 0 if all of the named files or file hierarchies were
  removed, or if the -f option was specified and all of the existing files
  or file hierarchies were removed. If an error occurs, rm exits with a
  value >0.
NOTE
  The rm command uses getopt(3) to parse its arguments, which allows it to
  accept the `--' option which will cause it to stop processing flag
  options at that point. This will allow the removal of file names that
  begin with a dash (`-'). For example:
     rm -- -filename
  The same behavior can be obtained by using an absolute or relative path
  reference. For example:
     rm /home/user/-filename
     rm ./-filename
SEE ALSO
  rmdir(1), undelete(2), unlink(2), fts(3), getopt(3), symlink(7)
BUGS
  The -P option assumes that the underlying file system is a fixed-block
  file system. In addition, only regular files are overwritten, other
  types of files are not.
COMPATIBILITY
  The rm utility differs from historical implementations in that the -f
  option only masks attempts to remove non-existent files instead of mask-
  ing a large variety of errors. The -v option is non-standard and its use
  in scripts is not recommended.
  Also, historical BSD implementations prompted on the standard output, not
  the standard error output.
STANDARDS
  The rm command is almost IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible, except
  that POSIX requires rm to act like rmdir(1) when the file specified is a
  directory. This implementation requires the -d option if such behavior
  is desired. This follows the historical behavior of rm with respect to
  directories.
  The simplified unlink command conforms to Version 2 of the Single UNIX
  Specification (``SUSv2'').
HISTORY
  A rm command appeared in Version 1 AT&T UNIX.
Tambien puedes ver rmdir, que borra carpetas o directorios