The -f option to rm is the extreme opposite of -i (21.11). It says, "Just delete the file; don't ask me any questions." The "f" stands (allegedly) for "force," but this isn't quite right. rm -f won't force the deletion of something that you aren't allowed to delete. (To understand what you're allowed to delete, you need to understand file access permissions (22.2).)
What, then, does rm -f do, and why would you want to use it?
Normally, rm asks you for confirmation if you tell it to delete
files to which you don't have write access - you'll get a message like
Override protection 444 for foo?
(The UNIX filesystem
allows you to delete read-only files, provided you own the file and
provided you have write access to the directory.) With -f,
these files will be deleted silently.
Normally, rm's exit status (44.7) is 0 if it succeeded and 1 if it failed to delete the file. With -f, rm's return status is always 0.
I find that I rarely use rm -f on the UNIX command line, but I almost always use it within shell scripts. In a shell script, you (probably) don't want to be interrupted by lots of prompts should rm find a bunch of read-only files.
[You probably also don't want to be interrupted if rm -f tries to delete files that don't exist because the script never created them. In some UNIXes, rm -f will give an error here; in others, it won't. -JP]
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