DELOLD is a command line tool used to delete old files with a create date older then a set amount of days. It can do verbose and rescursive with any path given. Perfect for Scheduled and/or batch file jobs.
License
GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GPLv2)Follow DELOLD
Other Useful Business Software
Assembled is the only unified platform for staffing and managing your human and AI support team.
Assembled is the only platform that unifies AI agents and intelligent workforce management to power fast and flexible support operations. Built for scale, we help teams automate over 50% of customer interactions, forecast with 90%+ accuracy, and optimize staffing across in-house and BPO teams. Orchestrate every chat, email, or call, balancing workloads between human and AI agents in real time — without sacrificing quality or control. Trusted by Stripe, Canva, and Robinhood, Assembled transforms support from a cost center into a strategic advantage. Our Workforce and Vendor Management tools connect forecasting, scheduling, and performance for smarter staffing decisions. AI Agents automate conversations across channels with your workflows and brand voice. AI Copilot empowers agents with real-time guidance, suggested replies, and one-click actions for faster, higher-quality resolutions.
Rate This Project
Login To Rate This Project
User Reviews
-
Doesn't appear to be working properly on Win2K08 R2. When I ran the command multiple times it deleted more and more files and folder each time. I selected older than 2 days and it eventually wiped out all files and folder in my test directory (even though they weren't older than two days). Not sure if this is a bug or a Windows version specific issue. There are limited switches, so I don't believe this is user error.
-
Thanks for the feedback, I've removed the "Press Any Key to Continue" at the end of the result.
-
We are using it every day to clean up our server log files it works fine. It could be a good idea to add the folder option, to look at datetime of folders and delete them, instead of looking only at files. We could use folder or files or both.