Bulk delete¶
To discover whether your Object Storage system supports this feature, see Discoverability. Alternatively, check with your service provider.
With bulk delete, you can delete up to 10,000 objects or containers (configurable) in one request.
Bulk delete request¶
To perform a bulk delete operation, add the bulk-delete
query
parameter to the path of a POST
or DELETE
operation.
Note
The DELETE
operation is supported for backwards compatibility.
The path is the account, such as /v1/12345678912345
, that contains
the objects and containers.
In the request body of the POST
or DELETE
operation, list the
objects or containers to be deleted. Separate each name with a newline
character. You can include a maximum of 10,000 items (configurable) in
the list.
In addition, you must:
UTF-8-encode and then URL-encode the names.
To indicate an object, specify the container and object name as:
CONTAINER_NAME
/OBJECT_NAME
.To indicate a container, specify the container name as:
CONTAINER_NAME
. Make sure that the container is empty. If it contains objects, Object Storage cannot delete the container.Set the
Content-Type
request header totext/plain
.
Bulk delete response¶
When Object Storage processes the request, it performs multiple sub-operations. Even if all sub-operations fail, the operation returns a 200 status. The bulk operation returns a response body that contains details that indicate which sub-operations have succeeded and failed. Some sub-operations might succeed while others fail. Examine the response body to determine the results of each delete sub-operation.
You can set the Accept
request header to one of the following values
to define the response format:
text/plain
Formats response as plain text. If you omit the
Accept
header,text/plain
is the default.application/json
Formats response as JSON.
application/xml
ortext/xml
Formats response as XML.
The response body contains the following information:
The number of files actually deleted.
The number of not found objects.
Errors. A list of object names and associated error statuses for the objects that failed to delete. The format depends on the value that you set in the
Accept
header.
The following bulk delete response is in application/xml
format. In
this example, the mycontainer
container is not empty, so it cannot
be deleted.
<delete>
<number_deleted>2</number_deleted>
<number_not_found>4</number_not_found>
<errors>
<object>
<name>/v1/12345678912345/mycontainer</name>
<status>409 Conflict</status>
</object>
</errors>
</delete>