Deleting objects¶
The omero delete command deletes objects. Further help is available
using the -h
option:
$ bin/omero delete -h
This command will remove entire graphs of objects based on
the IDs of the topmost objects. The command can be modified to include the
deletion of objects that would, by default, be excluded or exclude objects
that would, by default, be included using the omero delete --include
and omero delete --exclude
options.
Additionally, objects of the three annotation types, FileAnnotation, TagAnnotation and TermAnnotation are not deleted by default when the objects to which they are linked are deleted.
It is also possible to delete objects lower in the hierarchy by specifying the type and ID of a topmost object and the type of the lower object. For instance, deleting all of the images under a given project.
By default the command confirms the deletion of the target objects but
it can also provide a detailed report of all the deleted objects via an
omero delete --report
option. An omero delete --dry-run
option can be used to report on what objects would be deleted without actually
deleting them.
Examples¶
Basic delete¶
$ bin/omero delete OriginalFile:101
$ bin/omero delete Project:51
In the first line, the original file with ID 101 will be deleted. In the second, the project with ID 51 will be deleted including any datasets inside only that project and any images that are contained within deleted datasets only. Note that any linked file, tag or term annotations will not be deleted.
Deleting multiple objects¶
Multiple objects can be specified with each type being followed by an ID or a comma-separated list of IDs. The order of objects or IDs is not significant, thus all three calls below are identical in deleting project 51 and datasets 53 and 54.
$ bin/omero delete Project:51 Dataset:53,54
$ bin/omero delete Dataset:54,53 Project:51
$ bin/omero delete Dataset:53 Project:51 Dataset:54
To delete a number of objects with sequentially numbered IDs a hyphen can be used to specify an ID range. This form can also be mixed with comma-separated IDs.
$ bin/omero delete Project:51 Dataset:53-56 --force
$ bin/omero delete Dataset:53-56,65,101-105,201,202 --force
When deleting multiple objects in a single command, if one object cannot be deleted then the whole command will fail and none of the specified objects will be deleted.
The omero delete --dry-run
option can be useful as a check before
trying to delete large numbers of objects. If specifying objects with a range,
it is best to pass either omero delete --dry-run
or
omero delete --force
.
Note
If no flag is passed, the command will default to
omero delete --dry-run
and warn that this behavior is
deprecated. Future versions will default to
omero delete --force
.
Deleting lower level objects¶
To delete objects below a specified top-level object the following form of the object specifier is used.
$ bin/omero delete Project/Dataset/Image:51
Here the all of images under the project 51 would be deleted. It is not necessary to specify intermediate objects in the hierarchy and so:
$ bin/omero delete Project/Image:51
would have the same effect as the call above. Links can also be deleted and so:
$ bin/omero delete Project/DatasetImageLink:51 Dataset/DatasetImageLink:53
would effectively orphan all images under project 51 and dataset 53 that are not also under other datasets.
Including and excluding objects¶
-
--include
¶
Include linked objects that would not ordinarily be deleted:
$ bin/omero delete Image:51 --include FileAnnotation,TagAnnotation,TermAnnotation
As mentioned above these three annotation types are not deleted by default and so this call overrides that default by including any of the three annotation types in the delete:
$ bin/omero delete Image:51 --include Annotation
This call would also delete any annotation objects linked to the image.
-
--exclude
¶
Exclude linked objects that would ordinarily be deleted:
$ bin/omero delete Project:51 --exclude Dataset
This will delete project 51 but not any datasets contained in that project.
The two options can be used together:
$ bin/omero delete Project/Dataset:53 --exclude Image --include FileAnnotation
This will delete any datasets under project 53, that are not otherwise contained elsewhere, excluding any images in those datasets but including any file annotations linked to the deleted datasets. In this case the images that are not otherwise contained in datasets will be orphaned.
For an example on deleting tags directly see Delete tags.
Further options¶
-
--ordered
¶
Delete the objects in the order specified.
Normally all of the specified objects are grouped into a single delete command. However, each object can be deleted separately and in the order given. Thus:
$ bin/omero delete Dataset:53 Project:51 Dataset:54 --ordered
would be equivalent to making three separate calls:
$ bin/omero delete Dataset:53 $ bin/omero delete Project:51 $ bin/omero delete Dataset:54
-
--report
¶
Provide a detailed report of what is deleted:
$ bin/omero delete Project:502 --report ... omero.cmd.Delete2 Project 502... ok Steps: 3 Elapsed time: 0.597 secs. Flags: [] Deleted objects Dataset:603 DatasetImageLink:303 Project:503 ProjectDatasetLink:353 Channel:203 Image:503 LogicalChannel:203 OriginalFile:460,459 Pixels:253 Fileset:203 FilesetEntry:253 FilesetJobLink:264,265,262,263,261 IndexingJob:315 JobOriginalFileLink:303 MetadataImportJob:312 PixelDataJob:313 ThumbnailGenerationJob:314 UploadJob:311 StatsInfo:72
-
--dry-run
¶
Run the command and report success or failure but do not delete the objects. This can be combined with the
omero delete --report
to provide a detailed confirmation of what would be deleted before running the delete itself.
-
--force
¶
Delete multiple objects in a single command. Both comma-separated lists and ranges of IDs using a hyphen will work:
$ bin/omero delete Project:51 Dataset:53-56,65,101-105 --force
The command will fail and no objects will be deleted if any of the specified objects cannot be deleted.