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description ms.date ms.topic title
Command line reference for the 'dsc resource delete' command
05/08/2024
reference
dsc resource delete

dsc resource delete

Synopsis

Invokes the delete operation of a resource.

Syntax

Without instance properties

dsc resource delete [Options] --resource <RESOURCE>

Instance properties from stdin

<instance-properties> | dsc resource delete [Options] --resource <RESOURCE>

Instance properties from input option

dsc resource delete --input '<instance-properties>' --resource <RESOURCE>

Instance properties from file

dsc resource delete --path <instance-properties-filepath> --resource <RESOURCE>

Description

The delete subcommand removes a resource instance.

Any properties the resource requires for discerning which instance to delete must be passed to this command as a JSON or YAML object. The object can be passed to this command from stdin or with the --input option. You can also use the --path option to read the object from a JSON or YAML file.

This command returns no output when successful. If it encounters an error, it surfaces the error to the caller on stderr and exits with a non-zero exit code.

Examples

Example 1 - delete resource instance with input option

If a resource requires one or more property values to return the actual state of the instance, the instance properties can be passed with the input option as either JSON or YAML.

dsc resource delete --resource Microsoft.Windows/Registry --input '{
    "keyPath": "HKCU\\DSC\\Example"
}'

Example 2 - delete resource instance with input from stdin

If a resource requires one or more property values to return the actual state of the instance, the instance properties can be passed over stdin as either JSON or YAML.

'{
    "keyPath": "HKCU\\DSC\\Example"
}' | dsc resource delete --resource Microsoft.Windows/Registry

Example 3 - delete resource instance with input from a YAML file

If a resource requires one or more property values to return the actual state of the instance, the instance properties can be retrieved from a saved JSON or YAML file.

cat ./example.delete.yaml
keyPath: HKCU\\DSC\\Example
dsc resource delete --resource Microsoft.Windows/Registry --path ./example.delete.yaml

Options

-r, --resource

Specifies the fully qualified type name of the DSC Resource to use, like Microsoft.Windows/Registry.

The fully qualified type name syntax is: <owner>[.<group>][.<area>]/<name>, where:

  • The owner is the maintaining author or organization for the resource.
  • The group and area are optional name components that enable namespacing for a resource.
  • The name identifies the component the resource manages.
Type:      String
Mandatory: true

-i, --input

Specifies a JSON or YAML object with the properties needed for retrieving an instance of the DSC Resource. DSC validates the object against the resource's instance schema. If the validation fails, DSC raises an error.

This option can't be used with instance properties over stdin or the --path option. Choose whether to pass the instance properties to the command over stdin, from a file with the --path option, or with the --input option.

DSC ignores this option when the --all option is specified.

Type:      String
Mandatory: false

-p, --path

Defines the path to a text file to read as input for the command instead of piping input from stdin or passing it as a string with the --input option. The specified file must contain JSON or YAML that represents valid properties for the resource. DSC validates the object against the resource's instance schema. If the validation fails, or if the specified file doesn't exist, DSC raises an error.

This option is mutually exclusive with the --input option. When you use this option, DSC ignores any input from stdin.

DSC ignores this option when the --all option is specified.

Type:      String
Mandatory: false

-h, --help

Displays the help for the current command or subcommand. When you specify this option, the application ignores all options and arguments after this one.

Type:      Boolean
Mandatory: false

Output

This command returns no output when successful. When the resource errors, DSC surfaces the error on stderr and exits with a non-zero exit code.