a·gen·tic a·gil·i·ty

How to delete work items from TFS or VSO

Explains how to permanently delete work items from TFS or VSO using witadmin or C# code, including safety tips and batch deletion for large numbers of items.

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Have you ever created a bunch of work items that you decided later that you had to delete. Well I have… especially as a user of the TFS Integration Platform. And when things go wrong there they can really go wrong.

Now while you can put stuff into the “removed” state it is still hanging around cluttering up the place. The only way out of the box to remove items is to give the ID for each work item that you want to delete and execute the command line for each one.:

1witadmin destroywi /collection:CollectionURL /id:id [/noprompt]

WARNING: This code can result in total loss of all work items you have if you miss key a query! Be careful… and you are on your own. Don’t blame me, and no… I can’t get them back for you…

Well that’s just great unless you have a couple of thousand things to delete. So I knocked up a little bit of code to do it for me. Now, since I have had to knock it up a bunch of times before I thought that I had better share it. I started this blog in the first place so that I would remember things.

 1using Microsoft.TeamFoundation.Client;
 2using Microsoft.TeamFoundation.WorkItemTracking.Client;
 3using System;
 4using System.Collections.Generic;
 5using System.Linq;
 6using System.Text;
 7using System.Threading.Tasks;
 8 
 9namespace ConsoleApplication1
10{
11    class Program
12    {
13        static void Main(string[] args)
14        {
15 
16            TfsTeamProjectCollection tpc = new TfsTeamProjectCollection(new Uri("http://tfs.company.com:8080/tfs/DefultCollection"));
17            WorkItemStore store = tpc.GetService();
18            string query = @"SELECT [System.Id] FROM WorkItems WHERE [System.TeamProject] = 'projectName'  AND  [System.AreaPath] UNDER 'projectName\_TOBEDELETED' ORDER BY [System.Id]";
19            WorkItemCollection wis = store.Query(query);
20            IEnumerable x = from WorkItem wi in wis select wi.Id;
21            Console.WriteLine(string.Format("DESTROY {0} work items (they really can't be resurrected): y/n?", wis.Count));
22            ConsoleKeyInfo cki = Console.ReadKey();
23            Console.WriteLine();
24          if (cki.Key.ToString().ToLower() == "y")
25            {
26            try
27                {
28                    Console.WriteLine("Deleting....");
29                    IEnumerable y = store.DestroyWorkItems(x.ToArray());
30                    Console.WriteLine("DONE");
31                    foreach (var item in y)
32                    {
33                        Console.WriteLine(item.ToString());
34                    }
35                }
36                catch (Exception)
37                {
38 
39                    Console.WriteLine("Things have gotten all pooped up please try again!");
40                }
41        
42            }
43 
44          Console.WriteLine("Freedom");
45        }
46   
47    }
48}

The first thing that you may notice is that I search for items in a specific area path. I use _TOBEDELETED as it is obvious what is going to happen to things that end up there. Although I did work with a user who complained that all his files had gone missing. When asked where he kept them he pointed at the recycle bin on his desktop!

Anyhoo… just in case you made a mistake it will let you know how many work items that you are deleting. It’s a simple check but I have had it say “100,000” work items… AS you can imagine I very carefully terminated the program (never trust the ’no’ option).

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