Tar: Difference between revisions

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Create a new archive:
Create a new archive:


<code>tar -zvfc mytar.tgz *</code>  creates a tarball named “mytar.tar.gz”, and archives all files in the current directory into it.
<code>tar -czvf mytar.tgz *</code>  creates a tarball named “mytar.tar.gz”, and archives all files in the current directory into it.


Extract from an archive:
Extract from an archive:


<code>tar -zvfx mytar.tgz </code>  Extracts all files in the tarball into the current directory (You can specify a file name at the end to extract just that file.)
<code>tar -xzvf mytar.tgz </code>  Extracts all files in the tarball into the current directory (You can specify a file name at the end to extract just that file.)


List the contents of a tarball:
List the contents of a tarball:


<code>tar -zvft mytar.tgz</code>
<code>tar -tzvf mytar.tgz</code>
 


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 18:51, 20 January 2017

creates an archive (Commonly called a tarball. 'tar' is short for 'tape archive')

Flags

-z use gzip to compress/read the resulting tarball

-j use bzip2 to compress/read the tarball

-c create a new archive.

-v verbose. tar will list all the files it's adding to the archive.

-f the result should be saved into a file (as opposed to being stored on a tape)

-t list the contents of an archive

-x extract files from an archive

Examples:

Create a new archive:

tar -czvf mytar.tgz * creates a tarball named “mytar.tar.gz”, and archives all files in the current directory into it.

Extract from an archive:

tar -xzvf mytar.tgz Extracts all files in the tarball into the current directory (You can specify a file name at the end to extract just that file.)

List the contents of a tarball:

tar -tzvf mytar.tgz

References

  1. tar man page
  2. Ultimate Tar Command Tutorial