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Full Discussion: .tar and .tar.gz
Operating Systems AIX .tar and .tar.gz Post 302189812 by bakunin on Monday 28th of April 2008 02:40:06 AM
Old 04-28-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by thye
I agreed GNU-tar is "against the cultural tradition of UNIX" but [...] By using GNU-tar it save us a lot of time,i believe.
I guess this is why the shell was invented in first place: to glue together all the little specialized tools which do only what they are intended to do, but that they do efficiently.

For the same reason one might need a tool that lists a directory and to translate its contents into chinese - that doesn't mean it would be a good idea to incorporate a translator for chinese into "ls".

If you buy tools (out in the real world, not on a computer) you'd usually buy screwdrivers, hammers, saws, etc.. These tools may serve only one purpose (a screwdriver for handling screws, a hammer for hammering, etc.), but ideally they serve this purpose well. If you try to buy a screwdriver which is a saw and a scissor and a hammer at the same time you'll end up with some sort-of "72-functions-swiss-army-knife", which does serve a lot of purposes all equally bad.

bakunin
 

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GIT-TAR-TREE(1) 						    Git Manual							   GIT-TAR-TREE(1)

NAME
git-tar-tree - Create a tar archive of the files in the named tree object SYNOPSIS
git tar-tree [--remote=<repo>] <tree-ish> [ <base> ] DESCRIPTION
THIS COMMAND IS DEPRECATED. Use git archive with --format=tar option instead (and move the <base> argument to --prefix=base/). Creates a tar archive containing the tree structure for the named tree. When <base> is specified it is added as a leading path to the files in the generated tar archive. git tar-tree behaves differently when given a tree ID versus when given a commit ID or tag ID. In the first case the current time is used as modification time of each file in the archive. In the latter case the commit time as recorded in the referenced commit object is used instead. Additionally the commit ID is stored in a global extended pax header. It can be extracted using git get-tar-commit-id. OPTIONS
<tree-ish> The tree or commit to produce tar archive for. If it is the object name of a commit object. <base> Leading path to the files in the resulting tar archive. --remote=<repo> Instead of making a tar archive from local repository, retrieve a tar archive from a remote repository. CONFIGURATION
tar.umask This variable can be used to restrict the permission bits of tar archive entries. The default is 0002, which turns off the world write bit. The special value "user" indicates that the archiving user's umask will be used instead. See umask(2) for details. EXAMPLES
git tar-tree HEAD junk | (cd /var/tmp/ && tar xf -) Create a tar archive that contains the contents of the latest commit on the current branch, and extracts it in /var/tmp/junk directory. git tar-tree v1.4.0 git-1.4.0 | gzip >git-1.4.0.tar.gz Create a tarball for v1.4.0 release. git tar-tree v1.4.0^{tree} git-1.4.0 | gzip >git-1.4.0.tar.gz Create a tarball for v1.4.0 release, but without a global extended pax header. git tar-tree --remote=example.com:git.git v1.4.0 >git-1.4.0.tar Get a tarball v1.4.0 from example.com. git tar-tree HEAD:Documentation/ git-docs > git-1.4.0-docs.tar Put everything in the current head's Documentation/ directory into git-1.4.0-docs.tar, with the prefix git-docs/. GIT
Part of the git(1) suite Git 1.7.10.4 11/24/2012 GIT-TAR-TREE(1)
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