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Full Discussion: Hpux find tar gzip
Operating Systems HP-UX Hpux find tar gzip Post 302979032 by rbatte1 on Monday 8th of August 2016 06:00:43 AM
Old 08-08-2016
These options will struggle with too many filenames because xargs will produce multiple commands from the list. The command xargs (as I understand it) will take the input list and try to make a single command line from the options given using the input as described or as the final part of the line by default. If the line is going to exceed the maximum command length, then xargs will loop on the command with the remaining input.

With a tar this could be disastrous because the potential multiple tar commands would not be able to be disentangled if you needed to read it back.

If this was AIX, I would recommend writing the names of the required items into a temporary file and passing that with the -L flag, but I'm not sure that HP-UX or anything else supports that. Solaris might use -I (capital i) instead. You would have to read the manual page and look for a flag to accept a list or input file.


Could you consider cpio or other tools instead?


Robin
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lorder(1)						      General Commands Manual							 lorder(1)

NAME
lorder - Finds the best order for member files in an object library SYNOPSIS
lorder file... DESCRIPTION
The lorder command is essentially obsolete. Use the following command in its place: % ar -ts file.a The lorder command reads one or more object or library archive files, looks for external references, and writes a list of paired filenames to standard output. The first of each pair of files contains references to identifiers that are defined in the second file. You can send this list to the tsort command to find an ordering of a library member file suitable for 1-pass access by ld. If object files do not end with lorder overlooks them and attributes their global symbols and references to some other file. EXAMPLES
To create a subroutine library, enter: lorder charin.o scanfld.o scan.o scanln.o | tsort | xargs ar qv libsubs.a (Enter this command entirely on one line, not on two lines as shown above.) This creates a subroutine library named libsubs.a that contains charin.o, scanfld.o, scan.o, and scanln.o. The ordering of the object mod- ules in the library is important. The lorder and tsort commands together add the subroutines to the library in the proper order. Suppose that scan.o calls entry points in scanfld.o and scanln.o. scanfld.o also calls entry points in charin.o. First, the lorder command creates a list of pairs that shows these dependencies: charin.o charin.o scanfld.o scanfld.o scan.o scan.o scanln.o scanln.o scanfld.o charin.o scanln.o charin.o scan.o scanfld.o This list is piped to the tsort command, which converts the list into the ordering that is needed: scan.o scanfld.o scanln.o charin.o Note that each module precedes the module it calls. charin.o, which does not call another module, is last. The second list is then piped to xargs, which constructs and runs the following ar command: ar qv libsubs.a scan.o scanfld.o scanln.o charin.o This ar command creates the properly ordered library. FILES
Temporary files SEE ALSO
Commands: ar(1), as(1), cc(1), ld(1), make(1), nm(1), size(1), strip(1), tsort(1), xargs(1) Files: a.out(4), ar(4) lorder(1)
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