IT has to do with the way you created the tar file, only partly how you extract it.
You have to create it as a relative path. Suppose you have a directory /srs/main
and you want to keep "main" but not "srs" because you want to rerstore main into /path/elsewhere getting /path/elsewhere/main....
Code:
cd /srs
# ./main is a relative path
tar cvf /tmp/mytar.tar ./main
cd /path/elsewhere
tar xvf /tmp/mytar.tar
Dear UNIX experts:
Hi, I have a text file which the contents are arranged vertically down, line by line.
How do use a loop (I think) to make it arrange in vertical arrangement with a tab delimitated and write to a new file?
Eg: of source file
Hello World
Good-day
Thanks
Welcome
The... (8 Replies)
Can anyone help me on this. I have a file that looks like this:
color red green blue
color pink yellow
number one two
gender male
gender female
The output would look like this:
color red green blue pink yellow
number one two
gender male female
I have over 5000 rows and i dont want... (5 Replies)
How do I make tar set the correct atime on the extracted version? The option --atime-preserve works just on the original, not on the extracted file.
The extracted files always have current time as atime, which is bad. (10 Replies)
Hi,
I want to extract myfile.war to a folder which is in the same folder with war file.I did this as normal:
jar -xvf myfile.war
But it exploded all the content of file to the same level folder instead of that I was expecting to create a folder called myfile.
This works with tar:
... (0 Replies)
I am trying to grab a folder and all the folders and files underneath it and send it from one computer to another. I basically want to compress the whole folder into a tar, tgz, or zip file so that it can be sent as one file. is there a command to compress a folder and all its contents into a tar... (7 Replies)
hello,
i've a backup of a xen image which was tar'ed. i extracted the tarfile with --preserve and moved it to the lvm partition useing cp -p to preserve the ownership informations of the files in this step too.
but unfortunatly after extracting the archive some uid and guids which are present... (5 Replies)
Hello guys,
I am sure this has been asked before, but honestly, I cant find post talking about it.
Here is what I need:
- A tar file will be generated manually by user
- This tar file is then used within a bash shell script
My source folder structure is like this:
... (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a tar file and inside that tar file is a folder with additional tar.gz files. What I want to do is look inside the first tar file and then find the second tar file I'm looking for, look inside that tar.gz file to find a certain directory. I'm encountering issues by trying to... (1 Reply)
I would like to confirm my file.tar is been tar-ed correctly before I remove them. But I have very limited disc space to untar it.
Can I just do the listing instead of actual extract it? Can I say confirm folder integrity if the listing is sucessful without problem?
tar tvf file1.tar
... (1 Reply)
Hello Team,
Would you please help me with a UNIX command that would check if file is a tar file.
if we dont have that , can you help me with UNIX command that would check if file ends with .tar
Thanks in advance. (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: sanjaydubey2006
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bup-join
bup-join(1) General Commands Manual bup-join(1)NAME
bup-join - concatenate files from a bup repository
SYNOPSIS
bup join [-r host:path] [refs or hashes...]
DESCRIPTION
bup join is roughly the opposite operation to bup-split(1). You can use it to retrieve the contents of a file from a local or remote bup
repository.
The supplied list of refs or hashes can be in any format accepted by git(1), including branch names, commit ids, tree ids, or blob ids.
If no refs or hashes are given on the command line, bup join reads them from stdin instead.
OPTIONS -r, --remote=host:path
Retrieves objects from the given remote repository instead of the local one. path may be blank, in which case the default remote
repository is used. The connection to the remote server is made with SSH. If you'd like to specify which port, user or private key
to use for the SSH connection, we recommend you use the ~/.ssh/config file.
EXAMPLE
# split and then rejoin a file using its tree id
TREE=$(tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -t)
bup join $TREE | tar -tf -
# make two backups, then get the second-most-recent.
# mybackup~1 is git(1) notation for the second most
# recent commit on the branch named mybackup.
tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -n mybackup
tar -cvf - /etc | bup split -n mybackup
bup join mybackup~1 | tar -tf -
SEE ALSO bup-split(1), bup-save(1), ssh_config(5)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-join(1)